Jason Gillespie The PCB took me “completely and absolutely by surprise”


Jason Gillespie, the former Australia cricketer who recently resigned as Pakistan’s head coach in Test cricket, said on Monday that he resigned after being “completely and absolutely blindsided” by the Pakistan Cricket Board (PCB). .
Gillespie, whose contract was due to expire in 2026, resigned last week and expressed frustration at a lack of communication, leading him to feel the Pakistan Cricket Board no longer wanted him in the job.

“There were certainly challenges. I came into the job with my eyes wide open, I want to make that very clear. I knew Pakistan had gone through a number of coaches in a fairly short space of time,” Gillespie said. ABC Sport. “The final straw, I guess, was that as a head coach, you like to have clear communication with your employer. I was completely and completely surprised by the decision not to have a high-performance coach.”

As originally reported by Pak Gazette, the PCB initially did not renew the contract of Tim Nielsen, who was hired on Gillespie’s recommendation, as the team’s high performance coach. This had caused Gillespie to have doubts about his own future.

“Tim Nielsen was told his services were no longer needed and no one communicated anything to me about it,” Gillespie said. “And I thought after a number of other things that had happened in the previous months, that was probably the moment where I thought, ‘Well, I’m not really sure if they really want me to do this job or not.'” .'”

Adding to Gillespie’s frustration was the fact that the feedback he received about Nielsen and the team’s performance was positive.

“I developed a very close relationship with Test captain Shan Masood and felt we were certainly going in the right direction and things were going very well,” he said. “All the feedback I got or the feedback the PCB got was how effective, you know, Tim had also been in his role and the players were getting a lot out of him.”

Gillespie led Pakistan to a 2-1 victory against England in October, after losing the first match by an innings and 47 runs. However, after the defeat in the first test, he was informed that a new selection panel would be presented of which he would not be part.

He felt that his role as head coach had been diminished and even suggested that he often did not know the team’s lineup until the day before the game. This lack of clarity and communication only deepened his frustration with the PCB’s handling of his position.

“I felt like I was basically making catches and that was it on the morning of a game,” he said. “You want to be able to have clear communication with all stakeholders, with the selectors for example, knowing what the team is like as a head coach long before the game, or at least the day before the game.

Aaqib Javed is Pakistan’s interim Test coach for the series in South Africa. He is also the interim coach of both White teams after Gary Kirsten resigned in October.

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