Vaughan backs captain Strauss

Eurosport - Thu, 08 Jan 14:15:00 2009

Michael Vaughan has endorsed Andrew Strauss's credentials to captain England, following the resignation of Kevin Pietersen.

2008 England Andrew Strauss - 0

Vaughan, who famously led England to their surprise 2005 Ashes series victory but quit the captain's post himself after a loss of batting form last August, senses a "decent man" like Strauss fits the bill at a critical time.

With the Ashes looming and a Test series set to begin in the West Indies next month, England landed two major self-inflicted blows on Wednesday when Pietersen resigned after just three Tests in charge and coach Peter Moores - whose disintegrating relationship with the captain caused the crisis - was sacked.

Vaughan himself, left out of the Caribbean tour after a lack of opportunity to regain his form this winter, was being touted by some to return to lead England until strong favourite Strauss was named.

The Ashes-winning captain is in no doubt the England and Wales Cricket Board have chosen wisely.

"If there is one man who can get the England team to gel and bring the players together after weeks or even months of damaging rumours, it is Andrew Strauss," Vaughan wrote in his Daily Telegraph column.

"In the 18 months since Peter Moores took over as coach the results have not been good - but I think Strauss will be a very, very good captain.

"Such a decent man can bring back maturity and stability to the England team."

Vaughan's omission from the squad to face the West Indies was reportedly the issue which pushed Pietersen and Moores' disagreements to an unworkable level.

Pietersen is thought to have wanted his old captain back in the ranks - a policy resisted by the selectors in his absence.

Vaughan still hopes that somehow yesterday's drama can help England move forward.

"It may be that everything happens for a reason and things will turn out the best for English cricket," he added.

His mission, meanwhile, for Pietersen - should he choose to accept it - is simple.

"What Kevin has to do now is go to the West Indies and score a hundred in the first Test - then all the controversy will be forgotten," Vaughan prescribes.

"KP is very much his own person, which shows in his batting. He has never used a batting coach; he relies on his natural flair; he does it his own way - like the maverick he is. That is the genius he is.

"He is the one England player I have played with who has the ability to sustain that number one position in the world. He is that good. That now has to be his goal."

As for his own future, Vaughan took the opportunity to rule out any fanciful notions that he could be considered for the coaching role vacated by Moores and thought most likely to fall - on an interim basis at least - to Andy Flower.

"Finally I'd like to add that I'm not interested in coaching England or anyone else at the moment," he spells out.

"I want to play and score hundreds for Yorkshire and England again."

Duncan Fletcher, the England coach who helped Vaughan's team win the Ashes four years ago, fears there will be tricky times ahead for Strauss.

Fletcher left his post after England's hopes of defending the Ashes ended instead in a 5-0 whitewash Down Under - and then an early elimination from a troubled 2007 World Cup compounded matters.

He is astounded the ECB were unable to limit the damage of Pietersen and Moores' apparent personality clash and expects the fall-out to haunt England, leaving Strauss with more fire-fighting ahead.

"What a mess," Fletcher exclaims in the Guardian.

"How sad for English cricket that a year containing a home Ashes series has begun in such chaos."

It is the future, though, which concerns Fletcher most - and he warns Strauss is highly likely to be put in an uncomfortable and unenviable position.

"The selectors really should have stepped in before things turned ugly. Instead, England are in real trouble with the arrival of the Australians only a few months away. It all seems such a shame."

Fletcher believes Strauss, expected to lead England on the one-day leg as well as in the Tests in the Caribbean - despite his perceived ineffectiveness as a limited-overs batsman - may find himself trying to unite divided factions within the team.

"Andrew Strauss was the only viable option. But he will need the support of all the other players, and he will need to be rated by the other players too - which is crucial for any leader," he explains.

"There are egos in that dressing room who could cause more problems for the new captain. Not least of the difficulties will be how to handle KP when he returns to the rank and file.

"The ECB has exposed him somewhat by admitting that its research, whatever form it took, revealed a lack of support for Pietersen as captain.

"That to me sounds like a huge problem in the making: will the dressing room divide into pro- and anti-KP camps?

"Will the new captain have the backing of all the senior players? It's going to be a huge issue for the poor captain in the months ahead."

Sporting Life / Eurosport

Comment 1 - 15 of 15

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  1. Flintoff, Pieterson and Collingwood can't be­ selected again as ODI captains.

    The only other­ indispensible members of the ODI team are Shah,­ Sidebottom, Broad and Patel.

    As Broad and Patel are­ too junior, Shah or Sidebottom have to be ODI­ captain.

    However, Sidebottom has a poor fitness­ record. Shah for ODI captain.

    From biswasroop, on Fri 9 Jan 2:13AM
  2. Tom Moody was a hopeless coach.

    Dav Whatmore, Shane­ Warne or Andy Flower for coach.

    From biswasroop, on Fri 9 Jan 2:03AM
  3. The EWCB are completely spineless bunch of arrogant­ twits, Pieterson was the right choice and the EWCB­ should have backed the "captain" when he­ wanted Vaughn to be included in the squad to go to WI.­ Strauss is a "good" man but does not­ necessarily make him a good Captain, what experience­ does he have? But now that he has got the job as­ captain I really do wish him well for England's­ sake, I want England to win.

    From starman_123, on Fri 9 Jan 1:38AM
  4. amoahjohn16: Tell me what is the most exiting sport in­ the world? Football the worlds most popular sport can­ be boring, I have seen games where teams involved have­ no flair for the game and no incentive to win but not­ to loose and the ends ends in a 0-0 draw. I have lived­ in the USA for the last 25 years and can tell you that­ American football, Baseball, Basketball, and Ice Hockey­ are boring too. Many a time I have fallen asleep­ watching these games. And yes Cricket is a sport, I for­ one enjoy it as do many, many others around the world.­ Why so much publicity for a national captain to resign,­ its because Pietersen is the best batsman in the world­ and the whole cricketing world and media attention is­ on him. Just curious if you think Cricket is SO BORING,­ what the hell are you doing on these cricketing pages.

    From starman_123, on Fri 9 Jan 1:27AM
  5. Well 'amoahjohn16' you may think cricket is­ boring but if that's the case how sad is your life­ when you resort to reading a forum about it?

    From Angeldon, on Thu 8 Jan 2:10PM
  6. sick of all this cricket "hello" who cares­ anyway in my opinion, i repeat in my opinion cricket is­ boring by the way and dont tell me it was invented by­ the english because it got its roots in the african­ coastal areas

    From fallinhardon, on Thu 8 Jan 2:04PM
  7. Let me guess akoahjohn16, you're from one of those­ countries who don't play cricket?

    From The Captain, on Thu 8 Jan 1:56PM
  8. So, we've got a very decent chap as captain.­ Excellent, and sincere best wishes to him. The ECB are­ probably off to lunch patting each other on the back to­ cries of "All's well that ends well!" and­ the Aussies are sitting on the beach sharpening the­ knives that will finish off any survivors of the­ England dressing room back-stabbers party.

    K.P. might­ not be ideal captain material but he's got plenty­ of the 'stuff' that seems to be lacking in­ English cricket.. for example, a young man who had been­ raised in Australia and coached by ex Aussie test­ players, returned to his native England and joined a­ then leading Southern county club. After his debut­ match, were he unleashed some aggressive­ Thompson/Lillie inspired seam attack, he was taken­ aside by the Blazer Brigade and told "We don't­ like to do that sort of thing over here, Old Boy."­ Ignoring what he assumed was a joke he dished out more­ in the following matches until ordered to back off by­ the Chairman. Disgusted, he walked out of cricket and­ England lost a great bowler to industry. Moral.. the­ influence of the Great UK Blazer Brigade is still­ endemic in our attitude to sport. We either accept it­ and 'enjoy the taking part' or allow it to be­ taken over by the Ecclestones of this world who at­ least get it shown on terrestrial TV.

    From Biffo, on Thu 8 Jan 12:53PM
  9. amoahjohn16, cricket is the second most popular sport­ in the world. Better than many American sports, where­ they play their World Series with just their own teams­ involved

    From Alex B, on Thu 8 Jan 12:51PM
  10. post 4 chris w spot on im sick of the old school tie­ rubbish get in the real world beffy as coach

    From maxdobinson, on Thu 8 Jan 12:50PM
  11. SHUT UP amoahjohn16!!!!!!!!!!!!!

    From sihle.dlamini, on Thu 8 Jan 12:40PM
  12. what a bunch of pillocks the cricket board are, we are­ the laughing stock of the world. these bafoons who­ guzzle port and chomp cigars make me sick. they have­ strangled our game for decades. fall on your own swords­ you cowards and let a real cricket mind like Sir Ian­ Botham to show you how its done!

    From chris w, on Thu 8 Jan 12:10PM
  13. Well, what a surprise! Vaughan wasn't good enough­ to be reselected when Pietersen was captain, so now he­ plays kiss-@ss with the Strauss so he can slime his way­ back into the team!

    From Disgusted with Britain, on Thu 8 Jan 12:09PM
  14. Strauss will be captain of the Test Match team but­ he's rubbish in the one day version of the game;­ therefore why appoint a 1/2 time captain?

    From jonathan g, on Thu 8 Jan 11:48AM
  15. Comment hidden due to its low rating. Show

    Why so much publicity for this issue of someone­ resigning as captain of national cricket team.A game­ played seriuosly by less than 10 countries in the­ world.Striking a thrown ball with a bat, what is so­ exciting about this game?Someone tell me.Most boring­ sport.Is it a sport at all?

    From kofi, on Thu 8 Jan 11:45AM
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