South Africa bank on golf to avoid a good tour spoiled

“We’ll have a few days to clear your minds, let the dust settle and focus on the third Test.” – Dean Elgar

Telford Vice / London

GOLFERS contend that hitting a stationary ball properly is more difficult than meeting a moving target successfully. If South Africa use their down time wisely, the proof of that theory could be seen at the Oval in the coming days.

Dean Elgar’s team were dismissed for 151 and 179 at Old Trafford last week, where England won by an innings and 85 runs in three days. That levelled matters in the wake of the visitors’ victory, by an innings and 12 runs after they bowled out the English for 165 and 149, also in three days, at Lord’s the week before. The decider in this series of wild extremes is at the Oval from September 8.

The South Africans are using some of the 11 days between the second and third Tests for what team management have called “a breakaway in the west Midlands”. England’s squad have also taken a break, except for Zak Crawley and Harry Brook, who are involved in the Hundred. The home side can afford the luxury of not thinking about the series until they have to. Less so South Africa. Asked what the squad would be doing, Cricbuzz was told golf would feature among their activities.

If that helps Elgar and his players middle the ball more often than they did in Manchester — where Keegan Petersen’s 42 in the second innings was their top score in a match in which nine of their 20 batters were dismissed for single-figure scores — there will be no complaints. But some of their supporters will doubtless take umbrage at the squad not spending every spare moment in the nets ironing out the shanks and slices in their batting. As thing stand, they will train again for the first time on Saturday — a full week since they last picked up a bat.

“Sometimes you can go into panic mode when things like this happen,” Elgar told a press conference after England won at Old Trafford on Saturday. “Myself and the coach [Mark Boucher] are definitely not the kinds of guys who panic; we know we’re still a good side. Sometimes time away from the game is not a bad thing. We have two days off now but we do have some time away from the game which was already planned prior to us coming on this trip. We’ll use that period for better connection within the group. It’s not like it’s disconnected, but let’s just touch base again.

“Let’s not forget why we’re here: we’re here to win a Test series and we’re still in a great position to win a Test series. We’ll have a few days to clear your minds, let the dust settle and focus on the third Test.”

Elgar is correct in that his team cannot have become poor in the few days between the Lord’s and Old Trafford Tests. Rather, they squandered the advantage they earned in the first match, where their pace quartet of Kagiso Rabada, Lungi Ngidi, Anrich Nortjé and Marco Jansen intimidated and unsettled the English, by leaving out Jansen to deploy another spinner, Simon Harmer, alongside Keshav Maharaj in the second game. That left no choice but to bat first when Elgar won the toss in Manchester. The pitch was drier there, and the overhead conditions didn’t allow for the amount of swing seen at Lord’s. So the case for a second spinner was plausible.

But had South Africa retained their XI from the first Test they would have been able to — as they did in London — insert England. And thus continue the domination that had been paused just six days previously. If South Africa had kept their Lord’s combination intact and England had won the toss, the home side would have faced a tough decision: bat first on a fresh pitch against an attack you know have undone you just the other day, or risk batting last on what would be then be a difficult surface.

The impact on the South Africans of what happened at Old Trafford could be gauged from the contrast of how they approached their bonus days off. Asked the day before that match what his players did after Lord’s, Elgar said: “Each person went in their own direction. You just had to make sure you were back at the hotel for our 11 o’clock departure on Monday. Otherwise it would have been an expensive Uber to get to Manchester.” 

Elgar’s players don’t have the privilege of going their own way on the return journey to London. At least no-one will have to worry about getting an Uber. 

First published by Cricbuzz.

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Three days is a long time for England and South Africa

“The way we batted, bowled and fielded for this whole game is the benchmark for the standards we set.” – Ben Stokes

Telford Vice / Old Trafford

WHEN South Africa hammered England by an innings in three days at Lord’s last week, the home side had six days to work out how to stave off a series defeat at Old Trafford — which they did in emphatic style, also winning by an innings in three days on Saturday to knock the visitors off the top of the World Test Championship standings.

The South Africans will have 11 free days to work out how to win the rubber, which takes a break to relinquish the English cricket spotlight to the climactic stages of The Hundred. Test cricket will be uppermost again in the series decider at the Oval, which starts on September 8.

Should the visitors prevail, doubtless The Hundred haters — whose numbers seem legion — will blame the new tournament. But, for now, England will celebrate their fifth victory in six home Tests this season. The fact that it followed their only loss so far this summer only added to the significance of their achievement. Was this win the best of them?

“When you take the last game [at Lord’s] into consideration, the way we managed to come back and play and just completely forget about that and put in the performance that we have, you could say yes,” Ben Stokes told a press conference. “But a win is a win. You take them as they come. No-one took a backward step this week. And coming away with the win in the way that we did …”

South Africa won the toss and batted, and never recovered from being bowled out for 151, their third-lowest total since readmission. England declared at 415/9 with Stokes and Ben Foakes scoring centuries, giving them a lead of 264. They dismissed South Africa for 179.

“It was an amazing team performance all round,” Stokes said. “The way in which we bounced back from the disappointment at Lord’s last week was obviously very pleasing. Cricket is about how you bat, bowl and field, and the way we batted, bowled and fielded for this whole game is the benchmark for the standards we set.”

Dean Elgar was left to rue a first innings that unfolded disastrously after he won the toss and, having settled on picking two spinners in Keshav Maharaj and Simon Harmer, was all but compelled to choose to bat.

“First innings runs stabilise your game,” Elgar told a press conference. “If you score 300-plus you’re giving yourself the best chance to compete and get a result in your favour. We made half of that. I didn’t think we batted particularly well. Sure, the ball went around. But this is Test cricket, man. You need to deal with it.”

Harmer’s inclusion meant leaving out Marco Jansen, who took 2/30 and 2/13 and scored 48 at Lord’s — his sixth Test. Why was Jansen the player to make way? “Marco is the least experienced bowler in our four-prong pace attack,” Elgar said. “Lungi [Ngidi] gives us control and stability. ‘[Anrich Nortjé’s] got the raw pace, and he’s got a few of the English batters’ numbers. And [Kagiso Rabada] is the full package. So Jansen was the obvious choice.”

His message to his players, he said, was a work in progress: “I haven’t thought about it. Everything’s been a bit of a blur since day one. Everything’s happened so quickly. I’ll have two days to process it, but I won’t change my way or my approach. If I do that now I’d be doing myself an injustice and I’d be letting the team down. I think the guys enjoy the honesty, and they understand where they stand with me. It also creates an honest platform among the other players.

“I’ll have a few days off and go back to the drawingboard to dissect and have a look at where we could have been better. We’ll have those chats. It’s an adult environment. I don’t want to treat a guy like a schoolkid. That’s not my way. I wouldn’t have liked that when I was a younger player. But we’ll have a few chats going forward.”

Elgar lauded the courage shown by Rassie van der Dussen, who batted for almost three hours on Saturday despite missing the whole of Friday’s play after fracturing a finger in the field on Thursday.

“It’s tough enough batting with 10 fingers; now you’ve got to go do it with nine,” Elgar said. “We always knew it was going to be hard work for us to get on par with them and he showed a lot of nuts, to be quite frank, a lot of character and a lot of toughness. When his back’s against the wall, that’s what happens. Playing with a broken finger can maybe sometimes help you because you start forgetting opposition and you’re dealing with the pain going through your finger. He showed a hell of a lot of character in today’s innings.”

Van der Dussen will miss the third test because of his injury, and could be replaced by Ryan Rickleton or Khaya Zondo. Elgar didn’t rule out South Africa’s XI including more new faces.

“Whether that’s just the only change we’ll make … we’ve got a few days, nearly two weeks before the next Test. We’ll look at our options and try and get better combinations. The bottom line is we need runs from the middle order, and at the moment that is letting us down quite a bit.

“That’s the truth. As much as guys don’t want to hear it, I think they know that already. For now, Rassie’s position has to be filled. Whether that’s the only spot, we’re not sure just yet.”

For now, South Africa have the luxury of not having to be sure. But, as the first two matches of the series have proved, time disappears quickly once these teams cross the boundary.

First published by Cricbuzz.

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Anderson’s army go home happy

“He is 40 but he doesn’t act like a 40-year-old.” – Ben Stokes on James Anderson.

Telford Vice / Old Trafford

ALL James Anderson had to do to earn applause at Old Trafford on Saturday was turn up. As the fast bowler’s fast bowler emerged from the dressing room and stepped into the swaddling sunshine, the appreciation rose like foam on a freshly pulled pint.

Anderson was bound for a pitch at the edge of the square nearest the vast rectangular slab of temporary seats that leans away from the western boundary; the D Stand. Or party stand. The start of play was still half-an-hour away but the party was already underway, and the partiers knew their champion when they saw him on his home ground. Besides, with England steaming towards victory, Saturday may have been the last time they would see him this year. And who can say for how many more years they might have to see him after that?

Ahead of Anderson lay the third day of the second Test, behind him a career like no other. At 40, he bowls like someone half his age. Scratch that, he bowls exponentially better than most people half his age. But even freaks of cricket’s nature need to warm up, and that means, among other things, sauntering out to a pitch at the edge of the square half-an-hour before the start of play. It also means being applauded simply for showing your face.

“I honestly can’t see when he’s going to stop,” Ben Stokes told a press conference after the match. “You can see him enjoying every moment that he’s out there. He is 40 but he doesn’t act like a 40-year-old. He’s been amazing around the dressing room. The energy that he runs in and bowls with, still, is incredible. He’s a testament to himself and a great ambassador for the game, especially fast bowlers.” 

Interviewed by the BBC’s Test Match Special radio programme, Anderson said: “Every time I play cricket it could be the last, so I just enjoy the experience. I could retire tomorrow and be delighted. But I’m not.”

What would Jimmy do on this day of days, with England needing 10 wickets for fewer than 241 runs to win by an innings and reclaim the momentum South Africa earned by inflicting that level of hurt in less than three days at Lord’s? That thought had to be held, because first Joe Root bowled from the Brian Statham End.

Then it was over to Anderson at his own end. Sarel Erwee punched into the covers for three and Dean Elgar’s hip added a leg bye off his first over. The fifth delivery of his second held its line and launched Elgar’s off stump into the outfield.

By lunch, Ollie Robinson and Stuart Broad had dealt with Erwee and Aiden Markram. But, also by lunch, Keegan Petersen and Rassie van der Dussen had begun what would become South Africa’s longest partnership in England in more than 10 years. Hashim Amla and Jacques Kallis put on an unbroken 377 off 612 balls at the Oval in July 2012, a stand that followed Graeme Smith and Amla sharing 259 off 508. “As bowlers, we thoroughly enjoyed a day-and-a-half of sleep and feet up,” Vernon Philander remembered fondly on radio commentary. The 87 off 261 added by Petersen and Van der Dussen wasn’t in the same league, but it was the best resistance the visitors could offer on Saturday.

They were removed 13 deliveries apart by Stokes, both caught behind after tea. The ball that got Petersen, ending a stay of a minute short of four hours in which he faced 159 deliveries, was a marvel of physics, a missile that homed in on the batter before pitching, straightening and steepling to take the edge. Van der Dussen batted for almost three hours and 132 balls through the pain of a finger he fractured in the field on Thursday and that kept him in the dressing room throughout Friday’s play.

But the most prominent hero of that episode of the drama was Stokes, who sent down six immaculate overs for just eight runs before tea, and eight after the interval at a cost of 22 — and for the reward of the two biggest wickets of the innings. Stokes’ chronic knee problem couldn’t stop him scoring a century in this match, and it failed to derail him with the ball.

Anderson returned with the new ball to cleanbowl Simon Harmer and have Kagiso Rabada taken at first slip in consecutive overs as the writing on the wall reached neon brightness: England were indeed going to return the medicine they were forced to swallow in the first Test. Robinson, playing his first Test since January, hammered in the final nails by cleaning up Anrich Nortjé and Lungi Ngidi as England sealed victory by an innings and 85 runs.

Not many minutes later, while Elgar was being interviewed on the outfield, the crowd in the party stand swelled into their umpteenth rendition of one of the most famous chants in cricket: “Oh, Jimmy, Jimmy! Jimmy, Jimmy, Jimmy, Jimmy Anderson!” The mention of his name, on the public address, among the contenders for the player-of-the-match generated a rousing cheer. Anderson’s army knew he wouldn’t earn that prize. He had bowled beautifully, but it would need more than his figures of 3/32 and 3/30. Did that matter to them? About as much as the fact that they had already missed several trams home.

Jimmy’s song was sung several more times before the spectators trickled out of the ground, content that they had been as close to their man as they could get without incurring the wrath of security staff. Some of them, if they had not partied too hard, might have known that Harmer’s dismissal took Anderson to a world record 950 international wickets across the formats. Or that Rabada’s wicket was Anderson’s 100th against South Africa.

Some would have looked back in wonder at the fact that, when Anderson played his first Test against South Africa — his third overall — at Edgbaston in July 2003, the visitors’ XI featured Mark Boucher and Shaun Pollock, and that his own team included Mark Butcher. All have retired and moved on, and were in Manchester as coaches or commentators. What might they make of Anderson raging hard against the dying of the light? Actually, not at all raging but bathed in light that does not look like dying anytime soon.

Deservedly, Stokes arrived at his presser holding a beer, its status marked by a layer of foam visible about halfway down the green glass. If he could bottle Anderson and what he gives England, the wider game and the goodwill of those moved to sing his praises, doubtless he would. Oh, Jimmy, Jimmy … 

First published by Cricbuzz.

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No jokes: Stokes, Foakes snuff out South Africa’s hopes 

“One hundred percent.” – Anrich Nortjé voices his support for South Africa’s decisions at Old Trafford.

Telford Vice / Old Trafford

STOKES rhymes with Foakes. And with blokes and okes — the Seffrican equivalent — as well as jokes, yolks, folks, hoax, notes, hopes, coax, smokes, and, of course, strokes. More than a few of the latter were played at Old Trafford on Friday as England took control of the second Test, most of them by the brother Bens, Stokes and Foakes.

There were also a few folks making mental notes about the jokes they could coax about the hoax that is ‘Bazball’, and not end up with yolks on their faces. Friday’s play, after all, was about a pair of blokes who batted sensibly and soundly, and made a far better fist of things than England did at Lord’s.

Ah yes. About that. More than a few thoughts were added to Thursday’s pile devoted to South Africa fixing what wasn’t at all broken by changing the XI who won handsomely last week, thereby painting themselves into the corner of choosing to bat first on a seaming pitch. And, on top of that, batting poorly. Picking a team for the fourth innings — by including two spinners — is a risky enough idea, but having done so it is unforgivable to play below yourself. South Africa’s 151, their third-lowest first innings in their 282 Tests since readmission, is what that becomes in the scorebook. At this rate the match might not even reach the fourth innings.

Neither the composition of the side nor the decision to bat first can be blamed on Anrich Nortjé, but he has had to live with the consequences. How did that make him feel? “It’s a dry pitch, compared to Lord’s, and you have to go according to conditions,” Nortjé told a press conference through the heat of a glower that might have melted the microphone in front of him. Did he back those decisions? “One hundred percent.”

England showed the visitors how to come to terms with a surface like this — by employing significant application and purpose. Consequently they have 241 runs left to play with before they have to think about batting again. More likely they are thinking about the 10 wickets they need to complete what would be a deserved and resounding innings victory. To come back from where they were less than a week ago — “outplayed”, as Stokes rightly said — is no mean feat already.  

None of the South Africans bowled especially badly, but neither did they threaten frequently enough to wrest the advantage. Stokes and Foakes filled the vacuum with a stand of 173 that started when South Africa still fancied themselves in the contest. That was in the eighth over of the day, when Nortjé added Zak Crawley’s wicket to Jonny Bairstow’s — both caught in the arc — with England still four behind. 

“That was definitely a major time in the game, when we got those wickets this morning,” Nortjé said. “To try and keep that pressure on … it’s not every time that we’re going to get a team out in a session or two. It was definitely the period to try get more sticks — maybe something happening with the ball maybe a bit more bounce. As the ball got older it became more difficult.”

The first delivery of the second-last over before lunch painted a picture, from the South African perspective, of the rest of the day’s play. Keshav Maharaj went around the wicket, hit the nurdling Foakes on the back pad and what looked like in front, and appealed. Richard Illingworth raised his finger. Foakes consulted with Stokes and referred the decision. DRS said the delivery had pitched outside leg stump. That ended the conversation, but it bears pointing out that the ball, in the gizmo’s estimation, would have missed off stump. You can have turn, you can have bounce, you can have the beating of the batter, you can have the umpire’s agreement that the batter is out. But you can’t have his wicket.

England’s picture had been painted a dozen overs previously, when Stokes wrenched his troublesome left knee while turning for two. He went down in a heap, and for minutes while he received treatment on the field it seemed unlikely that he would be able to continue. But he did, and so did his team’s ascendance. And onwards and upwards they continued to go in admirable style. Stokes’ 103 was ended, via a skied hoik to cover off Kagiso Rabada, an hour before the declaration came with Foakes 113 not out.

“Basically the whole innings the ball missed the edge of the bat,” Nortjé said. “So you feel like you’re still in it, but they absorbed the pressure really well; especially at the start, and then they built the momentum in their partnership. The ball gets older and one or two things go their way, and they get the momentum on their side. They played the situation really well.”

If there seems to be a touch of déjà vu about all that, it might be because Stokes made 120 and Ollie Pope an undefeated 135 at St George’s Park in January 2020 — or 17 of South Africa’s Tests ago, and the last time they conceded more than one century in an innings. Nortjé took guard at No. 4 with three balls left in the second day’s play, and batted until after tea the next day for his 136-ball 18. Was he up for something like that again? “I was ready to go as nightwatchman [on Friday], but we’ll have to see what the team needs.”

Nortjé wouldn’t need reminding that South Africa lost that match in Gqeberha by an innings. And here they are again, their hopes hanging by a thread. Holy smokes, okes …

First published by Cricbuzz.

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Spin on spinners costs South Africa

“If you’re playing two spinners you would want to bat first.” – Kagiso Rabada.

Telford Vice /Old Trafford

THEY did what? “Batted first.” Didn’t they field first and win inside three days last week? “Yes.” Then what? “They changed the XI who earned that famous fast bowling victory.” By doing what? “Leaving out one of those fast bowlers.” What happened? “They were dismissed for one of their lowest totals.”

Nah. Ain’t never gonna happen. Even the most desperate of movie producers would have laughed that plot off their casting couch as the ravings of a fabulist. But all of the above is as true as the Lancashire rose is red. 

Under Manchester skies more leaden — though less humid — than those over Lord’s last Wednesday, when Dean Elgar inserted England, he opted to bat at Old Trafford on Thursday. That choice was informed and predated by another: to include a second spinner. South Africa couldn’t very well field first having decided on an attack designed for bowling in the fourth innings.

Wouldn’t it have been fun had Ben Stokes called correctly and refused to bat? Better question: isn’t it time captains were allowed to take two different team sheets out to the middle, and to hand over the relevant XI only after the coin has been spun; not before, as is currently the case? Teams are able to second-guess umpires and replace concussed or Covid-stricken players. So why shouldn’t they be able to put their most suitable XI on the field in the full knowledge of the reality of the scenario? Nah. Ain’t never gonna happen. Cricket is much too far stuck up its self-inflicted traditions to seriously entertain such notions.

So in came James Anderson, gliding on imported air from the eponymously named end. He had expected Stuart Broad to take charge of the second over, and why wouldn’t he: they had opened the bowling in the 154 Tests they had played together since they did so at Newlands in January 2010. But it was Ollie Robinson, back in the side after missing England’s last eight Tests through injury and doubts over his conditioning, who stood tall at the Brian Statham End. “When we went out for a bowl five minutes before, I said, ‘Are you happy with that end?’” Anderson told a press conference of his pre-match conversation with Broad. “He said, ‘I’m not taking the new ball.’ That was the first I knew about it.”

How did Burnley’s, Lancashire’s and England’s finest feel about England fielding first? “I didn’t mind, actually,” Anderson said. “The pitches here are normally good to bowl on with the new ball, especially early on. The weather’s been pretty average the last week, so [the pitch has] been under cover quite a bit. So although it felt hard on top there was definitely going to be some moisture in there somewhere. It felt like not the worst toss to lose. But you’ve still got to bowl well. It didn’t really swing much, but we saw it seaming. We thought we’d bash away at good areas for as long as possible. We did it pretty well all the way through.”

And that they did, completing South Africa’s demolition, for 151, with the 20th delivery after tea. Only twice in the 282 Tests they have played since readmission in 1991 have the South Africans been dealt with for fewer runs in the first innings.

Teams aren’t often bowled out for that kind of score without playing poor strokes, and the visitors were no exception. Aiden Markram’s reckless, top-edged pull off Ben Stokes before lunch was the pick of the bunch, preceded by Sarel Erwee’s uncertain prod to Anderson. But the English also bowled with intent and focus, and took their catches — Jonny Bairstow’s slick duck and roll to snaffle Elgar, millimetres from the turf, off Broad showed the value of stationing a wicketkeeper at third slip.

When Kagiso Rabada turned up at South Africa’s presser, he was asked if he was attending as a batter. He had the good grace to smile. It wasn’t an entirely unserious question. His 72-ball 36 was his team’s best effort in terms of runs scored and deliveries faced, and the stand of 35 he shared with Anrich Nortjé for the ninth wicket was the biggest of the innings.

But what he made, as a fast bowler who took match figures of 7/79 at Lord’s, of not getting the chance to immediately pick up where he left off was the more interesting topic of conversation. “Generally, if you’re playing two spinners you would want to bat first,” Rabada said. “The pitch is getting drier by the second. It’s day one and it’s really dry and quite slow. Simon [Harmer] was in the game — his second ball ragged quite a bit. I think it was the right decision. We played two spinners for a reason, knowing it can get quite dry. It is what it is.”

Harmer, the top wicket-taker in the county championship in the past two seasons and the leading spinner this summer with 46 wickets in nine matches for Essex, was picked to partner Keshav Maharaj. On the evidence of Harmer’s only over, the last of the day, that wasn’t the worst move. Bairstow paddled the first ball through short leg for a single, and Zak Crawley, looking as usual like a stick of uncooked dried spaghetti at the crease, fended off the rest as England advanced to within 40 runs of the lead at stumps. Crawley and Bairstow were well set in a stand worth 68. 

Marco Jansen, who took 2/30 and 2/13 and scored 48 in the first Test, made way for Harmer. “We had to play two spinners, and Marco missing out … he’s an exciting talent, and he can bat,” Rabada said. “Unfortunately he had to miss out today. That was a team decision; it wasn’t based on his performance. Everyone knows that Simon is a top quality bowler. He’s proven that, especially in the county championship. If you had to look at the replacement, it’s not a bad one. Marco’s got a long career ahead of him. I guess he wouldn’t mind the rest, because he’s going to be playing a lot more over the years.”

A fast bowler not mind not playing a Test? On a seaming pitch? Nah. Ain’t never gonna happen.

First published by Cricbuzz.

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Simon Harmer then, now and tomorrow

“It’s still ingrained in a lot of cricket cultures that spinners almost shouldn’t bowl; that it’s a fast bowler’s game.” – Simon Harmer, recovering fast bowler.

Telford Vice /Old Trafford

SOMETHING about Simon Harmer seems off. He’s at the other end of a video call, looking like he always does. But also not. For one thing, he isn’t wearing sunglasses. For another, he’s in an Essex shirt. For still another, it’s mid-April. Or more than two months before South Africa’s squad for the Test series in England is announced.

Harmer is talking from a hotel room in Birmingham after a training session the day before the start of a match against Warwickshire. He should, therefore, be in an Essex shirt. But that’s what’s wrong with this picture: it’s not a South Africa shirt.

How quickly the subliminal narrative changes. Since Harmer played the first of his 185 matches for Essex, in April 2017, he has appeared for South Africa only three times, including the Old Trafford Test. Thus we should regard him as an Essex player exponentially more than as a South Africa player. But, emotionally, for many South Africans, that is impossible.

Especially not in the wake of his successful return to the international arena in the Test series against Bangladesh in March and April. Keshav Maharaj was the headline hero with 16 wickets in the two matches, but Harmer was only three off that pace. No other South Africa bowler took more than four.

Less measurably, more viscerally, Harmer’s bristling presence evokes Allan Donald, Dale Steyn, or Kagiso Rabada. Aggression sparks from his serrated blond fringe as he darts for the crease, where he bursts into a whirl of electric urgency. He bowls as if he might hurt someone, not just dismiss them. He couldn’t be more South African if he tried. Or, in another sense, less. Who does the off-spinner think he is impersonating a fast bowler in a country that brims with some of the best speed merchants?

“I grew up as a fast bowler,” Harmer told Cricbuzz. “I idolised the South African quicks — Allan Donald, Shaun Pollock, Dale Steyn, Jacques Kallis. Only when I got to halfway through high school, when I was about 15, did I realise I was never going to bowl express pace. My batting was keeping me in teams, but I felt like I could add more. That’s when the experiment with bowling spin started.”

So, he’s a recovering fast bowler. That helps explain his attitude on the field. But there’s more to his sustained success than that: “When you go to a net session you’ll always see a fast bowler bowling spin and you’ll see a spin bowler bowling fast. You always want what you don’t have. But coaches realised there was something there: I could turn the ball. With fast bowlers, you can either bowl fast or you can’t. It’s very similar — you can’t teach a spinner to turn the ball. They’ve either got it or they don’t. You can teach control, but not putting revs on the ball. That foundation of fast bowling helped me so much with my spin bowling in terms of my positions at the crease, etcetera. It was the right progression rather than bowling spin from when I was young.”

His former life in the game has informed other aspects of how he plays, including unusually intense bowling mechanics for a spinner: “I need to get energy onto the ball, and in order to do that I need to generate momentum to the crease. If I’m too slow, I feel like I’m relying too much on my action at the crease. If I’ve got some momentum going to the crease — which maybe stems from my fast-bowling days — I feel like it allows me to think about what I’m trying to do with the ball, versus thinking about what my left arm’s doing or where my head’s going.”

The allround package is an attacking off-spinner; a modern rarity, especially outside Asia. In South Africa, in particular, spinners of any sort haven’t often been deployed as wicket-takers. They’re tasked with keeping it tight if they even get a bowl in the first innings, and if they’re lucky and the pitch deteriorates they’ll see more action later in the match. But most of the responsibility for dismissing the opposition still rests with seam bowlers. At least, that’s how it used to be.

For the past five seasons, the most successful bowler in South Africa’s first-class competition has been a spinner. Twice, that spinner has been Harmer. Once, Maharaj. Slow bowlers have occupied four places among the top five wicket-takers twice, and three times also twice. The equation is skewed by the fact that South Africa’s quality quicks don’t play much domestic first-class cricket. Rabada, for instance, featured in only two such games in the country during the same five seasons. But it is also true that confidence in the threat posed by spin is growing.

Harmer has done his bit to make that happen — especially in South Africa but also in England, where he took 308 wickets at 20.19 in 64 first-class matches for Essex from 2017 to 2021. Harmer was the leading wicket-taker in the first division of the county championship twice in those five years, and finished out of the top five only once. So far this year, he is the leading spinner in the competition with 46 wickets from nine matches. 

Why was attacking off-spin having its moment? “The cricketing world has evolved a lot from where it was maybe 15, 20 years ago, and orthodox spinners have come a long way as well. Graeme Swann did it to an extent in his international career and if you look at what Nathan Lyon’s done, there’s a strong case to make to say spin is becoming very important in how teams are made up. In terms of balancing attack versus control, teams and bowling coaches are starting to realise that having an attacking spin option in your XI brings a dynamic that people are enjoying and is helping teams to be successful.”

No-one appeared in more Tests for England, bowled more overs or took more wickets than Swann, who took 255 wickets in 60 matches, when he was in their XI — and often in an attack that included James Anderson and Stuart Broad. Something similar is true of Lyon, who is still at it after 110 Tests in which he has taken 438 wickets. That’s 160 more than second-placed Mitchell Starc, who has played 41 fewer Tests and bowled 2,446.3 fewer overs than Lyon.

But the battle for spin remains a long way from won in countries like South Africa, despite the evidence of recent seasons. “It’s still ingrained in a lot of cricket cultures that spinners almost shouldn’t bowl; that it’s a fast bowler’s game,” Harmer said. If you’re not an off-spinner, nevermind not an attacking off-spinner, you may be puzzled. Aren’t offies the second-class citizens of cricket, begging for a bowl in the queue behind the quicks, the wrist spinners and the left-arm orthodoxes? Aren’t they always waiting for a left-hander to arrive so they can finally turn the ball away from the bat?

Good luck telling Harmer that: “I feel a lot more in the game against right-handers than I do bowling to left-handers. Yes, the ball is turning away [from left-handers] but there’s a lot more I feel I can do with the ball in the air to a right-hander, and bring fielders catching around the bat into the game, than you can necessarily do with left-handers.”

That squares with the fact that, in Harmer’s first seven Tests, 18 of his wickets have been those of left-handers and 15 of right-handers. He’s taken most of them wearing sunglasses, a quirk he knows doesn’t sit well everywhere in the game. And which has become more than an affectation.

“I know it can come across as arrogant. But growing up and seeing my idols wearing Oakley sunglasses, all I ever wanted was a pair of Oakley sunglasses. Then guys like Graeme Swann, Johan Botha and Shane Warne started bowling in sunglasses. That’s probably where it stems from. I feel so uncomfortable now when I don’t have them on. They’ve become almost like a safety net. I feel like the batters can see where my eyes are going.

“I almost feel a bit insecure when I don’t have my sunglasses on. I feel a lot more comfortable in my own skin [wearing sunglasses]. As I’ve got older, probably because I play with sunglasses, my eyes have become more sensitive. So I probably rely on them more than I did at the start of my career. But the root of it was seeing all these guys who I idolised growing up wearing sunglasses.”

Harmer wouldn’t be asked to explain his thing for shades, and everything else about his career, if it wasn’t for Essex. Too much has been made of Harmer’s decision to go Kolpak with them in 2016, not least because he didn’t do himself any favours in justifying his move. Lost in that often spiteful conversation is the fact that English cricket has the resources and the focus to get the best out of players like no other arm of the global cricket industry.

That’s been true since Tony Greig left the Eastern Cape in the early 1970s as a distinctly ordinary allrounder and was transformed, by Sussex, into a daring, dashing captain who retired with a Test batting average of 40.43. Then came Allan Lamb, Chris and Robin Smith, and Kevin Pietersen. They were followed by Matt Prior and Jonathan Trott. None of them would likely have reached the heights they did had they remained loyal to South African cricket — not because they’re white but because the game in their country simply isn’t developed enough to find, nevermind keep, enough of its better players.

It used to be that apartheid-induced isolation prompted privileged players to look to England. Then Kolpak opened a door that was shut at the end of 2020, which would have come as a relief for CSA. The shoddy way cricket was being run in the country and the impact of the pandemic on the economy far beyond cricket have further shrunk the game in South Africa. If a clearer and more viable route to England existed, doubtless South Africans would be lining up to take it. 

“The English game, because of the funding, is comprised basically of international teams who operate at domestic level,” Harmer said. “At Essex, who I don’t think are up there with the highest-earning counties, it’s a 6,500-seater ground. But you have two physios at home games, you have a batting coach, bowling coach, head coach. You’ve got sports psychologists who come in for a certain number of days per year, you’ve got strength and conditioning people. It’s so much more professional.

“Coming into an environment like that made me realise I needed to raise my standards. Because I could see how these guys operated. It helped me rediscover what made me successful — be hardworking, find ways to get better and evolve as a cricketer. It all comes together in county cricket.

“There’s so much bad press going around about county cricket and how it’s causing English cricket to be this, that and the next thing. But from an outsider’s perspective and as a professional cricketer, they don’t know how good what they have here is. I fell in love with cricket again because of my time at Essex. It’s a lot deeper than just walking into a professional environment; it motivated me to want to be better and contribute more.”

Take a bow, county cricket and especially Essex, for giving back to South Africa a player who, at 33, is as close as he is going to get to complete. So close that he and Maharaj, who since his debut in November 2016 has taken more wickets for South Africa than everyone except Rabada, are mentioned in the same breath. Harmer doesn’t consider that a rivalry, a view backed by the frequent sight of him and Maharaj in close conversation as they walk across the training ground together.       

“There’s been chat around me versus him, but what about me and Keshav; not me versus Keshav? He’s done unbelievably well in international cricket. I don’t think anybody can question that. South Africa have traditionally gone in with a fast-bowling allrounder, and I think the discussion is now starting about a spin-bowling allrounder. It’s a hell of an opportunity.

“There is competition in terms of both of us pushing one another to be better. I don’t think I’m ever going to take ‘Kesh’s spot in the team. But I hope the way we train together and bowl together in games is naturally pushing one another to be better. You want to win Test matches, so there isn’t an element of me wanting to out-perform Keshav.

“Cricket is a performance-based sport, and there are going to be days when I do well and days when I do badly. I wouldn’t say there’s competition against one another, but it creates competition in our training that we’re always pushing one another to find ways to be better.”

Harmer probably didn’t think, when he said that, that South Africa would have shambled to 76/5 by the time he took guard at Old Trafford on Thursday. Or that Dean Elgar would be banking on him and Maharaj keeping the visitors in the game. That’s if the contest is alive come the fourth innings.

If it is, it could be a game made for an attacking off-spinner.

First published by Cricbuzz.

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Anyone for ‘Bazball’?

“Our hunger was up there and our hunger’s still here. It’s not going to go anywhere.” – Dean Elgar

Telford Vice / Manchester

FUNNY how nobody talks about ‘Bazball’ anymore. Just last week it was all the rage. Now it’s so last week. Maybe because it’s spicing the dark muttering about England’s dismal performance at Lord’s, where South Africa triumphed by an innings and a dozen runs inside the equivalent of two days of playing time.

Or maybe because the home side aren’t ready to admit they got things badly wrong by batting in one gear against one of the most varied attacks in the game. But perhaps England shouldn’t abandon, just yet, an approach that, earlier in their home summer, fuelled four consecutive victories over India and New Zealand. 

Maybe England’s minds are being boggled by the cheesy music they are subjected to, at Brendon McCullum’s behest, during practice sessions. Who could concentrate on middling the ball with Foreigner’s funereal “I Want To Know What Love Is” wailing through the ear-holes in their helmet? The equally, or more, questionable sounds emitted by John Denver, Toto, Atomic Kitten, John Farnham and Robbie Williams are also on this puerile playlist. It all sounds like music for a lift going down.

Certainly the South Africans wouldn’t complain if their opponents stuck to their misfiring guns at Old Trafford, where the second Test starts on Thursday. Who couldn’t use another two days off? “Each person went in their own direction,” Dean Elgar said when asked during a press conference on Wednesday what his players had done with their bonus down time. “You just had to make sure you were back at the hotel for our 11 o’clock departure on Monday. Otherwise it would have been an expensive Uber to get to Manchester.”

Not that that line of levity should make the English think South Africa’s captain has lost the competitive edge that sets him apart from players of similar ability and experience. They will know his fast bowlers will fly into the fray again, and that his batters will scrap as if their careers depend on it. Which maybe they do considering no South Africa player has scored a century since Kyle Verreynne made an unbeaten 136 against New Zealand in Christchurch in February — or 56 individual innings ago, 50 of them completed. The kicker is that South Africa have won all three Tests they have played in that time.

So it’s surprising that England’s only answer to what went wrong for them at Lord’s has been to replace Matthew Potts with Ollie Robinson, who hasn’t played in England’s last eight Tests because of injuries and concerns over his conditioning. There’s no point telling England this gently — it’s the batting, stupid. Harry Brook, the leading English batter in the county championship this season with three centuries and six half-centuries — four of them scores of more than 70 — in a dozen innings, is in the squad. Yet not in the XI.

Jonny Bairstow, who made nought and 18 at Lord’s but has built up a healthy credit balance by scoring six centuries in 18 Test innings this year, should surely have been moved down the order to take the wicketkeeping gloves and pads from Ben Foakes, who scored six and nought in the first Test. That would have made room for Brook.

South Africa train to the sound of ball on bat, the odd expletive, and not a strangled syllable of Foreigner. They don’t name their team before the toss, and they face a straightforward choice to try and make an already good team better. Having retained the 12 they named for the first Test, they will decide on Thursday morning whether they will deploy Simon Harmer as a second spinner. Harmer had no chance of playing in the steamy, seaming conditions that prevailed at Lord’s. Old Trafford hasn’t been kind to slow bowlers, so the odds are on him sitting out again. He would no doubt be disappointed, but it’s OK. As part of this squad, he knows what love is.

When: Thursday, August 25, 2022; 11am Local Time

Where: Old Trafford, Manchester

What to expect: More sunshine and less rain than we’ve seen in Manchester for the past couple of days, but a fair amount of cloud throughout the match. And a fast bowler’s pitch: since the start of 2018 spinners have a worse strike rate in Tests in England only at Lord’s and Trent Bridge.

Team news:

England: Ollie Robinson’s ability to generate bounce has earned him the crack of the nod ahead of Matthew Potts. 

Confirmed XI: Alex Lees, Zak Crawley, Ollie Pope, Joe Root, Jonny Bairstow, Ben Stokes (capt), Ben Foakes, Ollie Robinson, Stuart Broad, Jack Leach, James Anderson 

South Africa: The visitors are mulling picking a second spinner, in which case Simon Harmer would play at the probable expense of Lungi Ngidi. But the smarter money would be on an unchanged XI.  

Possible XI: Dean Elgar (capt), Sarel Erwee, Keegan Petersen, Aiden Markram, Rassie van der Dussen, Kyle Verreynne, Marco Jansen, Keshav Maharaj, Kagiso Rabada, Anrich Nortjé, Lungi Ngidi

What they said:

“He’s in the team and he’s playing this week. So everything that’s gone on in the past is something that he’s obviously grown from, and he’s learned a lot from about himself. Not just as a person but as a player.”.” – Ben Stokes on the often injured Ollie Robinson.

“Our hunger was up there and our hunger’s still here. It’s not going to go anywhere. We really want to play a brand of cricket that everyone loves back home, and hopefully the rest of the world enjoys.” — Dean Elgar promises South Africa’s A game.

First published by Cricbuzz.

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The circumstances of Elgar’s pomp

“The competition within our squad is huge. It’s healthy competition, not malicious competition.” – Dean Elgar

Telford Vice / Manchester

DEAN Elgar bounced up from his seat after a lunchtime press conference at Old Trafford on Wednesday. “Let’s go train before it rains,” he said with urgency. Whatever nuts and bolts were left to tighten before the start of the second Test, he was in a hurry to get the spanners out.

Elgar left in a blaze of primrose yellow trainers, but not the orange socks he wore at Lord’s last week — and which he deployed, he said, “only at practices”. As if to do so in a match would offend the gods.

Colourful training gear aside, South Africa’s captain is a famously old-fashioned cricketer. It followed that his team played the same kind of old-fashioned cricket at Lord’s as they have in all 10 of their Tests since he was appointed in March last year. They have won eight of them, three by an innings — including the three-day hiding they dealt England last week.

“What happened in the first Test was something amazing for us,” Elgar said. “We played really solid, sound cricket, as we’ve been doing for the last year.” And which, no doubt, he wants his side to do in the match that starts at Old Trafford on Thursday. “It’s difficult to read the future. I wish I could. I really hope the second Test goes the same way, but I know it’s going to be a lot tougher, knowing that England were hurt. They’re coming back with a vengeance.”

The home side will have to, because anything less is unlikely to be good enough to stop a team who rose above even their own expectations in the first Test. To bowl their opponents out twice with 12 runs of their own to spare despite a top score of Sarel Erwee’s 73 and nary another half-century has emboldened the South Africans enough for Elgar to talk about loyalty.

“We have extra resources, but as long as we’re getting the results, backing is extremely important for those guys,” he said of his middle order. “We have given them a decent run and I’m sure they know they’re under pressure to perform. Consistency is key in Test cricket, and even consistency in selection.”

As for his bowlers, who dismissed England for 165 and 149: “I reckon they can get much better. They’re still pretty fresh. They had a brilliant game. The pitch assisted them at Lord’s; we’ve got to take that into account. But you’ve got to put the ball into the right area and they did that. Our bowlers are leading our pack. They’re extremely hungry for success. The competition among them is brilliant, and the way they go about things is some of the most professional behaviour I’ve seen from fast bowlers. You don’t have to speak to them too much. They know what they have to do. They’ve got to bring the heat and the intensity again.

“The wicket might not suit blasting out a batting line-up so we might need to adapt to the conditions in front of us, which is a massive strength of ours.”

Part of Elgar’s plan for keeping his players on their toes is not telling them which member of the 12 won’t be on the scorecard. “We decide on the XI on the day. Everyone’s down to play, and on the day you’ll be told if you are or not. It creates the sense that no-one can take their foot off the gas if everyone’s available to play.”

He was no closer to deciding on his XI less than 24 hours before the start of the match than he was when the first Test ended on Friday: “[On Wednesday] we couldn’t even have a proper look at the pitch because of the weather that cut our practice short. The pitch was covered most of the day. I haven’t had a look at it yet. I had to have lunch and do the press.” But the choice wasn’t troubling him: “We’ve got the right resources in the changeroom. Whether we play four seamers or two spinners, it’s exciting. We’ve never had the luxury of having two world-class spinners in our armoury. And we’ve got our fast bowlers who set the tone.”

Those fast bowlers are Kagiso Rabada, Lungi Ngidi, Marco Jansen and Anrich Nortjé. The spinners are Keshav Maharaj and Simon Harmer. Elgar will likely choose between playing Ngidi or Harmer, but Ngidi looks the favourite.

So England picking Ollie Robinson because of expected extra bounce in the pitch tickled Elgar: “Love the mind games. Really enjoy it. If there’s going to be extra pace and bounce I’m sure our fast bowlers are going to get that out of this pitch.”

Elgar looked and sounded like a captain who couldn’t wait to get on with the job, and why not after a result as emphatic as his team have delivered — which contrasted sharply with his match in charge. In July 2017 he stood in for Faf du Plessis, who was away on paternity leave, in another first Test in England, also at Lord’s. South Africa lost by 211 runs in four days on their way to a 1-2 series defeat. Elgar, Maharaj and Rabada are the only survivors of that side. 

“We’ve got a lot of young guys who haven’t had any failures, so they don’t come with any baggage,” Elgar said. “There’s a lot of hunger and the competition within our squad is huge. It’s the strongest I’ve seen, and it’s healthy competition — not malicious competition. The red flag is being in too much of a comfortable position, and it’s up to me and the coach to align us after every good spell and pull the guys into line irrespective of how long they’ve been here. I see everyone as an equal.”

The differences with the mood in the England camp couldn’t be more pronounced. Ben Stokes’ team have spent the past few days trying to explain away what happened at Lord’s as an aberration, and on talking about the documentary on their captain’s career and his struggles with mental challengers. Would Elgar and his players watch the film, which will be available for streaming on Friday? 

“If he wants he can send me a link and I’ll watch it after the Test. It’s inspiring in English cricket and I’m sure it’s also going to touch people’s lives outside of English cricket. I’m sure there’s a message throughout. Maybe in the next few weeks we’ll be able to sit down and watch it.”

For now, though, he didn’t have to say, he has other things to do. Like win a Test series. 

First published by Cricbuzz.

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Will ‘Bazball’ bubble burst for good in Manchester?

“Not much will change. It’s about committing to how we want to go about things, and having full trust in it.” – Joe Root bats for ‘Bazball’.

Telford Vice / Manchester

YOU can take the New Zealander out of New Zealand, but good luck getting New Zealand out of the New Zealander. So there was no surprise that Brendon McCullum, as he strode to the middle at Old Trafford on Tuesday to have a look at the pitch under preparation for Thursday’s second Test, wore head-to-toe black.

McCullum spent 14 years playing for New Zealand. Or, as he might say, the Black Caps. There are more where they came from, including the All Blacks — New Zealand’s iconic rugby union team — and the Tall Blacks, their less successful basketball team.

Moreover, the streets of Auckland, Wellington, Christchurch and Dunedin are strewn with more than enough black-clad ordinary citizens to make the unknowing wonder whether the country is in a permanent state of mourning. You can have any kind of Kiwi you want as long, it can seem, as they’re wearing black.

England’s coach stuck out against the grey of a drizzly day as he walked purposefully — strutted, some would say — towards the uncovered pitch. He did not look like a man whose team had been thrashed inside two days of actual playing time at Lord’s last week trying to deliver a brand of cricket he had masterminded. A brand that he has since not only defended but urged his charges to play with even more conviction. Far from telling his players to ease off the gas, he appears bent on filling the team bus with jet fuel. 

“Over the next while you’ll probably get used to my optimism as well,” McCullum told reporters on Friday after the visitors had clinched their crushing victory. “I don’t tend to overreact about anything.” Not even, apparently, South Africa taking all 20 of his team’s wickets in 82.4 overs to win by an innings and 12 runs. “I guess one of the messages we will talk about is, ‘Did we go hard enough with our approach? Could we maybe go a little harder and try turn some pressure back on the opposition as well?’”

Maybe it helps that McCullum isn’t English, and thus is not weighed down by misplaced notions of national pride: his team lost a cricket match, not an election or a war. Besides, England have proved — in four successful home Tests against India and New Zealand this summer — that his way is often the right way. The man in black is just doing his job. Nothing less, nothing more.

Joe Root is as English as it gets and a Yorkshireman to boot, although a long way removed from the “no fours before lunch” variety. Maybe that’s why he sighed before he gave his first answer at a press conference on Tuesday: “Even though the result didn’t go how we wanted it to and we didn’t play as well as we could do, it doesn’t change anything. That’s been made very clear to the group. If anything, it’s an opportunity for us to come out and play with more intent; more in the way that we have done at the start of the year. It’s another opportunity to get back to how well we were playing in those first four Test matches.

“I try and look at things for what they are. You’re going to make mistakes on occasion; you’re going to play a bad shot. Things aren’t always going to go in your favour. You go into the game trusting all the work that you’ve done leading up to it. Not much will change. More than anything it’s about committing to how we want to go about things, and having full trust and belief in it.”

The South Africans burst the ‘Bazball’ bubble partly by refusing to acknowledge its existence. They didn’t bowl as if they were combatting their opponents’ gameplan. They bowled as if their less radical, more disciplined gameplan was better than their opponents’. They didn’t react. They acted. And they were proved correct. Right now, the English have the wriggle room to argue that what happened at Lord’s was an aberration; nothing but a speedbump in the fast lane of the superhighway to the future of Test cricket. But, should something similar unfold at Old Trafford, the speedbump will be recast as a red light.

South Africa’s attack, a contrasting cauldron of toil and trouble spitting with the fire of Kagiso Rabada’s sheer quality, Lungi Ngidi’s discipline, Marco Jansen’s left-arm lashing from on high, Anrich Nortjé’s blistering pace, and Keshav Maharaj’s competitive spirit are well-placed to turn that red light to its brightest setting.

But fine players like Root, only the second Englishman after Alastair Cook to score 10,000 Test runs, don’t see things like that: “It’s one of the fun bits about Test cricket as a batter — figuring out how you want to score your runs, and then being good enough to execute. It’s a very good, very well-balanced attack. That makes it even more enjoyable when you have success [against them].”

His faith in England’s approach is, at this stage, firm: “One of the great things about playing the way that we do is that there are occasions where teams stop trying to get you out and start trying to create pressure and squeeze the game. When you feel that shift in pressure out there, it makes life a lot easier. That’s almost what you’re searching for all the time — can you get to that period and can you recognise the right moments when you can start to get on top and force the game. For four games we did that brilliantly well.”

But not at Lord’s, where England were not only, as Ben Stokes admitted, “outplayed”, but also outthought. That was clear in the first session of what became the last day’s play when Dean Elgar deployed Maharaj as early as the eighth over of England’s second innings, with openers Alex Lees and Zak Crawley still at the wicket. Maharaj, who did not bowl in the first innings, trapped a sweeping Crawley in front with his third delivery and ended the session five overs later by removing Ollie Pope, also lbw. It was a magical moment of unconventional confidence.

“[Jack Leach] turned it with the old ball, so we thought with the newer, harder ball it might bounce a little more,” Maharaj told a press conference on Tuesday. “Full credit to Dean for implementing the plan. He did have a chat to me in the changeroom — ‘Just be ready, the opportunity might come to bowl with the newer ball.’ It paid dividends.”

There was more evidence of South Africa’s uncluttered thinking in Jansen’s explanation of his sniping inswinger that dismissed Root for eight in the first innings — the only one of his 32 wickets he has taken leg-before. “I didn’t expect the ball to swing that much, but the plan was to try stick around that fourth stump and off-stump area,” Jansen told reporters on Tuesday. “If it nips back it brings all modes of dismissal into play, and if it goes straight you could nick him off. I wouldn’t say the plan was to go for an lbw, but it just worked out like that because of the general idea of sticking to the off-stump line.”

The English on the players’ balcony and in the stands were visibly and audibly deflated whenever they lost big players like Root cheaply, which was often — Pope’s 73 in the first innings was their only score in the match of more than 35. The South Africans, by contrast, batted not flashily but grittily and deep. Their top three partnerships contributed less than half their runs, and Jansen and Maharaj put on 75 for the seventh wicket. For that their supporters can thank, among others, Mark Boucher.

“When ‘Bouch’ took over he wanted to really work on our middle to lower order to contribute runs,” Maharaj said. “We know how vital those 50, 60 runs can be from numbers 7, 8, 9, 10, 11. In the nets our bowlers spend a lot of time facing the other bowlers and getting throw-downs. The guys are putting in the hours and the effort.

“A lot of it is due to the hard work that ‘Bouch’ has done, as well as ‘Sammo’ [batting consultant Justin Sammons], who has been exceptional for our batting unit as whole but also in encouraging our lower order to make sure we top up on our skill and make sure we take care of the nitty gritty aspects.”

Boucher spoke before the first Test of the awe he saw among the younger players in South Africa’s squad simply because they were at the most storied ground in all the game: “There are memories to be created at this venue, and they would like to be part of creating them.”

That they did, in the happiest way. It helped, perhaps, that Elgar, Rabada and Maharaj are the only members of the 16 who had played Tests in England before this series. “There’s not many of us who have played a Test at Old Trafford, which is a good thing — to have that youth and energy, and people coming with a clean state,” Maharaj said. “It was a similar situation at Lord’s. We had the youngsters motivating us because they were not carrying any baggage.”

Youngsters like Jansen, just 22, who played only his sixth Test at Lord’s. “I saw ‘KG’ [Kagiso Rabada] running in and I am thinking, ‘I’ve seen this guy bowl on TV. Now I’m standing in the slips. And if the batter nicks it I have to catch that ball!’ It’s a different perspective.

“That motivates me not to let the team down. When I give my best, it lifts them up as well. We put in the hard yards and we don’t take anything for granted because we know, when we do that, mother cricket is going to kick you up the backside.”

Along with his team, Jansen is also playing for his parents, Koos and Erna, and brother, Duan, also a left-arm fast bowler, who has 14 first-class caps for North West. Asked about his father’s influence on his career, Jansen smiled broadly and said: “There have been times when my dad was very tough on us. There was no sugarcoating. He spoke to us, back then, the same way he speaks to us now. Nothing has changed. That enabled us to grow and mature quicker than other kids. Whenever I think about that, I just smile, because my dad played a big part in our careers. He has been the tough guy, and whenever we needed a bit of love, a bit of softness, he was there.”

All of which has made South Africa a better team than they were when they toured England in 2017, and lost the Test series 2-1. “We’re more sound as a unit,” Maharaj said when asked to compare the two ventures. “We know what to do and how to go about our business a lot better. There’s more clarity and role definition within the team. That’s been Dean’s mantra. He’s a driven and straightforward character, and that’s what the guys needed.”

No man in black required.

First published by Cricbuzz.

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Order changed after illness

Telford Vice / London

KYLE Verreynne batted one place lower than planned in the Lord’s Test after his grandfather took ill in the stands. 

South Africa’s official team sheet listed Verreynne at No. 6, but after the fourth wicket fell on Thursday, when Ben Stokes bounced out Sarel Erwee, Marco Jansen took guard. Verreynne came to the crease 12 balls later, after Ben Stokes trapped Rassie van der Dussen in front. Verreynne scored 11 before being caught behind to give Stuart Broad his 100th Test wicket at Lord’s. 

Earlier on Thursday, paramedics were called to the Edrich Stand to attend to Verreynne’s grandfather, who was overcome while watching the match. Sheets were held up to screen the medics and their patient from view, and that section of the crowd applauded as they made their way out of the ground. The incident was mentioned on the BBC’s live radio commentary, without naming who was involved.  

Cricbuzz understands Verreynne’s grandfather is recovering satisfactorily in hospital in London, and that other members of the family in the city have met with CSA officials.   

The South Africa camp are handling the matter with utmost sensitivity out of respect and care for Verreynne and his family, and declined to comment.

First published by Cricbuzz.

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