Sydney,
UNI:
Former Pakistan coach Bob Woolmer's widow has sent a personal
letter to his successor Geoff Lawson reassuring him not to fear
his new position at the helm of affairs, ahead of his departure
for Lahore on August 21.
''It's
a lovely letter about how he loved coaching Pakistan, loved the
people and she (Gill) wished me all the best,'' Lawson said.
''It
comforted me in the fact (Woolmer's family) gave me their support
and they don't have any concerns whatsoever,'' he said.
Although
'congratulations' poured in after he cornered the job, many questioned
the logic behind his acceptance of the offer. ''The amount of
people who have said to me congratulations, but you're mad.
The
newly-appointed coach even says he would have been more concerned
over going to London and New York than Pakistan.
''There
are lesser concerns than I'd have going to London or New York.
I was in England in 2005 when all the bombs went off, and that
was scary.
He
defended his decision to shift base to Pakistan, saying ‘‘(People)
see the Red Mosque shootout there and hear about bin Laden hiding
in the hills of Pakistan. But it's like if you're hiding in outback
Australia and you live in Sydney.
Lawson
also expressed surprise at the Aussie hockey team's decision to
not tour Pakistan. ''The Australian hockey team decided not to
go, I find that astonishing. As sportspeople in Australia are
revered, sportspeople in the sub-continent are deities almost.
If you're involved in sport, that's the safest situation to be
in.''
He
had already accepted the two-year post with Pakistan when he received
a letter from Woolmer's widow, Gill, who is based in South Africa.
Asked
whether the bungled investigation into Woolmer's death at this
year's World Cup concerned him, Lawson replied, ''You look through
that stuff and you do wonder why the Jamaican authorities came
out (and said it was murder). It was only their initial announcement
that got people in a tizz about the whole thing.
Why
couldn't they solve it? Because no one did it.'' However, there
are wider security issues in Pakistan. The Department of Foreign
Affairs is still warning Australians to reconsider travel to Pakistan
due to the high threat of terrorist attack, sectarian violence
and the unpredictable security situation.
The
Australian hockey team has withdrawn from the Champions Trophy
in Lahore in December following last month's bloody military siege
at the Red Mosque in Islamabad.
But
a Cricket Australia delegation has just returned from a security
mission to Pakistan, confident Australia's first tour of the country
in 10 years will go ahead next March.
The
new coach, however, wasn't always tolerant of Pakistan.
He
toured there in 1980, didn't play a Test and admitted he counted
down the days until he left. Just months earlier, Russia had invaded
Afghanistan. Lawson recalled escorts by military jets, tanks lining
runways, soldiers on the streets and the Australian team bunking
in spartan army barracks.
On
his next tour of Pakistan in 1982, Lawson said he refused to let
things get him down. He survived the three-Test tour on a diet
of Vegemite on naan bread with black coffee, lost 8kg and arrived
home with dengue fever. But he had been Australia's player of
the series.
Lawson
said he now loves visiting the sub-continent and he is reading
The History of Islamic Society.
On
Shoaib Akhtar, he said ''He's going to be a big part of the success
of that team. He's very enthusiastic. We've had a few phone calls
back and forth over the last couple of weeks.''
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