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CA struggles to handle Oz players when their lives are spinning out of control

Melbourne, June 13 (ANI): Cricket Australia officials are facing the chastening fact that they are not able to handle cricket's wild children well, after troubled all rounder Andrew Symonds was relieved of his contract for breaking alcohol related rules during the T20 World Cup.

Australian cricket struggles to handle situations when a player's life is spinning out of control, as can be seen in the case s of Michael Slater's marriage breakdown, Shaun Tait's depression and, to a lesser extent, Brett Lee's marriage bust-up.

Cricket Australia is trying to do its best, but somehow the system, although it's full of psychologists, strategists, scientists, and more coaches than you would find at your local bus depot, struggles to identify the root of the problem and fix it.

One fear is that the life of professional cricketers is becoming more removed from reality each year, the Daily Telegraph reports.

Symonds can earn as much in four days in the Indian Premier League as Allan Border got for a full contract in his last year as Australian captain.

Players are going from school to academies to full-time cricket contracts without ever knowing what it is like to work an eight-hour day as a teenager and be paid 14 dollars an hour.

Former Australian coach John Buchanan says: "We expect sportsmen to be role models but in a lot of cases their education and experiences in life are actually narrower than most normal people."

Slater, at peace in a prosperous life that features jobs with Channel 9 and a radio show, has become the type of role model to which Symonds can aspire as he rebuilds his life after having his Cricket Australia contract torn up a week ago.

Slater has proved that having a dramatically bad ending to your career does not have to sentence you to life as an outcast. (ANI)

Japan utility covers up 1999 nuclear criticality

Tokyo, Mar 15: A Japanese power company today admitted that it had covered up a 1999 incident in which mishandling of nuclear fuel rods led to an unintended self-sustaining nuclear fission chain reaction for 15 minutes.Hokuriku Electric Power Co said there had been no radiation leak as a result of the mistake, which caused the company's Shiga No. 1 nuclear unit in central Japan to go into a ''critical state'' for 15 minutes. The unit was shut down manually after an.....
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