Soul-searching Australia draft former captains to review

MELBOURNE, (Reuters) – Former Australia captains  Allan Border, Mark Taylor and Steve Waugh will join a review  panel charged with finding ways to make the national team more  competitive following their humbling Ashes defeat to bitter  rivals England.

England retained the coveted urn after handing out three  innings defeats in the five-test series that concluded in  January, stunning the national side and sparking calls by local  media and pundits for an overhaul of the game’s administration.

The panel would be chaired by prominent businessman Don  Argus, a former chairman of resources giant BHP Billiton, with former ICC and Australian Cricket Board chief  Malcolm Speed deputy chairman, Cricket Australia (CA) officials  told reporters in Melbourne yesterday.

“I do want to stress that this review is not about  individuals,” CA chairman Jack Clarke said.
“It’s about setting up processes, structures, systems to  give Australian cricket the best chance of sustained future  success. It will not be a witch-hunt.

“We normally do a review anyway, but not such a high-profile  review. We haven’t done it for some time.
“Australians don’t like losing, I don’t like losing either  I’ve got to say.

Allan Border

“And I think to lose the Ashes twice a row in Australia —  and we lost it pretty badly — I think any corporate business,  whether it be a sporting business or whatever should look at its  systems at some stage.

“There’s no point sneaking behind a bush to do this, we’d  much sooner be up front and tell the public what’s going on.”
Border, who took over from Kim Hughes in 1984/85, helped  Australia turn their fortunes around after a lean patch in the  early and mid-80s, before handing the reins over to Taylor who  cemented Australia’s status as the world’s top test side  throughout the 1990s.

Waugh carried on Taylor’s success from 1998/99, captaining a  team many regarded as one of the best of all time, while leading  Australia to a record streak of 16 test victories before his  retirement in 2004.

Although enjoying initial success under current captain  Ricky Ponting, Australia have struggled to replace a golden  generation of players including bowling greats Shane Warne and  Glenn McGrath, who retired in 2007.

The team has slumped to fifth in the ICC test rankings, but  are still holding onto their top ranking in one-day cricket and  are in the process of trying to defend their World Cup title in  the subcontinent.

Clarke denied the review was a concession that the game’s  administrators had failed to manage Australia’s transition.

Steve Waugh
Mark Taylor

“I don’t think it’s an admission of anything. I think it’s  just prudent corporate practice whether you’re running a cricket  organisation or running BHP, to be quite frank.”

“At no time in history have we had so many great players  leave at once. Australia’s been in this place before, but has  always got out of it.

“We want to make sure we get out of it very quickly and have  a rosy future.”