Cricinfo Mobile
Email Feedback Print

Australian legend gets the job

Greg Chappell is India's new coach

Anand Vasu and Cricinfo staff

May 20, 2005

Text size: A | A



Greg Chappell: impressed the panel © Getty Images

The exercise to select India's next coach is finally over, with Greg Chappell, one of the game's all-time greats, being appointed. The BCCI-appointed committee met at 10am on Friday, and made an announcement on the subject at 12.30pm. Initially, the board had not ruled out the chance of another round of discussions with the short-listed candidates after the preliminary round of inteviews was marked by chaos and confusion. Tom Moody, Mohinder Amarnath and Desmond Haynes were the others in contention.

The committee - comprising Sunil Gavaskar, Ravi Shastri and Srinivas Venkataraghavan - began their first interview with Mohinder Amarnath at 2.25pm on Thursday, a delay of almost half-an-hour, as a photo shoot had to be completed first.

Amarnath, the only Indian in the race, sporting a small Indian flag at the meeting, took close to two hours to make his presentation and finish his interview (although he was allotted 45 minutes) apparently because he had problems with the laptop computer he was using. This happened even though Amarnath had brought along his brother-in-law to help handle the technology side of things.

So Chappell, the second in line to be interviewed, occupied the hot seat at around 4.20pm, a good hour-and-a-half after the time he was allotted. Furthermore, Cricinfo has learned that Chappell had to complete his presentation in quick time as Ranbir Singh Mahendra, the board president, and Jagmohan Dalmiya, the former BCCI chief, had to leave the Taj Palace hotel around 5pm to keep a prearranged date with the prime minister. The interviews of the two remaining candidates - Haynes and Moody - then resumed after 6.30pm when the officials returned.

Sources close to the committee revealed that they were "impressed" by Chappell's crisp presentation and the brief question-and-answer session that followed. In this period the committee attempted to glean the basics of what Chappell hoped to achieve if he was handed the job. One thing that went in Chappell's favour was the fact that he was prepared to commit as many as 290 days a year to the job. When Chappell was last short-listed for the job in 2000, remuneration was reportedly a problem. However it has been learned that all four candidates this time around were happy to work with whatever figure the board thought appropriate.

Haynes, meanwhile, emerged from his interview appearing relaxed and, when mobbed by waiting television channels and other media people, asked jokingly, "Are you guys going to leave me alone now?" The comedy continued when one of the reporters commented that Haynes was the dark horse in the race, to which he replied: "Yes, look at me [pointing to the colour of his skin], I certainly am the dark horse."

The BCCI could not afford to waste time in announcing the successful candidate, as two of those short-listed - Chappell and Moody - had also been in talks with the Sri Lankan board, which is keen to make an appointment soon. Moody, who was the last to emerge from this round of interviews, told the media that he believed the fact that he was the youngest of the four candidates was neither an advantage nor a disadvantage.

He did, however, stress the fact that his knowledge of the modern game would work in his favour. When it was suggested that he had not played as much cricket as some of the others in the fray, Moody remarked: "I'm not here to represent India, I'm here to coach the team."

Ultimately, though, Chappell's greater stature within the game, and an ability to think out of the box, helped swing it his way. After almost five years of near-steady progress under John Wright, Chappell now has the task of taking India to the next level - that inhabited by Australia.

Anand Vasu is assistant editor of Cricinfo

RSS Feeds: Anand Vasu
Email Feedback Print
FeedbackTop
Share
E-mail
Feedback
Print
Country Fixtures Country Results
Group B: Bengal v Saurashtra at Kolkata - Nov 24-27
Saurashtra 650/9d Bengal 27/1
Group A: H. Pradesh v Tamil Nadu at Dharamsala - Nov 24-27
Tamil Nadu 293/8d H. Pradesh 291/4
Group A: Hyderabad v Orissa at Hyderabad (Decc) - Nov 24-27
Orissa 276 Hyderabad 123/5
2nd Test: India v Sri Lanka at Kanpur - Nov 24-28
India 642 Sri Lanka 66/1
Group B: Maharashtra v Karnataka at Poona - Nov 24-27
Maharashtra 105 Karnataka 473/4
Group A: Punjab v Gujarat at Mohali - Nov 24-27
Gujarat 160 Punjab 361/5
Group A: Railways v Mumbai at Delhi - Nov 24-27
Railways 187 Mumbai 248/8
Group B: U. Pradesh v Delhi at Lucknow - Nov 24-27
U. Pradesh 536/7d Delhi 9/0
Complete fixtures »
  • Twenty years of Tendulkar
Sponsored Links

Access your Indian Rupee earnings from anywhere in the world.

Debate now on the new ESPN Soccernet Castrol Rankings Blog

Cricshop.com - leading online cricket store

on www.scrum.com

20 Years of Tendulkar

Cricinfo celebrates two decades of the maestro

Bodyline

Bowl a fast one

Cricinfo Mobile Site

Our brand new mobile site