Pakistan appoints Tony Hemming chief curator amid efforts to improve cricket team performance

Undated file photo of Tony Hemming. (Photo courtesy: APP)
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Updated 15 July 2024
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Pakistan appoints Tony Hemming chief curator amid efforts to improve cricket team performance

  • Development comes a month after Pakistan suffered shock defeat to first-timers USA before losing to arch-rivals India in T20 World Cup
  • The Pakistan Cricket Board has also included South Africa’s Gary Kirsten and Australian Jason Gillespie to Pakistan selection committee

ISLAMABAD: The Pakistan Cricket Board (PCB) on Monday said it had appointed Tony Hemming new head curator for a period of two years, amid efforts to improve the national side’s performance.

The announcement came a month after the 2009 champions crashed out of the T20 World Cup, when the USA-Ireland match was abandoned because of rain. It was the earliest-ever elimination from a T20 World Cup for Pakistan. They suffered a shock defeat to first-timers USA before losing to arch-rivals India. Pakistan’s only win was against Canada.

On Monday, the PCB announced a series of measures to improve the national team’s performance and said Hemming would arrive in Lahore this week to assume his role as the head curator.




Pakistan Cricket Board Chairman Mohsin Naqvi (right) chairs a meeting of the management board in Lahore, Pakistan on Match 5, 2024. (Pakistan Cricket Board/X)


“One of Hemming’s immediate tasks will be to prepare pitches for the upcoming five ICC World Test Championship matches against Bangladesh (two in August/September) and England (three in October),” the PCB said.
“Hemming will also oversee pitch preparations for the ICC Champions Trophy 2025, which Pakistan will host from 19 February to 9 March.”
The Western Australian is a highly respected curator with nearly four decades of experience and has worked at various iconic cricket grounds in Australia, including Melbourne, Perth and Tasmania, as well as in countries such as Bangladesh, Qatar, Saudi Arabia and the United Arab Emirates, where he was the ICC’s Head Curator from 2007 to 2017 in Dubai.
During his time with the ICC, Hemming also oversaw pitch preparation at the Dubai International Cricket Stadium, which was one of Pakistan’s home venues between 2009 and 2019.
The PCB earlier announced the inclusion of South Africa’s Gary Kirsten and Australian Jason Gillespie a part of the Pakistan selection committee.
“Gary Kirsten and Jason Gillespie have been included in the selection committee,” the Pakistan Cricket Board said in a statement. “Every player will have to undergo a fitness test every 3 months. The player will have to play domestic cricket. The selection committee will finalize the procedure for playing domestic cricket.”
The handout said the period of the central contract would be one year and it would be reviewed every year on the basis of the performance and financials of players.
“The technical procedure for issuance of NOCs (no-objection certificates) for playing leagues will be laid down and NOCs will be issued to the players who meet the procedure,” the PCB said.
PCB Chairman Mohsin Naqvi said there would be “no compromise on discipline.”
“There will be a zero tolerance policy against players who violate discipline,” Naqvi, who is also the country’s interior minister, was quoted as saying by the PCB. “There should be unity and agreement within the team. Grouping players will not be tolerated. Management should take strict action on grouping.”
Naqvi has also asked Kirsten and Gillespie to submit a plan to upgrade high performance centers and build new ones in Islamabad and Peshawar and improve the quality of coaches’ training.
Last week, the PCB sacked selectors Wahab Riaz and Abdul Razzaq following the team’s disappointing T20 World Cup campaign in June.


Zimbabwe surprise as T20 World Cup Super Eights begin without Australia

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Zimbabwe surprise as T20 World Cup Super Eights begin without Australia

  • Pakistan and New Zealand will clash in Colombo on Saturday as the second “Super Eights” phase of the T20 World Cup kicks off
  • India carry hopes of millions of cricket-obsessed fans of winning back-to-back T20 World Cups and lifting the trophy on home soil

Kolkata: Pakistan and New Zealand will clash in Colombo on Saturday as the second “Super Eights” phase of the T20 World Cup kicks off without former champions Australia, who shockingly failed to make it out of their group.

Instead, surprise packages Zimbabwe, who did not even qualify in 2024, topped Group B after a stunning unbeaten campaign where they not only beat Australia but also co-hosts Sri Lanka.

An injury-depleted Australia endured a chaotic campaign and failed to make the second phase of the T20 World Cup for the first time since 2009.

Australia’s acerbic media did not hold back in their criticism, citing selection “stuff-ups” and “shambolic” preparations, including a 3-0 pre-tournament series loss in Pakistan, for the embarrassment.

Australia coach Andrew McDonald admitted his players were “devastated” but any inquest into the failure would only begin “when we exit the shores here.”

India, the world number one-ranked T20 side, are hot favorites to retain their crown on home soil.

However, in the second round they face a tough rematch of the 2024 final against an in-form South Africa in Ahmedabad at a packed 130,000-capacity Narendra Modi stadium on Sunday.

Both teams came through the first round phase with four wins from four.

India are on a 12-match unbeaten run at the T20 World Cup, stretching back to their defeat in the semifinal against eventual winners England in 2022.

No team has won back-to-back T20 World Cups or lifted the trophy on home soil, and India have the hopes of hundreds of million of cricket-obsessed fans on their shoulders.

But India have not been consistent and have a problem at the top of the order with their number one-ranked batter Abhishek Sharma recording three consecutive ducks.

Their batting has looked shaky and India were 77-6 against the United States before coming through to win.

Also in Super Eights Group 1 are Zimbabwe and the West Indies, who meet in Mumbai on Monday, with all that group’s games being hosted in India.

ENGLAND YET TO FIRE

The West Indies toppled England convincingly in the group phase and the two-time champions have all-round strength in depth.

They won the T20 World Cup the last time it was hosted in India, in 2016, and have started in clinical fashion, winning all four group games.

They will be extremely wary of Zimbabwe, whose colorful band of traveling supporters have had plenty to cheer so far. Even a washout against Ireland could not dampen their spirits.

In Sri Lanka, Group 2 pits the co-hosts against England, Pakistan and New Zealand.

The top two from each group will advance to the semifinals.

Pakistan were the last team to secure their berth. They did so by beating Namibia by 102 runs, with captain Salman Agha calling it a “complete performance” as they bounced back from a group defeat to bitter rivals India.

Another pre-tournament fancy, England stumbled through their group matches in Mumbai and Kolkata, losing to the only Test-playing side they faced, the West Indies.

Harry Brook’s side were unconvincing in wins against minnows Nepal, Scotland and finally Italy, who were making their World Cup debut.

But they return to a happy hunting ground in Kandy to face Sri Lanka on Sunday at a venue where England swept a T20 series 3-0 this month, with Sam Curran taking a hat-trick along the way.

Their top order needs to find form, with explosive openers Jos Buttler and Phil Salt yet to make a telling score and Brook failing to fire.

Sri Lanka have also been hot and cold.

Pathum Nissanka scored a superb century on Monday to all but end Australia’s tournament.

But they lost to Zimbabwe in their final group game, although Nissanka was in the runs again with 62.