Arthur Crabtree wrote:Kim wrote:An advantage? The only leak I know of is the one about KP not in fact wanting rest but wanting to play IPL instead of tests.
This leak was to counteract KPs retirement statement where he said it was all about wanting rest. It wasnt about seeking advantage but about (albeit sneakily) letting the world know the true situation. If KP hasnt been so economical with the truth it wouldnt have happened.
Obv if there have been other leaks, above might be BS.
Not that two wrongs make a right - but how did the press know about Kps unhapiness aboy the parody account?
IMO its been a PR war on both sides (EG Kps video ) and its an unfortanate fact of life that leaking is part of it. Think theres a danger of beating the ECB over the head over an unpleasant tactic while totalling ignoring just how badly KP has apparently behaved.
There was that leak, and then one about him wanting to miss the NZ series, and play all formats except during the IPL. We don't know for certain if this is true. It may have been an extreme bargaining position in order that he might secure a slightly less advantageous outcome. I can't remember all the press, there may be more. But this fragment that found its way into the press can't ever be properly evaluated. yet this has been the core of the antipathy that has built up around Pietersen.If you leave out hearsay, I can't see that Pietersen has acted
badly at all. Just the futile and guarded protests of a vulnerable and isolated person, who wants to keep on playing cricket, with reasonable accommodations, but doesn't know who to trust.
Well didn't KP note in his video that:
"Absolutely not [to the question of his insisting on playing the full IPL season]. I have taken that all back. I've had a very, very constructive conversation with the IPL owner of the franchise in India who has supported me; and the marvelous franchise that I am affiliated to, the Delhi Daredevils, have been magnificient on this. And I won't be playing the full IPL. I will come back and play in the Tests against New Zealand next year. So the IPL is definitely not an elephant in the room anymore."
and nearer to the beginning of this whole mess (before the text message fiasco) wasn't it KP himself who said "I can't give any assurances that the next Test [the third Test against South Africa] won't be my last. I'd like to carry on but there are obstacles that need to be worked out"?
Because in doing so he confirmed the off the record (hereafter "otr" or "OTR") briefing (as described by Mike Selvey) which stated that KP was not retiring from ODI cricket due to the need to rest but out of the desire to play the full IPL season.
His remarks at the end of the second Test are also puzzling given the about-face he has now done; first he "couldn't give assurances" that the third Test "would not be his last" and that he would "like to carry on but there were obstacles that need to be worked out"...yet now not only is he willing to carry on but wants to come out of ODI (and T20) retirement. So what happened between those "obstacles that need to be worked out" remarks and his video interview? Were these "obstacles" removed? Because the only thing that I know to have happened was the text message saga and the very real prospects (at the time, but now not just prospects but reality) that KP would simply be dropped from the England line-up. It would seem that according to KP's initial statements after the second Test, the selectors ended up doing the only sensible thing and simply gave KP full opportunity to go his own way. After all if he was contemplating retiring from test cricket at the end of this series, what difference would it make if they retired him one test match earlier?
Given that the next set of tests England has to play are against India (November to December), New Zealand (basically all of March in New Zealand) and then New Zealand again (basically all of May in England) it is quite reasonable to assume that KP would have contemplated missing all of these test series (and more) if he said he couldn't give assurances that the third Test against South Africa wouldn't be his last.
Throughout this sorry saga, KP has again and again managed to disprove spirited attempts to give him the benefit of the doubt:
- he didn't deny the existence of the text messages when he could have easily done so had they been phantom messages. Instead he later apologized for them, thereby admitting without the shadow of a doubt that they were real.
- he didn't deny that they were unflattering (or provocative or derogatory or however you want to term them) when he could also have easily done so had they been innocent messages
- in the video interview he could have very simply stated "I never insisted on playing the full IPL season and still do not. And I never wanted to miss the tests against New Zealand next year or any other upcoming tests series." That would have straight out denied all the speculation in the media. Instead he basically confirmed the speculation about his past intentions.
At this point I wouldn't be surprised if some folks aren't starting to wonder if they actually
can trust the tabloid press with the truth for once when it comes to all matters relating to KP.