AndyZaltzHair
Hall of Fame Member
just speculation though atmApparently Starc and Hazlewood are part of the leadership group, and were unhappy to be mentioned by Smith
some other news reported otherwise that they were not part
just speculation though atmApparently Starc and Hazlewood are part of the leadership group, and were unhappy to be mentioned by Smith
I mean, there really is no way he can be captain even if you could mount a case that losing the captaincy would be harsh. Would have no authority or respect in the role.Interesting to read in The Australian that senior Australian cricket figures where unhappy to be implicated in Smith referring to the 'leadership group' as being responsible for the incident as opposed to it being apparently just him and Warner of the side.
Him passing the buck like that may actually do him more damage in the eyes of his teammates than the incident itself as it showed under pressure he wasn't able to take responsibility; even in the unlikely event that Smith wasn't sacked as captain perhaps his teammates don't want him in the role anymore.
Correct that's what I meant by saying they were reportedly unhappy with Smith (when he said that the leadership group - of which they are apparently a part of - made the decision)They're part of the leadership group but weren't involved in the discussion
To an extent, but I think it's just trying to formalise the idea of "senior player" and take some of the workload off the captain's shoulders, and make it clear that just because you don't a (c) next to your name, you still have to fulfill similar demands as to your performance and conduct. I think most teams around the world would have similar - England certainly do.What's with this "leadership group" anyway? Did it exist before this test? If yes, what's the point in having a leadership group? I mean wouldn't it be a barrier between senior and junior players in team? Wouldn't the leadership group undermine the role of coaching staff and the captain himself?
Yeah but you have a team of 11. Having anything formal like that creates an unnecessary hierarchy. Obviously you have senior players that you should rely on for help, ideas, etc but having something formal in a setting like that I think does more harm than good. As other aussies in the past have mentioned, it used to be just the captain, vice captain, and the coach. That doesn't mean you can't delegate responsibilities to other players. But I do think it has the potential to create a cliquish culture.To an extent, but I think it's just trying to formalise the idea of "senior player" and take some of the workload off the captain's shoulders, and make it clear that just because you don't a (c) next to your name, you still have to fulfill similar demands as to your performance and conduct. I think most teams around the world would have similar - England certainly do.
Oh yeah but it's not an Australian innovation, it's more a modern "team theory" thing. They've popped up pretty much universally over the last decade or so.Yeah but you have a team of 11. Having anything formal like that creates an unnecessary hierarchy. Obvously you have senior players that II should rely on for help, ideas, etc but having something formal in a setting like that I think does more harm than good. As other aussies in the past have mentioned, it used to be just the captain, vice captain, and the coach. That doesn't mean you can't delegate responsibilities to other players. But I do think it has the potential to create a cliquish culture.
Doesn't Lyon have form wrt surreptitious pitch roughing or something like that? For whatever reason his involvement in this wouldn't surprise me.So if we take what Smith has meant previously to be "leadership group", and assume the reports are true that Starc and Haze weren't there, it would suggest the conversation was between Smith, Warner and Lyon.
The frustrating thing is that this inquiry with CA and Iain Roy is just a backroom attempt to remove as many heads as possible from the chopping block and mitigate PR fallout. I doubt we'll find out how deep it really goes.
Yes, I think it was because it was a fringe player Smith felt bad about him taking the fallI feel bad for Smith. If everyone had just denied it, the player who did it would have gotten a one match ban and pretty soon it'd be forgotten. He did the right thing and didn't throw the rookie under the bus and now he's ****ed.
Yeah pretty muchSounds corporate. Nonsense psychobabble in the absence of empiric evidence.
AwtaSounds corporate. Nonsense psychobabble in the absence of empiric evidence.
Or may be Bancroft might have refused to be made scapegoat alone and forced others to confess? We will never know.Yes, I think it was because it was a fringe player Smith felt bad about him taking the fall
That's quite within the realm of possibility. If you are capable of sending the new guy out to cheat for you, it's not a stretch to think you would then ask him to take one for the team if he got caught.Or may be Bancroft might have refused to be made scapegoat alone and forced others to confess? We will never know.
Either way they didn’t have choice in this case.