Langer right to feel aggrieved but wishy-washy CA more to blame than Cummins for sacking saga

By Paul Suttor / Expert

Justin Langer is well within his rights to vent his spleen, get it all off his chest and carry a chip on his shoulder but every professional sporting coach should know when push comes to shove, they are expendable. 

Particularly when the players don’t want them around.

And that was the case in the Australian men’s cricket team last summer and nothing he says now or in the future will change that scenario. 

Pat Cummins said as much when he fronted the media after Langer’s sudden exit in February, that his coaching style had run its course with the senior members of the team and they had wanted the old “change in direction”.

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And as Cummins, white-ball skipper Aaron Finch and others stressed, it was not their call on whether Langer would be retained as coach. 

(Photo by Getty Images)

Cricket Australia’s head honchos, much more so than the players, are the ones who have come out of this sorry saga with the biggest dents in their reputation.

As Tim Paine revealed in his recent book, The Price Paid, the executives like to save face rather than make tough calls. He accused CEO Nick Hockley of deferring to a PR expert who had suggested Paine should resign after his sexting scandal was made public rather than showing proper leadership by making the call himself.

For an organisation which has demanded accountability from players, particularly in the past four years in the wake of the Sandpapergate overreaction, CA appears to answer to nobody. 

The handling of Langer’s exit was shambolic. 

It was widely known in Australian cricket circles that Langer’s intensity was wearing thin on the players, particularly the more experienced squad members who had grown into senior statesmen of the team. 

The team under Langer and prior to that, Darren Lehmann, had often spoken about how they held each other accountable and how they had benefited from having open, honest lines of communication.

Langer claimed in his interview with the BackChat podcast that when he confronted Paine with questions about his style, the keeper was forthright and that he had appreciated his candour. 

(Photo by Mark Kolbe/Getty Images)

Similar story with Finch, who – according to Langer – eventually opened up to let him know what he needed to rectify. 

But Langer believes Cummins had dodged the issue and that there had been frequent leaks to the media which had undermined his position heading into the final few months of his contract last summer when it was up for renewal. 

“(Cummins) said to me about five times, ‘This might be brutally honest.’ I said, ‘Pat, there is nothing brutal about your feedback. What is brutal is I’m hearing it behind my back through the media or through sources’. No one’s telling me. Tell me,” he said. “People say that I’m very intense, but they’re mistaking intensity with honesty.”

Those quotes have received plenty of coverage the past couple of days but what was more instructive was what he said later when explaining that he is a disciple of Canadian author, podcaster and research professor Brene Brown’s theory that the No.1 thing in leadership is to be honest. 

“Clear is kind, unclear is unkind so tell the truth. We think that we’re being nice but we’re being unclear. When people talk to me they will never go to sleep at night wondering whether it’s the truth, because it’s clear, it’s honest, it’s kind.”

Langer says he desperately wanted to hear feedback on what he could do better, not have a sugar-coated version of events from his players.

But that doesn’t mean that changing his ways meant he was going to be the right person for the job in 2022 and beyond. 

Both things can be true that Cummins and Finch should have spoken up earlier or been more direct but Langer’s time as coach was clearly coming to an end.

Media sources clearly won’t be revealed but Langer should know that players very rarely give direct tip-offs to journalists.

They often don’t trust reporters to keep “off the record” chats out of the public domain as they fear they’ll be accused of leaking the information.

More often than not they’ll confide in their agents or the folder holders at CA who use that info to get their agendas into the mainstream media. 

Langer calls it cowardly and to an extent, he’s not wrong. In an ideal world, all attributions in the media would have a name to them. But in reality, it doesn’t work like that and he knows that too. 

“Everyone was being nice to my face but I was reading about this stuff and half of it, I swear to God and on my kids’ lives, I could not believe that is what was making the papers,” Langer said. “A lot of journalists use the word ‘source’. I would say, change that word to ‘coward’.”

Langer also claimed the mutiny was inspired by a few of the loudest voices in the room with the rest of the crew going along with the plan.

Again, that’s pretty much always the case in situations like this, particularly in an elite sport dressing room. In any group environment, there will always be people who will lead the debate and those who won’t speak up as much.

But you can’t tell people what to think, only what to think about. 

There’s little doubt he’s being genuine when he says “when I finished with the Australian cricket team, I would have got messages that make you cry from 90 per cent of the players”.

(Photo by Ryan Pierse/Getty Images)

No one will ever know what the venn diagram of players who sent him a nice message and also wanted to see the back of him but it’s likely there’d be a fair overlap.

Langer ruled out ever coaching for England or going into politics but said he’s had six job offers to be a head coach in the past six months “but I haven’t looked at them because I want to be home with family, I want to be with my mates in Perth, I want to be happy”.

It all makes for added intrigue when Langer steps behind the microphone for Channel Seven this summer and the two-Test series against the West Indies and the three matches against South Africa need a spark to ignite viewing interest.

People will be reading all sorts of subtext into what Langer says, particularly if he’s critical of Cummins or the other senior players who clearly preferred a change at the helm to Andrew McDonald.

Langer can be blunt but he’s nothing if not honest. In the mould of the recently retired Ian Chappell, he can be the voice of calling a spade a damn shovel that cricket commentary needs. 

Years ago when he was a senior player at WA, Langer was being interviewed about a teammate who had been dropped after he was a few minutes late to training.

The interviewer basically intimated to Langer that perhaps the punishment was a bit harsh but he wasn’t having a bar of it. The player was late, he knew the consequences so he had to cop the ban because he’d let his teammates down. 

(Photo by Chris Hyde/Getty Images)

There are no grey areas when it comes to Justin Lee Langer. It’s what helped the 52-year-old get selected in the Australian Test team at the age of 22 ahead of no lesser player than Dean Jones for what turned out to be one of the greatest and most intense matches of all time in Australia’s famous one-run loss to the Windies at Adelaide in 1993.

It’s what kept him bouncing back after being dropped several times before becoming a bona fide legend of Australian cricket in 2001 with his Ashes hundred kick-starting a six-year run-spree before his retirement alongside Shane Warne and Glenn McGrath. 

In the podcast he told a tale about Channel Nine patriarch Kerry Packer’s advice to Langer and a bunch of Test players during a team dinner at the businessman’s home in 2005 which underlines his motto of loyalty. 

“Boys, in this life, as long as you know who you are and your friends know who you are, the rest can go and get f–ked,” Langer recalled of Packer’s proclamation in between cigarette puffs. “And you know what, at the time, we went oh yeah, it is so true. I tell you what, it is unbelievable, especially in this world we’re currently living in, knowing who you are and people have got your back, that’s really important.

“There’s the old saying the harder you work, the luckier you get. We’ve all heard that but I’ve got a different take on that – the harder you work, the harder it is to surrender so therefore when opportunities come up, you grab them. 

(Photo by Darrian Traynor – CA/Cricket Australia via Getty Images)

“I had this f–k you attitude when I was out on the cricket field because they (the opposition) are trying to take my living away, they’re trying to take my dream away from me so I’m not surrendering that for one second.” 

The strength he has derived from having steadfast beliefs such as these can also be a weakness. Perhaps if he was more malleable as a coach, he would have retained the players’ support. 

Australia’s T20 World Cup win last year and 4-0 Ashes rout in isolation should have been enough for a coach to get their contract renewed for much more than the six-month slap in the face that CA offered. 

Langer and Cummins have copped body blows in the court of public opinion over the past 12 months.

But if CA had displayed stronger leadership from the get-go, it could have potentially healed the rift in the camp or at the very least given an Australian cricket icon a dignified exit rather than the sordid saga being played out in the media before basically pushing Langer out the door. 

The Crowd Says:

2022-11-25T08:39:48+00:00

Simoc

Roar Rookie


And that would be because CA had the supreme egoist, the Brylcream boy, Sutherland, who was dead set hopeless at leadership. He might be good at something like making money, or playing cricket, but running CA, he was the biggest fail of all time. Massive ego. What a hopeless fail he was with Chris Gayle, when an enlightened person could have put the matter to rest with a phone call within an hour of it starting. Its called management. He was incompetent at it.

2022-11-25T08:33:19+00:00

Christo the Daddyo

Roar Rookie


That’s Scott Morrison level of self-delusion going on…

2022-11-25T07:30:38+00:00

Jeff

Roar Rookie


@HR Yes, the current deal does blow previous deals away. But 9 wasn't so far off in their offering in the last broadcast rights cycle. One of the key things in business is fostering and maintaining relationships. Loyalty cannot be underestimated re its importance in long-term planning within a business. If you have loyalty and history with suppliers/partners, more often than not, all parties will weather the ups and downs together. CA put a knife to that and the issues they have had with Ch 7 since almost the start, are a testament to that. That showed a lack of nous on the part of the CA Board IMO. And whilst *this* deal blew previous offers out of the water, what will the next deal now look like?

2022-11-25T07:21:04+00:00

Jeff

Roar Rookie


@ Rellum: I think the big thing that the old ACB did well, was continue to foster a partnership of loyalty and shared values with Ch 9. When CA cut Ch 9 adrift for the highest $ deal available, they shot themselves in the foot by throwing away the 9 relationship and taking on partners who didn't have that shared history/loyalty. Now, I cut Fox Sports some slack here as they do in fact have a fairly long association with CA and tbh, Fox delivers bloody well on content and focus, even if an argument can be mounted re paywalls. The issue is more so the swap of 9 for 7. Could probably also add in Ch 10 being discarded as well, after their top effort support for the BBL in early years. The then CA Board got the balance wrong re $ v managing (maintaining) existing commercial relationships. So for mine, it does indeed come down to a lack of cultural awareness/knowledge of commercial history by the overall board when accepting the current deal.

2022-11-25T03:39:48+00:00

Ben Pobjie

Expert


I’m sure he believes it

2022-11-25T01:34:47+00:00

HR

Guest


The NRL is a useful similarity here. NRL admin doesn't care about crowds or the community. They are about TV $$$. That's what keeps the players paid and in the game. A dip in crowds? Pah. People will still attend cricket and NRL. They don't need full houses to be viable.

2022-11-25T01:33:27+00:00

HR

Guest


Your using the current TV deal as evidence that the current CA is competent? The one everyone is using as a big reason why the crowds are way down. The old boards, the ACB were able to get big TV deals signed as well without all these problems. That TV deal is not a major achievement for CA and they managed to muck that up as well That is demonstrably false. This TV deal is - inflation adjusted - the largest TV deal they ever signed, by a mile. Yes, crowds are down. But they don't care about crowds. That much is clear. They care about TV $$$. It is TV money that pays the bills, and pays the players and keeps the players contracted to CA. If they don't get the TV money, the players will sign overseas T20 contracts. It really is that simple. The TV deals of the past with Channel 9 are dead and buried now.

2022-11-25T01:30:56+00:00

HR

Guest


By any economic measure, the TV deal signed last time was the most lucrative signed. Inflation adjusted, it barnstorms over the previous deals.

2022-11-25T01:09:10+00:00

Christo the Daddyo

Roar Rookie


Trying to compare TV deals done 20 years ago to one done now is laughable. Totally different environment.

2022-11-25T01:06:42+00:00

Christo the Daddyo

Roar Rookie


Is he, though? He’s not painted a truthful picture of his time as coach…

2022-11-25T01:05:26+00:00

Christo the Daddyo

Roar Rookie


Not characteristics of a good coach I wouldn’t have thought…

2022-11-25T00:13:27+00:00

nics

Roar Rookie


As I said, I don't think the honesty is the issue. It's the approachability when he gets confronted, and presumably the fuse. I've worked with honest people and I've worked with those who you just tread on eggshells around them. It's not to do with their intelligence/ability but their reactivity. At the end of the day you can have high performance with laid back/"driven" leaders and good leaders know when each approach is appropriate.

2022-11-25T00:06:55+00:00

Rellum

Roar Guru


Your using the current TV deal as evidence that the current CA is competent? The one everyone is using as a big reason why the crowds are way down. The old boards, the ACB were able to get big TV deals signed as well without all these problems. That TV deal is not a major achievement for CA and they managed to muck that up as well

2022-11-24T23:53:42+00:00

HR

Guest


Those state boards also struggle to stay solvent. CA, with it's board of ex-corporate directors are why CA was able to sign generous TV deals and sponsorship and bring in money That money is then able to be used to keep the best stars locked into Australian cricket. Without that, we'd lose talent to the global t20 circuit and our players will be doing what's happening in NZ and no longer signing central contacts. Sometimes, the balance between needing to be a corporation or a community service is tough to define. There is no perfect solution. CA were not as polished as they should have been with Langer, but the ongoing focus of it is just silly.

2022-11-24T23:47:52+00:00

HR

Guest


But CA’s commercial capital rests on being able to resonate with, and be accepted by, the public To a limited extent, but one can also point to a TV deal that largely excludes the public as a sign they aren't worried too much. A lot of your comment is conflating CA admin with the performance of the men's team. They are separate issues.

2022-11-24T23:30:07+00:00

Tony

Roar Guru


And reality, I suspect

2022-11-24T23:21:16+00:00

matth

Roar Guru


I just don’t see how a dignified exit could have been possible. Everything about Langer screams ‘fighter’. He appears inflexible, very black and white and struggles with nuance.

2022-11-24T21:52:25+00:00

Christo the Daddyo

Roar Rookie


I’ve lost a lot of respect for Langer over how he’s behaved recently. Comes across as an insecure, whiny bully. Add in the fact that he’s not being complete with the truth either. He neglects to admit he was warned multiple times to change his behaviour, so his claim that he was blindsided at the end is simply not true. If I were a cricket administrator I certainly wouldn’t be hiring him as a coach now. He’s well and truly burned his bridges with this outburst.

2022-11-24T19:15:55+00:00

Tony

Roar Guru


Time for Langer to move on. Everybody else has.

2022-11-24T13:16:50+00:00

Rellum

Roar Guru


John Buchanan is the best coach we every had. He managed all those ego's and had all the players at their best under him. Different era, players being more responsible for their games but Buchanan knew how to focus them in the right direction

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