Australian Geoff Lawson was due to arrive Monday to take over as Pakistan coach, a job which will require him to dig deep to restore the credibility of the cricketing under-achievers.
Pakistan have been making headlines for all the wrong reasons since pacemen Shoaib Akhtar and Mohammad Asif tested positive for a banned drug last year. Their cricketing pride was then badly battered by their shock first-round exit from the World Cup in the Caribbean in March.
Worse followed when Pakistan coach Bob Woolmer was found dead in his hotel room in Jamaica just a day after the team's upset defeat at the hands of Cup debutants Ireland.
But Lawson, who took 180 wickets in 46 Tests, is confident he is the right man for the job, despite the criticism of some former Pakistani cricketers who have described him as "too raw and too new" to coaching. "I am hoping to talk to those people and see what contributions they can make," Lawson has said. "Pakistan can be number one, they have the talent and the skills to match the best in the world."
Lawson's first assignment with Pakistan is the Twenty20 World Cup in South Africa next month. Coaching Pakistan has never been easy - it involves meeting the enormous expectation of fanatical supporters, coping with an unyielding media spotlight and working out how to translate the team's potential into performance. Lawson's predecessors have often found to their dismay that they need more than coaching manuals to get the best out of a team apt to pull in different directions.
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