hopeforthebest wrote:sussexpob wrote:hopeforthebest wrote:
What assurances were given to KP and by whom/ My recollection is it came from Graves in one of his Waffling moments, which the press then worked into an offer to KP.
KP states that Graves told him in a phone call after taking his the job to cancel his IPL deal and score county runs, and he would be considered. Graves himself stated as much to the BBC, while not commenting direct on the phone call, he said basically exactly the same thing.
KP then scored the 300 for Surrey not long after and they went running to the hills to change their story, saying no amount of runs could replace "trust issues" and that he was not going to be picked. By memory, he score the 300 and was summoned by Strauss straight away and told to forget it, he wasnt being considered at all.
So yes..... having someone make a detrimental financial decision on a false assumption was pretty morally bankrupt. Where Graves was "waffling" is neither here nor there.... in Graves case, he is incapable of any discussion that doesnt come across as waffle.
Graves had no authority to make such promises to a single individual if such a promise was really made as it was a cricketing matter outside of his provinence. Of course the moral of the story is you can't trust a shopkeeper from Yorkshire.
Technically graves does really since he is the head of ECB but generally the head of ECB doesn't get involved with the selection barring the KP sacking since they mostly take care of the money and politics side of cricket.
