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Siddons targets test improvements
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Newly appointed
coach Jamie Siddons has taken up the Bangladesh position as a
challenge. He spoke about his aspirations and dreams with the
Tigers and shared his cricketing philosophy.
Q: A couple of months ago you were approached by the BCB but
declined to take up the Bangladesh position. What prompted the
change of heart?
Jamie Siddons (JS): There were certain personal issues I had to
sort out back home but I will not go into those. The timing was
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right for me when I was first offered the job. A few things happened
in the last month or so which have made it a little easy for me to
accept the job. I have played first class cricket for 23 years. I
was an assistant coach for five years. Now I think it is time for me
to step in for a job with a full national side. To take charge of a
national team was my ultimate goal and now that I have got that
opportunity I am really keen to get started.
Q: You worked as a senior coach in the Australian Cricket Academy.
You spent some time with the Australian national team too. Now you
are about to take charge of Bangladesh. Is this your biggest
challenge so far as a coach?
JS: Absolutely, without any doubt. Probably it is a natural
progression but I do not think that it is going to be easy. I have
to work really, really hard. I need the support from the
administration and my support staff. I think I have got a lot of
things to offer to Bangladesh cricket in the coming months.
Q: A coach’s job is to guide the players and bring out the best in
them. Some feel that guidance is more needed at a tender age rather
than in the National team. Do you agree with that?
JS: To some extent yes, but I think Bangladesh has got a national
team with a lot of young cricketers so the guidance is very
important there as well. Hopefully my job as the coach of the
national team will involve guiding the coaches of the junior teams
and the development squads also and hopefully the things that I am
doing at the top will be happening down below as well. It is really
important that the young players do not come to the national team
with a lot of deficiencies. As a National coach I do not want to
deal with the minor issues that should have been solved a lot
earlier in players’ career.
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Q: The fact that Bangladesh has a youthful
national side, does that make your job easier or harder?
JS: It would have been great for me to be the coach of Australia
(laughs). It is great for Tim Nielsen at the moment. He has got
some really talented, top ranked players of the world and the
best team in the world. It is really nice to be Tim at the
moment but I am not. I have got young players in my side who I
think are enthusiastic and ready to learn. I can see a massive
improvement if they are given the right guidance and their
mental approach is right. That is the challenge for me. |
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Q: You were a top class batsman and a brilliant fielder. Bowling
was not your specialty. Do you feel any necessity of a specialist
bowling coach in your coaching staff?
JS: Definitely, I think there is a place for the bowling coach in
the structure of the Bangladesh national team. I would have every
aspects of the game covered if I could but we can’t take twenty
people on tour. We put a few names out there. I will ask for what I
want whether I get that or not. I think the Board will consider that
with great importance.
Q: The Australians have changed the mentality of Test match batting
which nowadays is a lot more aggressive. Bangladeshi batsmen
generally have the natural aggressive instinct. Do you feel that
they should carry that instinct to the Test level too?
JS: Obviously you got to be aggressive for success at any level of
cricket. But at the same time you need to be sensible. You got to be
able to jump on the bad balls, make the ball percentages of the
danger areas very small and make the bowlers worry about where you
would go to hit them. But you also got to leave a lot of balls alone
in Test cricket if you want to get success. I think Bangladeshi
batsmen need to learn how to blend that perfectly. They should hit
the bad balls for fours. There is no point to bat for two hours and
score only 20 but if the opposition bowled two very good hours then
someday you have to be satisfied with 20 and remain not out. That is
my challenge, to educate the batsmen when to go and when not to go.
Q: You came to Dhaka on the same flight with few of the Bangladeshi
players including skipper Mohammad Ashraful. You must have talked to
them. What is your first impression?
JS: We really had a brief chat because we were late for the plane.
We talked a little while and got introduced to each other. It was
great to see some of the faces that I am going to see over the next
two years. That was a small introduction and hopefully I will soon
meet the other players and the coaching staff.
Q: Coach-captain relation is pivotal for the success of any team.
What kind of understanding do you seek with Mohammad Ashraful?
JS: Coach-captain relation is massively important. Ash is a young
captain as far as his international experience counts. I am a young
coach as well. We might have different ideas, we might have same
ideas but more importantly we need to bring them together so that
the players can follow the direction where we want to take them. Our
chats will be often and long and hopefully our relationship would be
a fantastic one that will take Bangladesh cricket forward.
Q: How would you present yourself to the Bangladeshi cricketers? As
a teacher or as a friend?
JS: Of course as a teacher but I will hope to earn their respect and
be a friend to them but not too close.
Q: Bangladesh has made considerable progress in ODIs in the last 3-4
years but the Test matches remain the problematic area. Will you
work on that and particularly focus on Test cricket?
JS: Definitely not. We need to keep winning in one day cricket and
start learning all about Test cricket. I do not think that we can do
that overnight. Our focus will be on both one-day cricket and Test
cricket. The basics of cricket are pretty simple—batting well,
bowling well and fielding well. We will be working on the basics of
the game.
Q: Bangladesh has won a lot of ODIs over the last few years but why
have they not got the same kind of success in Tests in the same
period?
JS: Only because of failing to apply the different mental approach
to the game and knowing when to execute that skill and when to hold
back. There is no difference in skills. The timing of when they are
playing certain shot needs to improve. They got the shots obviously
because they do it in one-day cricket but they do not pick the right
time to do that in Tests. That is for the difference in mental
approach.
Q: Would you like to be in the selection panel?
JS: I am going to have a chat with the selectors and the Board
members and see what they think. But I would like to play a part in
the selection panel.
Q:
…but you still do not know the players
JS: In the beginning I would be glad to sit there in the selection
panel and listen to everything the selectors discuss. I would put my
requirements and hope that they will give me the team according to
that.
Q: How important will your relationship be with the administration
and the media for getting desired success?
JS: It is really important. We got to understand that we are all on
the same boat. Our goal is the same and that is the progression of
Bangladesh cricket. If we want to go forward we all need to work
together. If we fight each other and not go in the same direction
then it is going to be really hard for the coach to have success. So
I am looking forward to a good working relationship with everyone in
administration and media.
Q: Are you going to do homework on Bangladeshi players before you
come back to take full charge of the national team?
JS: I will come back probably in the third week of November. In the
meantime I got to put together a program for the lead up to the New
Zealand tour. I think I will get the National players in the camp
for around 15 days. So my job would be to come back with a complete
training schedule. Beside that I am taking a lot of video footages
of the Bangladeshi players. I will analyze those. I will get the
opposition’s footage as well. I will try to find their strong and
weak points.
Q: In two years where do you want to see Bangladesh cricket?
JS: I want to see that our performance is improving all the time and
moving up the rankings. It does not mean that my aim is to take
Bangladesh to number two or number three position in the ranking. My
philosophy is very simple. Daily improvement is my aim. We want to
do better from what we did in the last match. I think we will
definitely be a much improved team in two years. How improved? Well,
time will tell.
Q: Now, on your career as a player. Shane Warne has bracketed you in
the list of the 50 greatest cricketers he has ever seen. How do you
feel about that?
JS: I played with Shane and against Shane. He has obviously seen a
lot of good cricketers. I feel honored that Shane has put me in that
bracket. In fact some people get a bit of humor out of it because I
have never played Test cricket. But at the same time a lot of people
respect the fact that I was a reasonable batsman, a reasonable
fielder. Although I must admit that I may have been a little bit
overrated in Shane’s estimations. That is my humble assessment.
Q: You are considered as one of the best batsmen never to have
appeared in the famous Baggy Green cap in Tests. How do you see
that?
JS: I am obviously disappointed that I did not get the opportunity
to bat in Test Cricket. David Boon, Dean Jones, Mark Waugh, Steve
Waugh, Allan Border—all great cricketers for Australia were there
ahead of me. I consider myself a little bit unlucky that those all
great batmen were around in my era. I got a couple of opportunities
though but did not probably take them when I could have. You got to
take your opportunity when it comes. That is what I am asking the
Bangladeshi batsmen to do (laughs).
Q: At the end of your playing career why did you get interested in
coaching?
JS: Even during my playing career I was really interested in
improving the players around me. That was something in-built in my
leadership skills and that sort of directed me that way to help
bring other people underneath me through. As the captain of South
Australia that was really my job to bring the players through and
teach them how to bat, how to bowl, how to field. I had been acting
as a coach while I was the captain. So it is a natural progression
for me to become a coach after ending my playing careers.
--Tigercricket.com
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