Jaffer resigns as Uttarakhand coach due to interference in team selection

Cricket Association of Uttarakhand's secretary Mahim Verma rejected Wasim Jaffer's claims and said he was given everything he had asked for since being appointed as the state team's coach.

Published : Feb 09, 2021 18:55 IST

Jaffer, a domestic heavyweight from Mumbai, was appointed Uttarakhand's head coach last March after he had announced his retirement from all forms of the game.

Former India opener Wasim Jaffer has resigned as Uttarakhand's head coach due to "interference in team selection", days before they were to compete in the Vijay Hazare Trophy which starts from February 20.

Cricket Association of Uttarakhand (CAU) has accepted his resignation. "I feel really sad for the players as I genuinely think that they have lots of potential and can learn so much from me but are denied this opportunity because of so much interference and bias of selectors and secretary in the selection matters for non-deserving players," Jaffer wrote in an e-mail to the association.

 

Cricket Association of Uttarakhand's secretary Mahim Verma rejected Jaffer's claims and said he was given everything he had asked for since being appointed as the state team's coach.

"We gave him whatever he asked for, had a pre-season camp for a month, let him choose his outstation players, trainer and bowling coach but his interference in selection matters was getting too much," said Verma.

 

"After the result in (Syed) Mushtaq Ali T20 did not meet our expectations, the selectors wanted to try out a few other players but he kept insisting on picking his own team which is not right as selectors are there, too, to do their job," Verma added.

Jaffer, a domestic heavyweight from Mumbai, was appointed to the position last March after he had announced his retirement from all forms of the game.

 

In his resignation letter, the 42-year-old Jaffer wrote, "It's with great sadness that I'm writing this email to inform you all that I would be resigning from the post of head coach of senior CAU team with immediate effect.

"If the honorary secretary of CAU would want to inculcate such kind of work environment while not letting me take certain decisions pertaining to the team's welfare and performance... then I don't think there's any valid reason for me to continue as head coach of men's senior team of CAU." Since taking over as coach, Jaffer also picked his own support staff. Uttarakhand, however, failed to impress in the Syed Mushtaq Ali tournament, winning just one game out of the five it played.