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Gary's Diary

| May 2008 »

March 15, 2008

My first weeks in India

Posted by Gary Kirsten at in





No cricket kit in the pre-tour camp © AFP
My first couple of weeks in India have been outstanding. I was fully expecting some things to differ from my expectations and I was hoping to learn from those differences and avoid disappointment because of the expectations that have been created by my own life and career.

That has not happened so far - I'm still waiting! So far, all the unexpectedness has been extremely positive. I organised a pre-tour camp before South Africa arrived in India and I asked all the players to bring no cricket kit, none whatsoever. It was an important time to do other things.

It would have been easy to feel frustrated when this camp was cancelled but I did not. I am just the coach and there are many aspects of business and peoples' lives over which I have no control, and wish to have no control. There were good reasons for the dates of the camp to be changed and, as it transpired, we did everything we wanted to do in Chennai before the first Test began.

I was happy, my coaching partner Paddy Upton was happy and so were the players and our bosses at the BCCI. So everything that Paddy and I were keen to do was accomplished, the players enjoyed the time and nothing was lost. My coaching philosophy does not need to happen in my time-frame, as long as it happens.

Results are everything in professional sport. And sometimes they can be nothing, too. Results determine the short to medium term future of players and coaches and the longer term future for administrators, but sometimes it is crucial for all of those directly involved in professional sport to take a small step back from the importance of next week's game in order to ensure the best results for the next year or two, or five.

It has been fantastic to have Paddy on board for the start of my time with India and I have no doubt it will have a significant bearing on India's long-term prospects. Having said that, I cannot lie. Just like every Indian fan, I want to win EVERY game! Paddy and I may advocate the long-term view, but we are both winners and will stop at nothing to make sure we win next week!

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March 10, 2008

South African cricket from a new perspective

Posted by Gary Kirsten at in





No trouble mixing with South African players in India © Getty Images
I've asked Paddy to pen a few words updating you on what has been happening over the past weeks. Over to Paddy...

Paddy: Since the last post, both Gary and I have been through a period where the learning curve has sufficiently steep that it's resembled an overhang. We have just had dinner together at the hotel in Ahmedebad, where we reflected on the past 2 weeks. I thought I'd share some of that conversation. Talking about dinner, or Indian food more generally, let me start by answering probably our most frequently asked question; "so how are you finding the food?" My two most favourite foods are South and North Indian (the jury is out on which tops the other), which at home my wife cooks probably every second day. I now get to eat it 3 times a day, actually more if I count the snacks, so I am as happy as a Paddy in an Indian restaurant.

Gary is a bit more of a pasta and braai-guy, and it's been fascinating to watch him fast becoming a chilli-loving vegetarian... and he claims that he's really getting hooked. Although he still fancies the ice-cream dessert rather than the delicious Indian desserts that I am yet to learn how to spell, never mind pronounce.

Probably more significant than talking food is the fact that we've just been beaten in a Test match by the South African team, by players who we know well, and many of whom have been Gary's team-mates and clients of mine. Naturally this was one of the topics of reflections over dinner.

We both confessed to initially having some anxiety about meeting the SA players in India, wondering what it would feel like to be greeting them from the opposition bench. The first time we met, wearing opposing team colours, was at a function celebrating Anil Kumble's 600 test wickets.

To both of our pleasant surprise the meeting was as natural and comfortable as it has always been before we donned the Indian colours, no discomfort, no awkwardness, and no ill-feeling - the latter which we didn't really expect anyway.

And what does it feel like to be planning and putting our every effort into beating our home country? The truth, for both of us, is that with every part of us we want and are willing India to win. The disappointment of defeat at the hands of the South Africans in the last Test burned us as much as it did the Indians.

It hurts. That said, if six months ago someone suggested that we would so badly want India to beat South Africa in a Test match, we would have seriously wanted to know what that person had been smoking.

Pondering this change in allegiance, the simple equation is that this is a part of the global and professional world in which we all live. CEOs move from one company to a competitor next door, rugby/ cricketers/ soccer players move from one province/ country to another, and coaches move from one team to another.

While the late Bob Woolmer, who Gary and I both worked with, was an English test cricketer who coached SA and Pakistan, it was Duncan Fletcher, a Zimbabwean, living in South Africa who was coaching England, Woolmer's home team?

Research into how the human mind thinks shows that patriotism and professionalism are found at different levels of thinking. Certainly in Gary and my situation, we have experienced this that we have been able to take a fully professional approach, one which dictates that we want India to win. And one which as South Africans we have become surprisingly comfortable with - in fact Gary's four-year old son Joshua spent his time here in India wearing the Indian cricket supporters shirt. All he wanted was that dad's team would win.

On the field of play there is no inch asked nor given between the teams nor coaching staff, and off the field, both Gary and I have shared the usual good relations with the SA players and their coaches, particularly with Mickey Arthur and the effervescent Goolam Rajah, the SA team logistics manager whose work is legendary in the cricket world.

"How have you found India?" is another question the layman/ pressman has asked us a lot. India is a fascinating place, it has a fascinating array of cultures and the people are in general welcoming, gentle natured, friendly and full of smiles.

Where ever we drive in the team bus, I can't help staring out the window at a sea of the worlds broadest smiles that are projected by every women, children, adult and aged as their hero's pass. When they hear the sirens of our escort vehicle, people coming running from their shops, homes and balconies with cell phone cameras waving wildly, hoping to get a picture, a glimpse or even a wave from someone on the bus.

It is a huge privilege they bestow upon these cricketers, to receive such admiration and support from so many people, miles more so than any of the other cricket-playing nations.

In the last few years since our last visit, when we both wore SA cricket colours, the much spoken about fast emerging economy is evident. Roads seem better, hotels are more and better, cricket facilities are improved, it is easier to travel and make your way around as a foreigner... and even the amount of English spoken seems to be more than before.

All this adds to the excitement and anticipation of being here for the next two years. Not only are we only slap-bang in the middle of the cricket hub of the world, but we really get the sense that we are in an exciting and energetic economic hub of activity.

Despite being 1-0 down in our first series as coaches of the Indian team, the future looks bright - at the same time we are under no illusion of the work that is required.

I guess every parent, businessman, teenager, student, manager, coach, leader at some stage are going to find themselves in tough circumstances - the middle of the fire, as we find currently ourselves. Both of us can certainly feel the heat, but are not getting burned. How?

We are sticking to what we know works; ensuring that we leave no stone unturned in our planning and preparation; that we create open and honest lines of communication with all the players and support staff; knowing that most of the answers to what needs to be done exist within the system, that we remain centred and clear-headed whilst balancing short-, medium-, and long-term thinking.

The focus remains on quality and not quantity, and that each player and support staff member takes ownership of personal responsibility, accountability, pride in performance, and 'laying their body on the line'.

Regardless of the result, if everyone can go to sleep at night knowing that they have given their 100%, then that is all the coaches and fans can ask. It is a big ask, but it goes with the territory. And it is the same for anyone wanting to get to the top of big pile, which is one thing ... and to stay there and consistently succeed, which is another.

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March 4, 2008

On the ground in India

Posted by Gary Kirsten at in





I feel completely 'Indian' as we approach the series © AFP
First of all, many thanks to so many of you for the words of encouragement and support I have received over the last few months. From the moment I accepted the job I have been inundated with good wishes, not to mention requests for interviews! Apologies if I have been unable to respond personally to all of you, but I'm still trying.

I was never in doubt about the enormity of the position as coach of India but if I had been unsure then I certainly would not be by now. I have only been in Bangalore for a few days but I'm settling in very quickly, as I knew I would. My wife, Deborah, hasn't been to India since the South African tour of 1997 and is amazed by the changes the country has undergone. Having two small children this time around will also ensure that it is a very different experience!

I am delighted to be able to confirm that Paddy Upton has agreed terms with the BCCI to join me as mental and fitness coach to the national squad.

Paddy and I have a connection going all the way back to school days and, of course, he was part of the South African national team as fitness trainer in the mid '90s while I was playing.

More recently we became business partners when we established Performance Zone 18 months ago, a business focusing on assisting people to improve both business and sports performance.

Our third partner in Performance Zone, master coach Dale Williams, will be looking after our business interests while we focus on Indian cricket. There are some exciting new projects we are working on and we'll tell you more about them in my next posts.

The most obvious question I have been asked about the beginning of my two-year contract has been about the fact that we are playing against South Africa. Whilst I appreciate the fascination and irony about the scheduling, I must say that everybody else seems far more fascinated by that aspect of the contest than I do.

To be honest, having spent three highly enjoyable and productive weeks with the Indian team in Australia, and having maintained almost daily contact with Anil Kumble and Mahendra Singh Dhoni, I feel completely 'Indian' as we approach the series. I won't ever renounce my nationality, obviously, but I like to think of cricket as a completely professional game and I am a professional. But it goes beyond that. I feel passionate about the Indian team, and Indian cricket. The Indian team, given its numbers and resources, should be dominating world cricket. On the field as well as off it! I would love to be a part of that happening.

My time with Sachin Tendulkar, Rahul Dravid, Kumble, Sourav Ganguly, Dhoni and VVS Laxman- as well as the incredibly talented youngsters in the squad, has been invigorating and inspiring. I can't wait for the real stuff to begin.

We will continue to use this blog to keep you up to date on what is happening within our world. With the South Africans coming out to India in the next few weeks, our first challenge is going to take them on with the best that we have.

Thank you once again for your generous support and please pass this blog along to anyone wanting to follow our progress in India and keep up with the latest thinking in the world of performance.

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Gary Kirsten
One of the pillars of South African batting in the 1990s, Gary Kirsten's game revolved around mental toughness and the ability to absorb pressure. A batsman acutely aware of his strengths and weaknesses, Kirsten was a man for the big occasion. He was South Africa¹s leading run-scorer in both formats of the game before Jacques Kallis overtook him. After retiring from the game in 2004, he has devoted a great deal of time to understanding what creates sporting success, and has worked with various teams and individuals in a consultancy capacity and was contracted by Cricket South Africa's High Performance Academy. He was appointed head coach of the Indian national team effective early 2008, and this blog will focus on his experiences in that role.
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