Bangladesh head coach Chandika Hathurusingha has taken responsibility for the side’s massive failure in the ongoing ICC Cricket World Cup, where the Tigers failed to live up to the expectation completely.
Coming here with high hopes of playing the semifinal for the first time, Bangladesh found them in wanting and won just one victory in seven matches.
The performance that took a huge nosedive after registering win in the first match against Afghanistan, left Bangladesh’s ICC Champions Trophy ambition in limbo as well.
“I take responsibility as well as anyone in the group because we have disappointed the fans and we disappointed ourselves as well.
We didn’t play our best cricket but the thing is nothing has changed from the first game to
now,” Hathurusingha said here today in Delhi.
Bangladesh will take on Sri Lanka at Arun Jaitley Stadium here tomorrow (Monday) in a bid to keep their Champions Trophy hopes alive.
Hathurusingha who was highly successful in his first stint with Bangladesh, taking the side into the quarterfinal of the 2015 World Cup, now saw the other sides of the coin in his second stint.
He said Bangladesh indeed let themselves down due to high expectation.
“Only [what] has changed is what’s going through between our ears.
Our skills hasn’t gone anywhere. So, I think we put ourselves down by having high
expectations. That’s the only thing that we can think of, because as you
rightly said, we haven’t played our best cricket or what we were capable of
or we played before coming into the World Cup. So, in that sense, it’s we all
need to look at mirrors and see what went wrong,” he added.
Also the loss of form of so many players simultaneously was key in the side’s
dismal performance, he said.
There was speculation that the likes of Najmul Hossain Shanto, Towhid Hridoy,
Tanzid Hasan Tamim couldn’t take the pressure of playing in the big stage,
that too with high hopes.
“I’m speculating if I say yes or no, I don’t know, to be honest. The only
thing you can think of is, it’s high expectation from everyone, because as
players, we all wanted to perform in the biggest stage. That’s, as you said,
it’s that kind of expectation. It can be pressure, can be that you’re put in
a little bit, yeah, trying to do too much,” Hathurusingha said.
Despite winning three matches in the last World Cup, the Bangladesh Cricket
Board (BCB) considered it a failure and the then head coach Steve Rhodes was
forced to step down. There is wide speculation that Hathurusingha will have
to face the same fate even though he was contracted until 2024. The BCB would
have to compensate huge should they want to sack him.
When asked about his future as Bangladesh coach, Hathurusingha pushed the
ball to the BCB’s court by saying: “It’s not up to me. It just have to do
decided by the board.”
He also tried to defend himself by saying that he didn’t get enough times
ahead of the World Cup to regroup the side.
“You know, I started seven months ago, so I had seven months. And then there
are certain things beyond my control happening in between as well – all these
things is I don’t think is right forum or time for me to think or discuss. At
the moment my focus is this game, how we can win the next game,” he added.
“I’m only 7 months into the job – There’s not much I can do within seven
months what I have what I did was just take the team from where the team was
and make sure that they were prepared for this actually it’s my work has to
start after this, because it’s World Cup is separating to prepare, and then
it’s taking the team forward. It is a very different challenge.”
“My biggest challenge at the moment, keep that environment stress-free as
possible from every angle for them to help them perform to their best
ability.”
Hathurusingha also stood by comment of playing the semifinal.
“It’s not a wrong comment because we all want to do well. We have a high hope
and we have the expectation to do well and we thought that we are capable of
doing but then we couldn’t achieve so it’s not a wrong comment.”