Mickey Arthur says his love for Pakistan cricket has declined

Arthur and his support staff were removed after 2023 World Cup

By Web Desk
February 01, 2024
Mickey Arthur says Pakistan cricket is in a very disappointing place - AFP

Former Pakistan Men's Team Director Mickey Arthur has opened up on the state of affairs Pakistan Cricket Board (PCB) is in and how it is disappointing for him.

Arthur and his support staff, including head coach Grant Bradburn, were removed after the Men in Green failed to qualify for the semi-final of the 2023 ODI World Cup.

The 55-year-old, while talking to ESPNCricinfo, narrated the story of how then Management Committee Chairman Zaka Ashraf removed him and how it was a shocker.

"At the end of the World Cup we went back to Lahore. We had planned the whole Australian tour, so much so that we had thought about teams and combinations. We arrived in Pakistan and there was silence initially.

"And then Zaka wanted a review meeting of the World Cup. We went to that, I did a presentation, Rehan [ul Haq, the team manager] did a presentation. Grant [Bradburn, the head coach] spoke, the whole management team was in this meeting.

"There was a recess and we were starting a camp two days later. I was still on the balcony organising with Usman Wahla what our logistics were going to be. And I wondered why there was such a break in this review. And then I got a little whisper in my ear that Zaka wanted to see me in a separate office in the museum at the HPC [High Performance Centre]. I went in, he asked me a whole lot of questions and then he said, 'look, we're going to remove the whole support staff and captain, basically, and that was it.'"

Arthur and the staff were appointed at the National Academy, however, they never worked there and resigned after three months.

"The whole review was just a charade," Arthur says. "I would have had a bit more respect for Zaka if he'd said it straight out. The way I realised the whole thing was a charade was Mohammad Hafeez was already sitting at the PCB offices and that's why Zaka got into trouble because our meeting went on and on and on."

"I was savvy enough in my contract negotiation to put in a clause that there was a three-month termination settlement, not a one-month settlement. We weren't going to resign because the minute you resign, you walk out and that's it. For all the efforts we put in, the coaches and I deserved the three-month settlement," he added.

"The PCB said we would be reassigned, but that was impossible. You can't reassign people who have signed contracts. You can't just reassign the team director, head coach and batting coach of the national team. That was a charade to get rid of us."

Meanwhile, Arthur opined that he follows Pakistan cricket passionately but vigour and thirst waned a little bit after what happened in Lahore.

"To be brutally honest, I think Pakistan cricket is in a very disappointing place. There's a massive amount of talent there, There are some world-class players, not just talented players. They're not given the support structure that they need to flourish.

"The one thing we had in 2019 and from the time we won the [2017] Champions Trophy to the end of it was an environment where the players were pushed. There was a lot demanded of them, but I backed every one of those boys 100%. So then they went out and played for the team instead of playing for them themselves.

"When there's security within the environment, Pakistan is very good. When there's that insecurity, players start playing for themselves instead of the team because they're thinking of the next tour, and the next contract. That's a dangerous place to be in, and that's kind of where Pakistan cricket is now. And that's something that's very disappointing and sad for me," he concluded.

Comments