BCCI Coaching Crisis: Why Troy Cooley's Exit Leaves Critical Vacancy

Troy Cooley's time as the fast bowling coach at the BCCI's Centre of Excellence is officially over. His departure adds to a growing list of vacancies within the CoE's coaching structure. The BCCI has been advertising for several critical roles, including batting and bowling faculty, but no replacements have been named yet. This staffing gap raises concerns about the sustained development and workload management of India's cricketers across formats.

Key Points: Troy Cooley Ends BCCI Fast Bowling Coach Tenure at Centre of Excellence

  • Troy Cooley's tenure as fast bowling coach at the BCCI CoE concluded on Saturday
  • His role included coaching India's women's team and men's A side
  • The CoE faces multiple vacancies in batting, bowling, and sports science roles
  • BCCI has advertised for key positions but appointments remain pending
3 min read

Cooley's tenure as fast bowling coach at BCCI CoE ends, no clarity yet on filling vacant post

Australian coach Troy Cooley's tenure at BCCI's Centre of Excellence ends, creating another vacancy amid multiple unfilled key coaching and faculty positions.

"With players' all-format workload requiring sustained care and monitoring... Indian cricket cannot afford further delay in filling its critical roles at CoE. - IANS Report"

New Delhi, Dec 20

Troy Cooley's tenure as fast bowling coach at the BCCI's Centre of Excellence (CoE) has come to an end. The decorated Australian coach came on board in late 2021 with an aim to build and nurture India's next set of fast bowlers.

His tenure saw him working closely with the pacers and in coordination with VVS Laxman, the head of cricket at CoE, previously known as National Cricket Academy (NCA). Cooley was the bowling coach of the Indian women's team in the T20 World Cup in South Africa in February 2023 and worked in the same role with the India men's A team on their tour of England earlier this year.

Sources have told IANS that Cooley, 60, will leave the CoE facility on Saturday. As of now, there is no official word yet on who will step in to fill in the void left by his departure. Cooley's departure also means yet another vacancy in the CoE's coaching structure has been created.

Last month, Rajib Datta's tenure as the bowling coach and lead faculty at CoE came to an end. In August this year, the BCCI put out advertisements for resident faculty in batting and bowling. Moreover, CoE's sports science and medicine head position is yet to be filled.

Ever since former head Nitin Patel moved on, an advertisement was put out inviting prospective applicants in August. But IANS understands that there's no word yet on who would fill in the vacancy of this critical post.

Last month, the BCCI invited applications for the role of Head - Cricket Education at the CoE, after Sujith Somasunder left the position to become the vice-president of the Karnataka State Cricket Association (KSCA). The deadline for sending applications was December 8, and it remains to be seen in how much time the position can be filled.

With players' all-format workload requiring sustained care and monitoring across both men's and women's set-ups, Indian cricket cannot afford further delay in filling its critical roles at CoE.

IANS also understands that Munish Bali has moved out of the CoE to be attached full-time with the India women's team, in the same capacity that batting coach Sitanshu Kotak currently serves with the men's side.

Bali, who was a member of the coaching staff when the Harmanpreet Kaur-led side won the 2025 Women's ODI World Cup at home, was previously contracted to the CoE and deputed to be with the women's team before making a recent full-time shift to the national side.

It is also understood that AI Harrsha will continue as the India women's team strength and conditioning coach for the upcoming five-game T20I series against Sri Lanka, starting in Visakhapatnam on Sunday.

The arrival of Nathan Kiely, who was believed to join the Indian women's team as their S&C coach, is pending. The Australia-based Kiely had stepped down from his role as Bangladesh men's S&C coach in October citing personal reasons, and there's a hope that he could join the team during their all-format tour of Australia set to happen from February 15 to March 6 next year.

- IANS

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Reader Comments

S
Sarah B
Cooley did good work, especially with the women's team. But the constant churn of coaches at the academy level isn't ideal for player development. Consistency is key. Hope they find a good replacement soon, maybe even promote from within our own system? 🤔
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Vikram M
With the IPL auction done and big tours coming up, this is the worst time for instability at the CoE. This is where our bench strength is built! BCCI's administrative delays are showing again. They have the money, now they need efficient management. 🇮🇳
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Ananya R
Good to see Munish Bali moving full-time with the women's team. They deserve the best support after that World Cup win! But it does leave another gap. The article is right, we can't afford delays. Player workload management starts at the academy level.
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David E
Respectfully, the BCCI needs to be more transparent about these processes. They put out ads in August and we're still waiting? Fans invest so much emotion in this team. The least we deserve is a clear roadmap for how our future stars are being nurtured.
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Karthik V
Maybe it's time to look at former Indian pacers for this role. Someone like Zaheer Khan or Ashish Nehra could bring fantastic experience. Foreign coaches are good, but we also have incredible homegrown knowledge. Jai Hind!

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