sussexpob wrote:It's been badly managed by all parties.
One party created the situation, but then again, the other had the responsibilty to manage the situation. The ECB failed at every hurdle to contain this and stop it getting out of hand, and now seemingly, are still struggling to come up with a satisfactory resolution. In terms of management you have to be prepared for this, or have the capacity to deal with it... considering how many press relation people are employed and other similar types, one could easily state that their management has been piss poor at every stage.
I dont want to hear Flower demanding apologises from players, I firstly want him or the ECB to apologise for the shame their input and handling has caused the image of our countries game.
Flower has already admitted he could have handled things better - though he also stressed that there is more to this than a few texts and Twitter.
The ECB eaks are very regrettable and there should be some sort of internal investigation into it.
Sadly, I think the only way the ECB could have contained it would be to have let KP have everything he wanted.
sussexpob wrote:I think that the open feedback loop and team "post mortems" you describe would not result in players disgruntingly talking outside the team if they were the democracy fest that you suggest, and if KP felt his comments or feedback was being listened to or acknowledged, he wouldnt go speaking behind peoples back.... especially when by all accounts he is a very straight talking and confrontational character(certainly not scared of a fall out with people, or making such things public knowledge).
Of course, there will be grumblings outside the dressing room. But there needs to be some common sense (or maybe paranoia) about it. I wouldn't dream of slagging off my boss or company anywhere on the Internet, especially not on social media. I wouldn't text it either (and if I knew someone working for a competitor, I certainly wouldn't text them about it). And I don't work for a big company, it has under 20 employees. [/quote]
sussexpob wrote:A fact that the press overlook when they make remarks about him chasing the money and being a Saffer Mercernary.
True. I don't think the money aspect is that simple. KP loves to be loved. Being a posterboy for the IPL, a tournament with huge crowds in a 1bn-strong country that worships the game is right up his street. Tests against New Zealand in May in front of a League 2 size crowd (fourth tier of English football in case anyone needs to know) isn't quite the same.
sussexpob wrote:This saga has been going on for weeks now and you still don't get it, Shanks. "Team unity" is not about being best buds. It's not about being robots - 11 players who think and act the same. To dumb it down to a single sentence, it's about pulling in the same direction.
Its not about being a robot, but anyone who doesnt agree or follow with the direction that everyone else is pulling in gets dropped for reasons of team unity? Yep, way to make a point.... can you not see the contradiction?
There is no contradiction. Different people with different skills and personalities may take different routes to the same target - as long as those routes don't interfere with each other. 11 robots have the same personality, say the same thing, take the same routes.
Pietersen did use to be part of a united team, pulling in the same direction. Sure he was different, a bit awkward, but he was never a major problem, despite what some people liked to think. Things have changed, sadly and to the detriment of all parties.