|
Aussie cricketers to keep it all in the family
MELBOURNE (Australia)—Cricket Australia (CA) said Sunday it has no plans
to prevent the families of Australian cricketers from staying with them
on overseas tours.
Melbourne’s Sunday Herald Sun suggested the practice was partly to blame
for Australia’s 2-1 Ashes loss in England. A CA spokesman said Sunday
the organisation had no plans to scrap the policy amid speculation that
players’ partners and children would no longer be permitted to stay with
them while overseas.
“Is it in the top 10 things we are worried about? Not at all,” the
spokesman said. Family members have been staying with cricketers since
Mark Taylor’s captaincy in the 1990s because team management thought
players would perform better if they were content and settled. The
practice, which has been a part of Australia’s successes over recent
years, was looked at as part of a CA review of the national side, which
began after the fourth Trent Bridge Test loss to England in August.
But the spokesman said CA was “absolutely totally committed” to
continuing to let players have their partners and children stay with
them on tours. The Australian Cricketers’ Association (ACA) was angered
by suggestions that the practice should be scrapped.
“Apportioning blame for the loss of a series to the presence of families
on tour is a joke,” ACA chief executive Paul Marsh said. “Our players
travel the world for extended periods of time, and having their partners
and families with them brings some sense of normality to an otherwise
lonely and stressful emotional situation.
“The players feel very strongly that the presence of their families on
tour only improves their state of mind and therefore their performances.
“While the team has been winning, the presence of families hasn’t been
an issue. It is disappointing that on the back of a close series loss
that people are jumping at shadows.”—Agencies |