Ashes tour was like a ‘booze cruise’ says Flintoff

LONDON, (Reuters) – Andrew Flintoff has described  the 2006/07 Ashes tour of Australia, when England were thrashed  5-0, as being like a “booze cruise”.

The all-rounder, who retired from test cricket following  this year’s Ashes series win, made the claim in his latest  autobiography “Ashes to Ashes”, serialised in the Daily Mail.

“I was the captain of a team heading for a 5-0 Ashes  whitewash,” wrote Flintoff, who was handed the skipper’s job  after Michael Vaughan was injured.

“Relationships were becoming strained…I felt massively  isolated.
“The problems had really started when we were defeated in  Adelaide to go 2-0 down. I was in a bit of a muddle and didn’t  really know how to get out of it.
“My head had gone, probably with what had happened in the  Ashes. The frustration was bubbling inside of me. I exploded.

“My bat was leaning against the bench in the dressing room,  and I put my foot through it and broke it – not the most  intelligent thing to do.

“The upshot was I turned up for nets the next day not in  the best of shape, although I wouldn’t say I was as bad as  coach Duncan Fletcher has said I was.

“I’m not going to try to make excuses because I know I  shouldn’t have arrived for training smelling of booze. It was  unprofessional but it was indicative of my state of mind at the  time.

“I wasn’t the only one, I hasten to add, and it wasn’t just  the players – most of the support staff were at it more than we  were. It was like being on a booze cruise.”

PEDALO INCIDENT

Flintoff also gave details of the infamous “pedalo  incident” during England’s less than impressive 2007 World Cup  campaign in the West Indies, but said he did not, as reports at  the time claimed, need to be rescued.

The all rounder was stripped of his vice-captaincy in the  wake of the incident which followed a late-night drinking  binge.

“Not long after I arrived at the club, I realised I’d had  enough to drink and slipped out – intending to walk back to the  hotel,” he explains.

“Instead of walking down the road, I decided it would be  nicer down the beach and come into the hotel from the back. A  row of kayaks caught my eye, but none of them had any oars.

“Next to them were some pedalos, and I remember dragging  one to the edge of the water – presumably because I fancied a  ride. But for the life of me, I couldn’t work out how to get on  it – or my legs into it – so I let go of it, and it quickly  drifted away from the shore.

“I think I slipped and fell over in a few inches of water,  but nothing more.”
Flintoff played a pivotal role in England’s Ashes victory  under Duncan Fletcher in 2005 but said they struggled to  develop a working relationship when he was captain.
“It was a case of two people who didn’t get on being thrown  together for eight months of the year as part of the England  cricket team,” he said.

“We had completely different views on life; the  relationship didn’t work and it came to an abrupt end after the  World Cup.”