Australia must get Ric Charlesworth in wake of Arthur sacking

By Glenn Mitchell / Expert

Australian cricket continues to lurch from bad to worse. The axing of national coach Mickey Arthur just a fortnight out from the first Ashes Test is the latest in a string of controversies to beset the Australian team.

After a competitive home summer where Australia pushed the world number one South Africa before conceding the three-Test series 1-nil, the Australian Test team has unravelled.

The ill-fated tour of India in March culminated in a historic 4-nil drubbing.

It was during that series that four players were ruled out of selection for the third Test as a result of failing to complete a self-evaluation that had been ordered by Arthur.

While many questioned the severity of the penalties handed out, it was captain Michael Clarke who stated that the incident, which became known as ‘homework-gate’, was indeed the straw that broke the camel’s back.

He alluded to the fact that there had been an ongoing slip in standards among the playing group.

Some of the issues he raised were players turning up late to training sessions, refusing to attend sponsor functions, not adhering to the medical protocols with regard to injury management and the failure to wear the appropriate team uniform when required.

In short, a team once regarded as the benchmark of the sport worldwide, was failing to adhere to the little things that are required by a group of elite sportsmen.

It was felt that the ‘line in the sand’, as Arthur referred to the suspensions in India, would be enough to shock the players into line.

Fast-forward to June and the reality was very contrary to the ideal.

In the space of three weeks, opener David Warner twice breached Cricket Australia’s code of conduct.

A 4am Twitter rant directed at two experienced News Limited cricket journalists – Robert Craddock and Malcolm Conn – drew a $5750 fine.

Before the dust had settled on that incident, Warner found himself a further $11,500 lighter in the wallet, as well as being dealt a suspension that would be lifted on the day of the opening Test at Nottingham, following an early morning physical altercation in a drinking establishment with England batsman Joe Root.

All these episodes have provided rich fodder for the English tabloids, England fans and former players, in particular Ashes-winning skipper Michael Vaughan.

A meek exit from the Champions Trophy tournament, in which Australia was the defending champion, was yet another cause for English celebration.

However, the decision to axe the coach nearly two years prior to the end of his contract and on the eve of the highest profile series in the sport, will be seen as the icing on the cake by England’s legion of fans.

At the time of writing, Cricket Australia had yet to speak publicly on the axing.

When they do it will make fascinating listening.

There has often been a perception that Arthur has been too close to the player group, that he was trying to be their friend, one of the boys.

There is no doubting his affable personality.

But, as a coach, you have a stand apart from your charges.

It has been rumoured that there was an initial attempted cover-up over the Warner fracas however concerns were raised by some players, notably Shane Watson – who was one of the four men banned in India – that this was a gross inconsistency and a case of double standards.

If that was indeed the case, it was a flawed philosophy on behalf of team management.

Highly respected former Australian Test batsman Darren Lehmann is heavily backed to fill the gap left by Arthur’s dismissal.

Lehmann is currently an understudy to Arthur as an assistant coach and he has been working with Australia A which concluded its tour of England last night.

He and Clarke will be charged with turning around an errant ship.

For Clarke, who is battling to prove his own fitness ahead of the Ashes opener, the weight of expectation and scrutiny on his leadership will now be far greater.

He will be the man largely responsible for setting the necessary standard on and off the field.

There are many in the game, who while supportive of his tactical nous, hold reservations over his man-management skills.

Now is not the time for a weak leader.

Whether Lehmann ends up becoming the team’s mentor full-time beyond the Ashes remains to be seen.

Cricket Australia will have ample time to sit down and take stock of where it is at and cast the net far and wide before appointing the new full-time coach.

One thing is for sure, the national team has reached a modern-day nadir.

A new broom needs to sweep through the dressing room and restore the ethos that helped Australia to dominate the world for almost two decades.

For mine, if I was in the head office of Cricket Australia in Melbourne, I would be picking up the phone and placing a call to Dr Richard Charlesworth.

If ever a man had the necessary credentials to lead Australian cricket out of its seemingly self-imposed malaise it is Charlesworth.

As a coach, he is arguably the greatest this nation has produced.

In my two decades in the sports media, Charlesworth is far and away the most impressive, intelligent and broad-thinking coach I have ever met.

During the 1990s he was at the helm of the Australian women’s hockey team when it strode the world as a nonpareil.

Under Charlesworth’s astute leadership they won consecutive Olympic gold medals in 1996 and 2000 and filled the trophy cabinet with every available piece of silverware during his tenure.

After a period away from the sport, during which he had forays into the coaching structures of the AFL and New Zealand cricket, he made an extremely successful transition into the role of head coach of the Kookaburras – the men’s national hockey team.

In a short period he took them back to the number one ranking in the sport.

Charlesworth’s CV is broad and impressive.

Selected for five Olympic Games as a player and regarded as the finest of his era, he also played first-class cricket and had a stint as West Australian captain.

In addition, he qualified as a doctor of medicine and served three terms in Federal parliament.

In short, he is a self-driven perfectionist and over achiever.

Almost all of Charlesworth’s charges during his time as a national coach have spoken glowingly of his abilities to extract the best out of them as individuals and the team as a collective.

They also underline the fact that he is imbued with one very discernible trait – discipline.

That is a trait which is seemingly absent from the current make-up of Australia’s current cricket team.

Ric Charlesworth has – if you’ll pardon the pun – the runs on the board.

He has a wealth of experience in successful team management and leadership and he has experience as a first-class cricketer.

He is a high achiever by nature, and for mine, he is the right man to lead Australia out of its current cricketing plight.

The Crowd Says:

2013-06-24T13:53:30+00:00

colvin

Guest


Pat Howard might be a good bloke but in that picture above he looks quite full of himself. Almost a dickhead. I still remember his first test against the ABs. He had had a big build up because of his family connections and we were interested to see him play. Early in the first half he ran back towards the WB 22, collected an AB kick through and.with the brash confidence of misguided youth decided to counter attack by attempting to side step the following up Michael Jones. Not normally a good choice. When Pat saw Michael it looked like he froze and his attempted sidestep seemed to be off both legs at the same time but in different directions. So he got castled well and truly, held on to the ball in the tackle and was penalized, three points. The NZ commentators were quite amused and made comments along the lines of "welcome to test rugby Pat." It seemed that moment defined his whole WB career where he never seemed able to play to his apparent potential. Hope his sports administration career is more fruitfull.

2013-06-24T11:41:23+00:00

Kev

Guest


CA better have a bloody good reason for sacking Arthur just two weeks out from the Ashes.

2013-06-24T11:40:45+00:00

Matthew Skellett

Guest


Not Little Johnny surely He thinks its ok to lose as in not giving your all on the paddock the Australian Public prefer the team and its players play to win EVERY game

2013-06-24T11:35:35+00:00

Chairman Kaga

Guest


Really, if you have managed to get to international level of cricket what coach do you actually need? What the hell could Mickey Arthur teach a teach test match bowler or batsman? It is just following the leader stuff all this over coaching. Bradman, the Chappell's, Lillee and Warne had no need for a coach.

2013-06-24T07:39:57+00:00

Alex

Guest


Glenn, would welcome a reply. Do you think if more of the current crop and even the group just previous (2007 -2010) had played more games with the 2005-2009 team the. This underperforming attitude would never have fostered. If more of them had seen the hard work put in by people like Langer, Lehman, hodge, warne, McGrath, ponting, Hayden etc....? Also maybe the introduction of charlseworth to replace Howard ( or even John Howard to replace Howard) as well as the introduction of some former players like Border, Taylor, S. Waugh to the board similar to the system use by Bayern Munich or maybe even for part time mentoring/ youth coaching roles ala Manchester United??

2013-06-24T07:33:57+00:00

jamesb

Guest


If Charlesworth fills in an important position in Australian cricket, then I'm all for it. But at the end of the day, James Sutherland, the CEO of CA has to go!

2013-06-24T07:30:42+00:00

jamesb

Guest


"Charlesworth could be given Howard, Sutherland or Invers’ jobs." Thats a great suggestion jameswm!

2013-06-24T07:11:02+00:00

Jay

Guest


Lehmann will be an excellent choice. Unfortunately CA still has the inadequate 3 of Howard, Sutherland, and Inverarity still involved.

2013-06-24T06:12:20+00:00

Jimmy

Guest


Wayne Bennett also fits the bill.

2013-06-24T05:52:27+00:00

Timmuh

Roar Guru


Glenn, In a lot of ways I would agree. But with this current team so lacking in the game's fundamentals, in a way that should be impossiblke to make Shield teams much less a Test squad, I think right now the head coach needs good technical cricket knowledge. He has to almost give schoolboy coaching to some of these guys. If the team was mostly needing a man manager (they certainly need that) who could organise training sessions and leave the little bits of advice to assistants; almost like an old style "team manager", then somebody such as Charelsworth would be ideal. With the failings at club, junior and Shield level being so prominent in the Test squad I'm not sure he's the right fit for the current circumstance. On the cover-up, the way I heard it Arthur wasn't covering it up. Apparently he was genuinely unaware anything had happened until Watson asked how it was going to be handled. (I can't vouch for the source on that as it comes second hand, though he is usually reliable.)

2013-06-24T05:45:24+00:00

boes

Roar Pro


Sounds like an ideal high performance manager to me.

2013-06-24T05:43:46+00:00

Clavers

Guest


Whatever else you might say about Watson, his work ethic is equal to any. Even when he was being picked in Australian tour squads but not in the playing team, reports were coming back about him training his butt off, running sprint repetitions etc while most of the squad had their feet up. If anything his biggest problem over his career has been working *too* hard, doing too much strength work in the gym and getting injured. That and working out how best to balance his batting and bowling roles and finding the right place in the order. He has had to work harder than most over the years, partly to overcome so many injuries, partly because as an all-rounder he has to maintain an extra set of skills. And his technique has never been in question, as a batsman or as a fast-medium swing bowler. At test level he has not yet quite fulfilled his potential with the bat, even though he averages 43 in the opening role. But look at his ODI batting average and compare that with other Australian greats: Watson 41.3, Ponting 42.0, Gilchrist 35.9, Steve Waugh 32.9, Allan Border 30.6. What else do you expect of the guy? Oh yes, "homework." And maybe boxing prowess. :S

2013-06-24T05:22:24+00:00

jameswm

Roar Guru


Charlesworth could be given Howard, Sutherland or Invers' jobs. Just get him in there to steer the ship, and implement common sense and toughness.

2013-06-24T05:14:04+00:00

Clavers

Guest


He's Labor., so let's make him Opposition Leader.

2013-06-24T05:07:26+00:00

Showbags

Guest


Matt h has the better idea. Charlesworth as High Performance Manager with Boof as coach would be a good setup. Also removing Lehmann and Clarke as selectors is another thing that must be done to prevent this infighting that is going on.

2013-06-24T05:06:15+00:00

Worlds Biggest

Guest


Great candidate and makes so much sense but would Charlesworth want take on a basket case ? Clearly there are issues across the board in the game including the Senior Executive.

2013-06-24T05:06:08+00:00

Clavers

Guest


Ric Charlesworth would at least be an improvement over Pat Howard as a High Performance Manager. Although both made names in other sports, at least Charlesworth knows how to put on pads and hold a cricket bat. Although from what I once read he didn't swing it very often (the bat or the ball, for that matter).

2013-06-24T05:01:46+00:00

B.A Sports

Guest


I like it to But given Watson's dislike for hardwork and "Watson first" mentality, I am sure he would have Charlesworth out the door just as quick as he got Arthur out the door if not faster now that he has had some practice!

2013-06-24T04:46:48+00:00

Gr8rWeStr

Guest


I like Glenn's suggestion but I like yours even better.

2013-06-24T04:43:16+00:00

Andy_Roo

Roar Guru


Forget Charlesworth coaching the AUS cricket team. Let's make him Prime Minister instead

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