1st ODI preview: Cricket doesn’t like South Africa, Newlands doesn’t like England

Neither team have played on ODI since the World Cup, where England were crowned champions despite neither them nor New Zealand winning the final.

TELFORD VICE in Cape Town

WHAT’S in three throwaway ODIs that are nothing more than a lettuce leaf sandwiched between the meat of a Test series and the mustard of three T20s to come? If you’re South African, plenty. And if you’re English.

Quinton de Kock will take charge of his first series in the format after being appointed South Africa’s captain on January 21. His squad includes neither Faf du Plessis nor Kagiso Rabada, who have been rested. He also won’t have Anrich Nortjé, Chris Morris or Dale Steyn. But he will have Lungi Ngidi, back from his umpteenth unfortunate injury — a hamstring, this time — and exciting talents like opening batter Janneman Malan, wicketkeeper-batter Kyle Verreynne and fast bowler Lutho Sipamla.

England haven’t played an ODI since July 14 last year, when they managed to be crowned World Cup champions despite neither them nor New Zealand winning the final at Lord’s. England’s only players to pass 50 in that match, Ben Stokes and Jos Buttler, are missing from the equation for this series. 

But they will be back for the T20 rubber. That’s what white-ball cricket is all about this year with, semantically, the inaugural T20 World Cup — previously it was called the World T20 — set for Australia in October and November. And that’s where the global game’s short-format focus will stay for at least another year: the ICC have canned the Champions Trophy, so another T20 World Cup will be played in 2021.

Even so, decent performances in the ODIs could be banked as credits towards securing places in T20 squads. Verreynne, for example, has ridden a wave of regional support — he plays for the Cape Cobras — into South Africa’s squad. Should he prove the hype to be more than home town hoariness, he would be significantly closer to playing in his first senior major tournament. Jonny Bairstow faces a different challenge. Having been a spectator since he made one and nine in the first Test at Centurion, he needs to remind people who matter why he was picked. It won’t help Bairstow’s cause that he played in the only Test England lost on this tour, but it won’t hurt that he scored a century in a one-day tour match in Paarl on Saturday.

Their too often shambolic showing in the Tests has heaped pressure on the South Africans, whose supporters will gladly accept success in the ODIs as the poor person’s salve for their wounded pride. So they will be heartened by the fact that South Africa have won all five of the games in the format they have played against England at Newlands. Alex Hales, the only player to have scored a century for England at the ground, also isn’t in their squad. Neither are James Anderson and Stuart Broad, their most successful bowlers in Cape Town.

Twenty totals higher than England’s Newlands best of 246/8 have been compiled in the 42 ODIs played there. They feature at joint-fourth on the list of lowest totals at the ground, having been shot out for 107 in 34.2 overs by Zimbabwe in January 2000 to earn South Africa’s northern neighbours victory by 104 runs.

That was one of the five defeats England have suffered batting second in day/nighters at Newlands. It is an accepted truth that trying to score runs effectively under lights in Cape Town is significantly more difficult than making hay while the sun shines.

But, given the trough South Africa stumbled into during the Test series, factors like that aren’t going to matter. Bigger issues will parse the teams. Things like whether the South Africans have remembered how to play cricket of any sort since their 3-1 series drubbing was sealed at the Wanderers last Monday. And whether England remember what ODI cricket is considering they have played a dozen Tests and five T20s in the almost six months since the World Cup final.

When: Tuesday February 4, 2020. 1pm Local Time.

Where: Newlands, Cape Town.

What to expect: For the captain who wins the toss to bat first. Only eight of the 42 day/night ODIs played at Newlands have been won by the team who chose to field. That doesn’t have much to do with the pitch itself. Rather, the evening air brings moisture that aide the bowlers. 

Team news

South Africa

Victory is all that will matter to a side hurting from having lost eight of their last nine Tests. But achieving it could be complicated by the fact that the XI is likely to include several debutants drawn from an experimental squad. And look out for some madcap captaincy — or should that be mad captaincy — from Quinton de Kock. 

Possible XI: Quinton de Kock, Janneman Malan, Temba Bavuma, Rassie van der Dussen, David Miller, Kyle Verreyne, Andile Phehlukwayo, Beuran Hendricks, Tabraiz Shamsi, Lungi Ngidi, Lutho Sipamla.   

England: Without Ben Stokes and Joss Buttler, England also have a work-in-progress feel about them. But the return to their ranks of a totem like Eoin Morgan can only be a stabilising factor. The five wickets Matt Parkinson took in England’s two warm-up games should earn the leg spinner a debut. 

Possible XI: Jonny Bairstow, Jason Roy, Joe Root, Eoin Morgan, Tom Banton, Moeen Ali, Tom Curran, Chris Woakes, Chris Jordan, Adil Rashid, Matt Parkinson.

“It’s always nice to not play against Ben Stokes, but they’ve still got some quality players. A lot of them are still World Cup winners and were part of that squad, and they’ve also got some exciting young players.” – Quinton de Kock talks his opponents up and down.

“Before the next [50-over] World Cup we have two T20 World Cups that we are eyeing. This series against South Africa will allow us to build a broader squad so that in three or four years’ time we have a substantial group to select from, just like we did before this past World Cup.” – Eoin Morgan focuses on the bigger picture.

First published by Cricbuzz.

Author: Telford Vice

I have been writing, gainfully, since 1991. No-one has yet paid me enough to stop. @TelfordVice

Leave a comment