Australia a ‘soap opera’ and ‘I feel like a director’: Langer

Australian coach Justin Langer looks on prior to the T20 International match between Australia and South Africa, at Metricon Stadium, on the Gold Coast, Saturday, November 17, 2018. (AAP Image/Dave Hunt) NO ARCHIVING, EDITORIAL USE ONLY, IMAGES TO BE USED FOR NEWS REPORTING PURPOSES ONLY, NO COMMERCIAL USE WHATSOEVER, NO USE IN BOOKS WITHOUT PRIOR WRITTEN CONSENT FROM AAP
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Australia cricket coach Justin Langer admitted Monday he feels like a “director of a soap opera” as speculation grew around the future of banned Steve Smith and David Warner.
Debate about the pair reared again during the third Test against India in Melbourne, after Smith and Cameron Bancroft gave television interviews about the ball-tampering scandal in South Africa in March.
Their comments were widely interpreted as deflecting all blame onto Warner, with some former players slamming them for unnecessarily dredging it back up on Boxing Day, the most revered day in the Australian cricket calendar. Australia’s woeful batting in the match, which they lost by 137 runs, also focused attention on how much Smith and Warner were missed.
Langer, who has previously described the Australia team as a “dysfunctional family”, said the headlines were yet another headache.
“It’s all just part of the soap opera we’re in every day,” he said in Melbourne before heading to Sydney for Thursday’s fourth and final Test, with India leading the series 2-1. “I feel like a director of a soap opera at the moment, I honestly do.
“Coaching is about man management and looking after people, caring for people, and that was just another distraction last week,” he added.
Bancroft, who was banned for nine months, made his return on Sunday evening for the Perch Scorchers in the Big Bash League, but only lasted three balls. Smith and Warner’s suspensions run out in late March. Captain Tim Paine admitted on Sunday it was “pretty clear” they were being missed, with no batsmen other than tailender Pat Cummins scoring more than 50 in Melbourne. Langer said cricket authorities were “in touch with the boys all the time”.
“There’s a really good process we’re going to go through to get the boys back into the team,” he added of the trio.
They could possibly return for a one-day international in late March, when Australia have pencilled in a series against Pakistan in the United Arab Emirates.
According to the Cricket Australia website, the series was tentatively set for March 15-29, but Pakistan have reportedly proposed pushing it back to March 31-April 13.
Smith and Warner’s exile has left a big void in the Test team.
Aaron Finch has been unable to reproduce his limited overs form in the red ball game, Usman Khawaja has struggled and newcomer Marcus Harris at the top of the order is yet to post a big score.
“We’ve got a lot of guys learning on the run at the same time,” said Langer, acknowledging a lack of experience. “That’s not easy for them, but we’ll collectively be better for it over time.”

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