England skipper slams Hales’s ‘complete disregard’ of team values

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LONDON, May 3, 2019 (BSS/AFP) – England captain Eoin Morgan has accused
disgraced Alex Hales of “complete disregard” for team values following the
Nottinghamshire batsman’s exile from the tournament hosts’ World Cup squad.

Hales was dropped from all England squads, including the provisional 15-man
party for the World Cup, after reportedly failing a second test for
recreational drugs.

But England only decided to send Hales into international exile after a
report of a 21-day ban from cricket was published in the Guardian newspaper,
a move that led to suggestions officials were responding to media pressure
rather than upholding a policy.

The England and Wales Cricket Board (ECB) insisted they could not go public
with details of Hales’s suspension because of their own rules regarding the
handling of drugs offences, meaning Morgan, selection chief Ed Smith and
coach Trevor Bayliss were unaware of any problems when England named their
provisional squad last month.

Morgan, speaking ahead of England’s season-opening one-day international
away to Ireland on Friday, did not pull any punches when asked about Hales’s
conduct.

“Unfortunately Alex’s actions have shown complete disregard for those
(team) values,” Morgan told reporters. “This has created a lack of trust
between Alex and the team.

“On Saturday, we got together as a group of senior players to discuss the
effect the news coming out would have on the team and the culture.

“We all agreed the best decision for the team was for Alex to be
deselected. I relayed this to (England men’s team director) Ashley Giles,
because we don’t have final say, I can only give the view in the changing
room and how guys feel. I think we’ve dealt with it really well.”

England are determined to avoid off-field distractions and controversies as
they bid to win the men’s 50-over World Cup for the first time.

They have adopted an increasingly hardline approach as a direct response to
a late-night incident in Bristol, where Hales was present, that eventually
saw Ben Stokes cleared on a charge of affray but miss the 2017/18 Ashes tour
of Australia.

– ‘Dragged down’ –

“We’ve worked extremely hard on our culture in the last 18 months since the
Bristol incident,” said Morgan, who contacted Hales to offer support when,
before the Guardian story broke, it was announced he was taking a break from
Nottinghamshire duty for “personal reasons”.

“We will need at least 15 men to win the World Cup and, whatever way Alex
would have dealt with it, the other 14 people would have been dragged down
and that would have been quite a weight taken forward.”

Giles was just one of three people in the ECB hierarchy who had to be told
of Hales’s failed drug test, with board rules meaning he had to keep the
information confidential.

He insisted Thursday Hales could return to England duty, saying “the door
isn’t closed whatever people think”.

“But what we want to see is some really good behaviour over time and some
good cricket, of course.”

Giles dismissed a statement issued by Hales’s representatives saying the
ECB had reneged on assurances his World Cup place was safe despite this
latest off-field incident.

“Neither myself nor (ECB chief executive) Tom (Harrison) would lie, mislead
or cover up what went on or make a U-turn…we didn’t. Tom and I can’t make
guarantees on selection, because we’re not selectors,” said Giles.

Hales is set to make his Nottinghamshire comeback on Friday in a One-Day
Cup match against Durham that overlaps with the England fixture.

“Alex has behaved like an idiot, but he’s our idiot and we want to welcome
him back into our support network,” Nottinghamshire director of cricket Mick
Newell, told the BBC.