Arthur Crabtree wrote: Might be worthwhile for the media to listen to his concerns.
I dont think you get to forget everything that you have ever done in your career at the end, and then cry you've been singled out unfairly. After he was initially taken apart in test cricket, his form at state level plummeted, and he openly talked of falling out of love with the game and moving on. He rebuilt his career in Queensland after departing NSW, but at the first opportunity to reprove himself in the national team he got himself booted out the squad (with others, he wasn't singled out because of race) for not completing his mandated preparation work that the captain and coach had asked of all players strictly. If people were out to get him, then being suspended for discipline with a test average of 25 would have been the end for him.
In his presser, he complained about being singled out for golf when he team mates also played, but this is nothing but bad faith. The press were not criticising him for one isolated incident before Perth, he openly said some time ago (I reckon 18-24 months ago maybe) that as he headed into his late 30s he would prolong his career by resting more and having more downtime, and that he couldn't keep working as he used to at his age - his form plummeted, a series of niggly injuries followed - the point was not to criticise him playing golf before that test, it was to highlight that his continual choice of playing golf over training might be the reason he keeps losing fitness. He manufactured a point to portray something that wasn't really being suggested - he was singled out because he was the only 38-39 year old who came out and said he'd no longer be training as hard. No one else did that. No one else was criticised.
The best example though is the Grand Prix gate. I guess at the end of the day you can believe who you want, but why on Earth would a coach, backed by his junior coach (a respected ex-player with 150 international caps), and his state director (Australia's 8th most capped test player) all come out to say he faked injury and buggered off to watch a GP rather than play, if it wasn't true? And the deal breaker was the fact that after it became a huge new story and Khawaja came back, not a single person he cited came out and said his side of the story was true. George Bailey could have ended the story with a 1 minute phone call, but he and others Khawaja rallied for his defence rested silent. It all ended with him then changing the narrative into some lame, soap opera rubbish about him being so dedicated to Queensland, he left his wife and kids at home to play Tasmania during a period of inclement weather...... it felt a bit surreal by the end.
Probably worth noting as well that Khawaja has bragged in the past that he was responsible for changing the fines/strictness of lost over rates after pulling strings with friends at the ICC. Amusingly, he talked about it like he was doing a great service to the players to stop them losing their match fees, and seemed oblivious to the fact what he was really celebrating was a system of robbing the paying public for the entertainment they paid for....
He's a trained pilot, so I have to conclude he's more entitled t*sser over stupid.