The Star Malaysia

Ring in the changes

Warne calls for new Australian cricket coach and selection chairman

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SYDNEY: Test great Shane Warne yesterday called on Australia coach Mickey Arthur to be replaced by former New Zealand skipper Stephen Fleming days after branding the nation’s cricket chiefs “muppets”.

The outspoken leg-spinner, who said he was “frustrated on many levels at present”, praised Fleming as “the best opposition captain we played against” on his website www. shanewarne.com.

“I believe he brings a lot to the table, a calmness, an intelligen­t understand­ing of the game and a very good cricket brain.

“He’s a good communicat­or too as well as a good leader of men.”

Warne, 43, who also wants former Test wicketkeep­er Rod Marsh as chairman of selectors, said the current Australian set-up was not working as the players gear up for two Ashes series against England over the next year.

In a post entitled “Where is Australian cricket at? Part 1” on his website, Warne said: “The next 12 months is the biggest 12 months of cricket for the Australian cricket team in a long, long time.

“If we do nothing now, we will be where we were 30 years ago. There needs to be urgent action and a new strategy-plan put in place.”

In Twitter comments on Monday, Warne blasted Cricket Australia’s policy of rotating players, which has attracted stinging criticism from other greats of the game.

Cricket Australia (CA) CEO James Sutherland has told Warne he is happy to discuss Warne’s ideas but has expressed disappoint­ment with the manner in which he expressed his concerns, CA said on their website.

Australia, third in the Test and one-day rankings, lost the recent Twenty20 series against Sri Lanka after drawing the one-day series and beating the visitors in the Test series.

Warne was last week fined A$5,000 (US$5,250) for a code of behaviour breach in the domestic Big Bash League.

And he apologised earlier this month after a foulmouthe­d rant against West Indian all-rounder Marlon Samuels that earned him a ban and a A$4,500 fine.

Warne claimed 708 Test wickets in a celebrated career that also courted controvers­y, including a fine for taking money from a bookmaker. He was sent home from the 2003 World Cup for taking a banned diuretic.

Also yesterday, CA said that Australian pace great Dennis Lillee has been appointed to CA’s’ high-performanc­e team as a fast bowling adviser.

 ??  ?? In the spotlight: Shane Warne and British actress Elizabeth Hurley during the Australian Open tennis tournament on Jan 19. Inset: Stephen Fleming, the man Warne says should be coach of the Australian cricket team. — AFP
In the spotlight: Shane Warne and British actress Elizabeth Hurley during the Australian Open tennis tournament on Jan 19. Inset: Stephen Fleming, the man Warne says should be coach of the Australian cricket team. — AFP

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