SYDNEY, April 1-New Australia captain Michael Clarke is  an astute cricket tactician but will need to be more "formal and firm"  in his man-management, according to spin-bowling great Shane Warne.
Clarke  was appointed Australia's 43rd test captain on Wednesday in place of  Ricky Ponting, who had resigned a day earlier, and departs with his  first squad to Bangladesh for three one-dayers on Monday.
Warne,  who took 708 test wickets in a glittering career and remains a highly  influential voice in Australian cricket, said Clarke, a close friend,  was the right man for the job but would need to further develop some of  his skills.
"As far as a leader of men goes, this is where I think  Michael can improve," he wrote in his column for Friday's Daily  Telegraph.  "The way he conducts himself is laid back and fun by nature,  but as skipper he will need to become a bit more formal and firm.
"In  dealing with his team, I believe he has their respect as a player, but  now it's time to earn that respect as a leader - firstly from the  extended Australian cricket family and then the public," Warne added.     In other areas, though, Warne said he thought Clarke, who turns 30 on  Saturday, was already the finished article.     "His communication  skills remind me of a young Mark Taylor, who was the best captain I  played under," he wrote.
"He works well with the bowlers and we  don't see him running up to them after every ball -- that's a good thing  by the way -- or looking like a cop directing traffic.    "Some  captains like that because it's a power trip - look at me, I'm in  charge."
Warne, who never captained his country in tests because  of off-field indiscretions, said he thought Clarke's style of captaincy  would suit a team that does not enjoy the ascendancy that Australia had  in Warne's heyday.
"His tactics are spot on and his style of play is aggressive," Warne wrote.
"With  a team in transition, it's important to put players under pressure.  That is, you have to risk losing to win, not be happy to not lose and  draw.
"That way the players learn how to win and learn by their  mistakes. You can't just be defensive, sit back and hope someone will  make something happen. You must be pro-active and set the ground rules  out from day one.
"We know we won't be number one again in any  form of the game for some time but if the attitude of the team is 'try  to be the best we can be', then the current group can't do any more than  that," he added.
 
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