David Warner stated that he would like to eventually coach a team shortly after he retired from Test cricket. He did, however, leave it up to his wife Candice to decide whether or not to let him avoid his home for a few more days.
David Warner will carry on with his Twenty20 international cricket career and is probably going to play for Australia in the next Twenty20 World Cup, which is scheduled to start on June 1, 2024. Along with playing for the Delhi Capitals in the Indian Premier League (IPL), the 37-year-old will also be a part of many international teams, such as those in the Big Bash League (BBL) and ILT20. Warner would rather assume a coaching position following his retirement from all formats.
Absolutely. I do have plans to become a coach in the future. David Warner told Fox Sports, “I’ll have to talk to the wife first to see if I can go for a few more days without work.
That kind of sledging won’t happen much longer, in my opinion. David Warner
David Warner also talked candidly about his aggressive personality in his early career. Earlier in his career, Usman Khawaja, Warner’s opening partner, said that the team management had asked him to sledge opponents. However, David Warner feels that spectators will no longer witness such sledging in international cricket.
When I first joined the squad, I approached the game with the intention of upsetting people by getting in their faces and throwing them off balance while they were batting. I was shaped into that individual. You won’t witness that kind of sledging or anything similar, in my opinion. Like myself and Shaheen Shah Afridi (in the Test against Pakistan), I think there will simply be some lighthearted joking.
“That seems like the best course of action to take. I don’t imagine you’ll witness the previous hostility again. It’s going to shift. If I were the coach in five or ten years, I believe the entire dynamic would change. It will become more about the intricacies of cricket and winning games than how you get on batsmen’s skin,” David Warner continued.