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Fletcher hooks Boycott bouncers
London, Aug 13: England coach Duncan Fletcher has said criticisms of his management style by Geoffrey Boycott were a
He added, "with the volume of cricket coming up, he needed time to rest and recuperate.
He also tackled Boycott`s assertions that he had "brainwashed" former captain Nasser Hussain and was himself an "invisible coach".
"Hussain is a strong-minded individual and perfectly capable of making his own mind up in cricketing matters. In fact I think Nasser brainwashes me at times!
"Boycott also criticised my management style, suggesting that I am not `fronting up` or being `seen to help`.
"I do not seek to be high-profile, whether we win or
lose, but prefer an active, thoughtful and level-headed
behind-the-scenes management role."
Boycott was dismissive of England`s decision to employ
Australian Troy Cooley, who had an undistinguished first-class
career with Tasmania, as a bowling coach and said that when it
came to the batting the team should consult him or fellow
England Great Graham Gooch.
"Great players don`t necessarily make great coaches," Fletcher said. "I never saw Troy Cooley bowl, but I know he is a fine bowling coach and he came highly recommended by Rod Marsh who has played a lot of test cricket.
"As for a batting coach, I like to think I have made an impact here," Fletcher, formerly in charge at English county Glamorgan and South Africa`s western province added.
"Players have certainly improved their success rate against the world`s best spinners," said Fletcher, a claim backed up by both Hussain and Alec Stewart, two players who have always acknowledged the help.
England who have won just two of their last eight test series under Fletcher are currently 0-1 down in their five test campaign against South Africa ahead of tomorrow`s third match at Trent Bridge.
But Fletcher said he deserved to be judged on his overall record. "Throughout the whole of the 1990s, before I took over in 1999, the England team won seven test series.
"Since the South Africa tour in 1999, when I took over,
we have won six series and suffered four series defeats. Two
of those were against Australia, acclaimed as one of the best
sides in history, and one against India away."
Bureau Report