logo
Gary Kirsten unmasks PCB's politics, sheds light on ‘tumultuous' Pakistan head coach tenure: ‘Teams need to be run by…'

Gary Kirsten unmasks PCB's politics, sheds light on ‘tumultuous' Pakistan head coach tenure: ‘Teams need to be run by…'

Hindustan Times9 hours ago

Former South African cricketer Gary Kirsten opened up about his time as the Pakistan cricket team's white-ball coach and revealed why he relinquished the position. Kirsten, who led India to their 2011 ODI World Cup title, was appointed as Pakistan's white-ball head coach in 2024 on a two-year deal. However, his tenure got off to a tough start during the T20 World Cup, as Pakistan fell at the group stage following shock defeats to the USA — a non-Test side — and to archrivals India during their US leg.
The Proteas veteran was assured a significant role in selection decisions upon his appointment, but that changed after Pakistan's T20 World Cup exit, when he found himself excluded from subsequent selection meetings. He then decided to relinquish the head coach position after just six months.
Kirsten revealed that losing his say in team selection made it difficult for him to coach effectively and make a meaningful impact on the group.
"It was a tumultuous few months. I realised quite quickly I wasn't going to have much of an influence. Once I was taken off selection and asked to take a team and not be able to shape the team, it became very difficult as a coach then to have any sort of positive influence on the group," Kirsten told Wisden.
The 57-year-old remains open to a return to Pakistan's coaching setup, but stressed that he would do so only under the right conditions.
"If I got invited back to Pakistan tomorrow, I would go, but I would want to go for the players, and I would want to go under the right circumstances," Kirsten said.
Pakistan cricket has witnessed a big downfall in the last few years, with back-to-back group stage exits in the ICC events - 2023 ODI World Cup, 2024 T20 World Cup and 2025 Champions Trophy.
Conflict, internal divisions, and growing interference from officials have become a defining feature of the Pakistan Cricket Board's landscape, fueling controversy and unrest within the game.
Kirsten also highlighted the challenge of operating within a PCB structure where cricket isn't necessarily led by those who have played the game — something he believes has a detrimental impact.
"Cricket teams need to be run by cricket people. When that's not happening and when there's a lot of noise from the outside that's very influential noise, it's very difficult for leaders within the team to walk a journey that you feel like you need to walk in order to take this team to where it needs to go," he added.
The 2011 World Cup-winning coach made it clear that he doesn't want to get involved in politics and other agendas outside cricket and just wants to coach a team. He also reserved high praise for Pakistan cricketers and talked about the pressure their players face after a loss.
"I'm too old now to be dealing with other agendas, I just want to coach a cricket team, work with the players – I love the Pakistan players, they're great guys. I had a very short period of time with them and I feel for them. More than any other team in the world, they feel the pressure of performance massively, when they lose, it's hectic for them, and they feel that. But they're professional cricketers and I'm a professional cricket coach. When we get into that environment, there are generally certain things you do to help a team be the best that they can be, and when there's no interference, you go down the road, and if it's a talented group of guys, you're generally going to have success," he concluded.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

'It's Okay': Yuvraj's Tweet After Australia's Defeat In WTC 2025 Final Goes Viral
'It's Okay': Yuvraj's Tweet After Australia's Defeat In WTC 2025 Final Goes Viral

News18

timean hour ago

  • News18

'It's Okay': Yuvraj's Tweet After Australia's Defeat In WTC 2025 Final Goes Viral

Last Updated: Australia failed to defend the target of 282 runs in the WTC 2025 final played against South Africa and went down by 5 wickets. Australia suffered a shocking defeat by 5 wickets against South Africa in the World Test Championship (WTC) 2025 final. In the one-off match played at Lord's from June 11 to 14, Aussies failed to defend the target of 282 runs. Opening batter Aiden Markram scored 136 runs for the Proteas in the second innings and added 147 runs for the third wicket with Temba Bavuma (66) to seal a memorable win for South Africa at the Home of Cricket. After South Africa ended their 27-year-long wait for an ICC title, former Indian all-rounder Yuvraj Singh took to X to share a tweet in which, apart from praising the South African team and their players, he also took a cheeky dig at Australia. 'The class of 2025 ends a 27-year wait and lifts the ICC World Test Championship Trophy in style! Huge congrats to the @ProteasMenCSA on a historic win at Lord's. I've always believed there's no greater measure of resilience and character than Test cricket and South Africa rose to the occasion! #AidenMarkram's century was pure class. @KagisoRabada25, @marcojansen2000 and @NgidiLungi brought relentless intensity and #TembaBavuma led with calm and courage. A final worthy of the format Tough luck #Australia! You know It's okay to let go of one trophy #WTCFinal," Yuvraj wrote. Aussies started the WTC 2025 final as favourites, and they were in the pole position when Mitchell Starc removed Ryan Rickelton for six runs on the first ball of the third over of the run chase on Friday (June 13), but after that, Markram first joined hands with Wiaan Mulder and then with Bavuma to keep Australia at bay and end South Africa's more than two-decade-long wait. For his super show with the bat, Markram won the Player of the Match award, and he also became the first South African batter to score a century in the ICC final. A defeat against South Africa at Lord's was a bitter pill to swallow for Australia, who went down in an ICC final for the first time after suffering a defeat against England in the 2010 T20 World Cup. First Published: June 15, 2025, 23:35 IST

A new dawn — how braveheart Bavuma and his men defied the odds
A new dawn — how braveheart Bavuma and his men defied the odds

The Hindu

timean hour ago

  • The Hindu

A new dawn — how braveheart Bavuma and his men defied the odds

As Temba Bavuma strolled the Lord's outfield on Saturday afternoon, the mace in one hand and young son Lihle in his other arm, a sea of emotion would have swirled through his mind. Just moments previously, he had helped end years of heartbreak, masterminding an extraordinary five-wicket conquest of Australia in the final of the World Test Championship. Bavuma wasn't just the captain of the all-conquering South African team, he was its leader in every sense of the word. It wasn't just redemption time for the Proteas, but also vindication of Bavuma's faith in himself, of the establishment's faith in him. There are certain tags that simply refuse to go away. They surface without warning, and then develop a life of their own, mushrooming beyond imagination to stick like an unrelenting leech. Most of these labels are negative, insulting even. Until 14 June 2025, South Africa were saddled with the unflattering tag of 'chokers'. No more, not ever. So often have South Africa stumbled with the finish line in sight that even they might have started questioning themselves, wondering nervously if they had it in them to breast the tape. Successive generations of wonderful cricketers – and let's make no mistake, South Africa have had them by the bushel since their return to international cricket in 1991 – found the knockout stage of ICC tournaments a step too far. Their more recent meltdown came just under 12 months back, in the final of the T20 World Cup in Bridgetown. With 30 needed off 30 deliveries to best Rohit Sharma's India, the Proteas found ways and means to self-destruct; India were brilliant, of course, spearheaded by that champion paceman, Jasprit Bumrah. But they will be the first to admit that South Africa's generosity and munificence too played a big part in their seven-run heist. South Africa's captain that fateful Saturday afternoon was Aiden Markram, a terrific batter who, somewhat like KL Rahul, doesn't have the numbers that his skills demand. After 46 Tests, he only averages 36.50, far too few for someone of his ability. The Kensington Oval must have been fresh in memory when Markram approached the Lord's showdown, believing that he owed his team a few. A first-innings blob wouldn't have helped, but he came roaring back, first with the scalp of Steve Smith with his off-spin, then with a century for the ages that helped South Africa mount the joint second-highest successful chase at Lord's. Hot favourites Australia were the clear favourites going into the match, despite a rejigged batting order with Marnus Labuschagne opening for the first time. Put in by Bavuma, they scrambled to 212, then rolled their opponents over for 138 on the back of Captain Fantastic Pat Cummins' six-wicket burst. The defending WTC champions (at the time) are masters of tightening the screws, of elevating capitalising on front-running into a fine art. A lead of 74 was seen as decisive. The consensus was that anything above 250 in the fourth innings was mountainesque. And so, when last pair Mitchell Starc and Josh Hazlewood combined for a 59-run stand to boost the total to 207 and their overall advantage to 281, well… South Africa had to battle not just the weight of Lord's history, their own previous failings and a fired-up Australian outfit, they also had to explode the myth that they had taken the 'easy' route to the title round. All six of their series in the two-year WTC league stage were two-Test affairs. They didn't face either Australia or England, and they were held to a 1-1 draw by India in January 2024 after suffering a two-day hammering on a terrible surface in Cape Town. No one seemed to care that they had won seven Tests on the bounce to secure their place in the final, or that India sealed their own fate by losing six of their last eight Tests, including three in a row at home to New Zealand. Bavuma and the other senior players were nonchalant outwardly at the barrage of criticism and thinly veiled innuendo, but they must have been hurting at the casual dismissal of their roaring run. The only way to silence the critics was with a chase for history to remember. Who better to mastermind it than the captain that let it slip away in Bridgetown and the captain who had won eight of his nine previous Tests in charge? Game-changer Bavuma joined Markram in the second innings with South Africa on 70 for two, a decent start but with plenty of work to do. He should have been dismissed for two but Smith, donning a helmet and standing close in at second slip because numerous deliveries previously had 'died', was taken by surprise by the speed and height with which the edge rushed to him. Not only did the former skipper shell the catch, he also dislocated his right little finger and took no further part in the match. It was a significant development for more reasons than one. Where Bavuma lived to fight another day, Australia were deprived of the Smith wisdom that Cummins has so come to rely on. Perhaps there would have been no change in the script even otherwise, but Australia seemed a little flat and bereft of inspiration in Smith's absence. No exaggeration – one only has to go back to Indore and March 2023 to realise how transformed a side Australia were when Smith took over the captaincy after Cummins was unfortunately forced to return home owing to his mother's illness. Bavuma's delight at being let off quickly turned to despair when he did his left hamstring, a little later. He had only reached six and South Africa were nearly 200 away, so he wasn't abandoning the ship. The 35-year-old has a history of injuries, but this wouldn't bury his ambitions. He hobbled along, overcoming the pain barrier, refusing to let physical discomfort or the constant chirping from the Australians – he later revealed that the Aussies had invoked the 'choke' more than once – disrupt his concentration. Where Bavuma was the braveheart, Markram was magnificent. Poised and assured, he gave the impression that he would see it home. There was a certain sense of calm that percolated through to the balcony at Lord's, where his excited but subdued mates willed him on. Willed Bavuma on. Willed the chase on. They were soon reminded that they were not in a minority; Lord's was awash with the Protean green, while in the commentary box and in the stands, former skippers Shaun Pollock, Graeme Smith and A.B. de Villiers stood in solidarity. As did most of the cricket world, which believed that South Africa deserved their place in the sun now, more than ever before. When Kyle Verreynne brought up the winning run, tears flowed unchecked. Tears of ecstasy, of course, but also of relief. The drought had ended, the monkey had been flung off the back. One couldn't shake off the feeling that even while history was being made, this was also history in the making. It will take a bold individual to preclude South Africa collecting more silverware in the future. 🏆 CHAMPIONS OF THE WORLD! 🇿🇦 A 5 wicket victory! The Proteas Men have conquered the Test arena, winning the ICC World Test Championship 2025 Final against Australia at the iconic Lord's Cricket Ground 🏟️🙌 Undeniable. Unstoppable. Unrelenting. History made at the Home of… — Proteas Men (@ProteasMenCSA) June 14, 2025 As in such instances, South Africa had numerous heroes – not just in the final, but throughout the campaign. Their bowling superstar was the outrageously gifted and unassuming Kagiso Rabada, who came into the title clash with a cloud hanging over his head. Rabada had just served out a one-month ban (during IPL 2025) after testing positive for a banned recreational drug. He admirably took responsibility for his action, but he was also convinced that as silly as that might have been, it would not define him. He got down to business emphatically, with five wickets in Australia's first innings and four in the second. If Marco Jansen had been his ally the first time around, then it was Lungi Ngidi who became his partner in crime in the second dig, breaking the game open with the scalps of Smith, first-innings top-scorer Beau Webster and Cummins. On their way to Lord's, South Africa had eked out performances from so many – Ryan Rickelton and Tristan Stubbs and David Beddingham and Wiaan Mulder, and also from the superb left-arm spinner Keshav Maharaj, who wept unashamedly after victory had been achieved. There was Markram, yes, but few shone brighter than Bavuma, him of the hamstring strain of the final which didn't prevent him from helping Markram add 147 for the third wicket. The captain, who has won nine and drawn the other in his first 10 Tests at the helm (no other Test skipper has escaped defeat in his first ten outings), averaged 59.25 in the two-year WTC cycle culminating in the Lord's faceoff. He might be the shortest physically on the park, but stands tallest among his colleagues, his legend having grown manifold following his heroic batting at Lord's. In the 33 years since they first took part in an ICC event – at the 50-over World Cup in Australia and New Zealand – South Africa had lost one final, 12 semifinals and two quarterfinals. Amidst this heap of rubble, their triumph in the inaugural Champions Trophy (then known as the ICC KnockOut Trophy) in Bangladesh in 1998 under Hansie Cronje has almost been forgotten. The roars of this seismic success under Bavuma, however, will reverberate for a long, long time. It's been a difficult time for the country on various counts but this win, fashioned by men from varied and diverse backgrounds, will offer hope. What Bavuma's boys have shown is that unity of purpose, a common goal and a burning fire can make even the most impossible appear fairly commonplace. Cricket in South Africa won't reach the dizzying heights of popularity it enjoys in India, but now more than ever, it looms as a vehicle for change, as a beacon of optimism. That alone makes the end of a long, agonising wait well worth it.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store