Flower puts faith in Collingwood

Flower puts faith in Collingwood

England coach Andy Flower is confident Paul Collingwood's experience of captaincy will help him lead better in ICC World T20.

Durham all-rounder Collingwood resigned as captain of England's ODI and Twenty20 sides nearly a year ago after admitting the responsibility had affected his form in Test cricket, following a run of 24 innings without a century.

Despite having initial reservations about taking on the responsibility again for next week's tournament, 33-year-old Collingwood was persuaded to resume the role and will lead England out for their opening game against Holland at Lord's on June 4.

It represents a major turnaround for Collingwood, who struggled during the inaugural ICC World Twenty20 tournament in South Africa two years ago and misjudged the overs to such an extent against New Zealand that he failed to give Andrew Flintoff his full quota despite him being England's most economical bowler.

Collingwood also had a mixed record as England's Twenty20 captain, leading them to only one victory over Zimbabwe in the last World Twenty20 event, but Flower believes he will be much better for the experience this time.

Paul Collingwood 

"His ideas are clearer now"

"I think a couple of things have changed for him now," said Flower. "Firstly, it's only Twenty20 cricket he's captaining in and secondly he's got the experience of giving it a go initially and that will hold him in very good stead.

"I remember I captained the Zimbabwe side in two different spells and I would have been a much better captain in the second spell than I was in the first and I'm sure that will be the case with him - he will have learnt a lot.

"He's a slightly different cricketer to the one he was last time he captained, though. He's certainly in much better form and feels more confident in himself and he's also experienced the IPL, not playing but watching, and in a way he may have seen much more by doing that.

"He's also pretty comfortable with his knowledge of the game, which is a nice place to be. We have chatted, we have ideas of the sort of side we want, and he's got pretty clear ideas of how he wants to go about stuff."

One leader will be better

For all Flower's support for Collingwood, the coach admits he would prefer just to be working with one captain for all teams - a situation which has been prevented by Andrew Strauss' decision to opt out of consideration for Twenty20 cricket because he believes he is not playing well enough to merit selection.

It leaves England with a split captaincy situation they would prefer not to have, but Flower does not believe it will disrupt the current harmony in the squad in the build-up to the Ashes.

"I don't think it will disturb things, but I also don't think it's ideal," admitted Flower.

"In an ideal world you'd have one captain, but I think Colly is really looking forward to it.

"He's looking forward to the challenge and I think it might work okay. I hope we play similar cricket that we have recently in the Twenty20 game and one of our challenges is now to mould a few different faces into the unit as well so that's pretty exciting."

Whatever happens in this tournament, Collingwood is unlikely to either want or receive the captaincy of the ODI side.

Strauss all geared up

Strauss is now comfortable playing the 50-over format once again and looking optimistically to the future following the emphatic series win over West Indies.

"I'm happy with my own contributions," said Strauss, "I'm happy with the way the team is forming and I definitely think there is a role for my type of player in 50-over cricket.

"That excites me both from a personal performance point of view but also from a captaincy point of view to see a pretty young, vibrant team all going out and expressing themselves.

"Our One-day cricket has been a little bit haphazard in the past and it just looks like it's getting a bit more consistent at the moment and that's encouraging."

Flower, though, is aware of the need to separate the next three weeks of the ICC World Twenty20 from the bigger challenge ahead in the Ashes.

England have tried hard to concentrate on their Test and one-day series against West Indies at the start of this summer, which they have achieved successfully by claiming clean sweeps in both series.

As the Ashes approaches, that task will become harder, although Flower said: "The West Indies are a proud cricketing nation with a great history and our job was to beat them and we've done that very well and very convincingly.

"We will obviously have a few thoughts about the challenges in the second half of the summer but one of your skills as a sportsman is to be able to focus one thing at a time, and now we'll move on very quickly and focus on that Twenty20 challenge."


Powered by Disqus
  • Join us on Facebook Join us on Facebook


standard
 

  • ESPN is a trademark of ESPN, Inc and STAR is a trademark of Star Television Productions Limited. Trademarks used under license by ESPN STAR Sports.
  • Presented by ESPN, Star Sports, Star Cricket