Warner’s ego must be managed for Australia return: Graeme Smith

Published April 11, 2019
Former South African captain Graeme Smith has some advice for Australia coach Justin Langer — make sure David Warner’s ego is managed if he starts to ‘get bigger than everybody else’ as he is no longer an indispensable part of the team. — AFP/File
Former South African captain Graeme Smith has some advice for Australia coach Justin Langer — make sure David Warner’s ego is managed if he starts to ‘get bigger than everybody else’ as he is no longer an indispensable part of the team. — AFP/File

SYDNEY: Former South African captain Graeme Smith has some advice for Australia coach Justin Langer — make sure David Warner’s ego is managed if he starts to ‘get bigger than everybody else’ as he is no longer an indispensable part of the team.

The polarising opener is on the comeback trail after a one-year ban for ball-tampering. But some commentators believe Warner’s return could be disruptive to the team, which is now resurgent after a run of poor results, and that he needs to managed carefully.

Read: Ball-tampering: Why it cut Australian cricket so deep

Smith, who skippered his country for more than a decade, said that while he admired Warner’s batting, he had ‘pissed a lot of people off’ throughout his career.

“I don’t know,” he told Australian television show The Back Page on Fox Sports when asked if he would have any issue in welcoming Warner back to the Australian team.

“It’s difficult to know what it’s like behind the scenes, but he’s always been an incredible cricketer,” added Smith, who played 117 Tests before retiring in 2014.

Warner, who has notched up 349 runs and scored one century and three half centuries in six matches for the Indian Premier League’s Sunrisers Hyderabad, is set to be named in Australia’s squad for the May 30-July 14 Cricket World Cup in England.

“Especially when he bats, he bats with that driven nature, that intensity, ego to perform. And he’s an excellent cricketer.

“I think where David has been throughout his career is that he’s pissed a lot of people off. He’s just that type of guy. I think at the moment he needs Australian cricket more than they need him.”

Warner is suspected of instigating a plot to use sandpaper to alter the ball in the now infamous Cape Town Test last year. He has long been a divisive figure.

And Smith believes his behaviour needs to be monitored closely.

“I think he’s very driven, I think he wants to do well, he wants to prove his worth again. And I think David Warner in that position is probably a good guy to have in your environment,” he said.

“It’s when he starts to get bigger than everybody else then probably management needs to be ready for that.

“Guys like Langer and whoever is captaining the side going forward need to ensure they stay on top of that and manage that space and that ego well going forward.”

The reintegration of Warner and co-conspirator Steve Smith has already begun with the pair meeting the one-day team after their bans expired late last month.

Australian cricket chief Kevin Roberts recently said team-mates don’t always need to be ‘best mates’.

“In any workplace, you don’t need to be best mates with everyone, but there needs to be a foundation of respect and I think there is growing respect there,” he said.

Published in Dawn, April 11th, 2019

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