Zondo’s story has many chapters

“I’m always nervous, whether I’m playing a club game or my son is throwing balls at me.” – Khaya Zondo

Telford Vice / London

HYDE Park looked like an African savannah on Thursday. Not that lions or lionesses, or indeed cricketers or footballers of any kind, roamed the vast undulations of London’s usually green and pleasant heart. It was too hot for that. Aside from the baroque splendour of its trees, the parched park was a patchwork swathe of beige.

The UK’s most intense summer since 1976 will do that to even the most lush spaces. Like Lord’s, less than three kilometres to the north, where the Test series between England and South Africa starts on Wednesday. What has the heat done to pitches at cricket’s grandest ground?

Not the obvious and helped the spinners, it seems. They have claimed only 18 of the 186 wickets to fall there in first-class matches this season. That includes the Test against New Zealand in the first week of June, when Lancashire leg spinner Matt Parkinson had to come haring down the highway to make his debut as a concussion substitute for Jack Leach.

Parkinson had Tim Southee caught at slip in New Zealand’s second innings — the only wicket of the 35 that fell in the match that belonged to a slow bowler. No spin was bowled in either team’s first innings, and only 18.3 overs in the 170.2 overs bowled in the second innings. In the most recent first-class match at Lord’s, between Middlesex and Sussex three weeks ago, spin accounted for three of the 29 wickets and 54 of the 365.1 overs. If mad dogs and Englishmen really do go out in 2022’s midday sun, not many of them are spinners.

According to Southern Water, this region of England had less than two-thirds of its average rainfall for the first six months of 2022 and only four millimetres in July — when the long-term average is 50.3 millimetres. Temperatures have hovered around 30 degrees Celsius for weeks, and the rain that has been forecast for next week will come — if it comes — as a relief to everyone except cricket aficionados who have turned their attention to Lord’s.

Doubtless Khaya Zondo isn’t thinking about any of the above. For one thing, he’s not in London. For another, he can’t do anything about the weather. For still another, he is focused on staying in the selection frame for the first Test. He did that on Tuesday and Wednesday by batting for more than three hours for his 86 in a tour match against England Lions in Canterbury. It was the South Africans’ biggest innings in terms of runs and deliveries. Importantly, Zondo showed a level of patience that earned 130 dot balls from the 166 he faced. He was undone on the second morning without adding to his overnight score, when he left an inswinger from Sam Cook and had his off stump rattled.

“I’ve accepted my limitations,” Zondo said in an audio file released by CSA after the close on Tuesday. “I’ve also accepted where I am good and I’ve just kept working, trying to get better with each ball I face, just keep adding building blocks on top of each other.” 

The first of those blocks was laid during practice — “I went into the nets and worked on my balance, worked on playing the ball late” — to help him adjust to the conditions: “It’s definitely different to South Africa. The ball nips a lot more, and you never really feel like you’re in; you’ve got to make sure you’re always awake. As soon as you think you’re comfortable, that’s when the ball does something you don’t expect it to do and that’s when it catches you off guard.”

After 213 first-class innings, he was not immune to anxiety: “I’m always nervous, whether I’m playing a club game or whether my son is throwing balls at me. So I’m always nervous when I pick up a bat. That’s good nerves.”

Zondo scored two half-centuries and a century in nine innings for Darwen in the 2015 editions of the Northern Premier League and the Lancashire Cricket Board Cup. He last played in England on South Africa A’s tour in May and June 2017, when he made 66 runs in four 50-over innings and a single in each trip to the crease in a four-day match. His effort this week is his best anywhere since he reached a career-high 203 not out in a domestic first-class match in October 2021. In eight subsequent innings in the format he has twice passed 50.

Zondo’s latest effort has complicated South Africa’s selection deliberations. He batted at No. 7 with Ryan Rickleton, Rassie van der Dussen and Aiden Markram above him. All could be competing for one place in the Test XI. Markram made 10 and Van der Dussen 75 in the first innings, and they were 20 and eight not out at stumps on Thursday. Rickleton suffered a first-baller on Tuesday.

The naked numbers say Zondo has done the most among them to crack the nod, but rarely are these matters so simple. Markram played himself back into confidence and form at the IPL, and just more than three weeks ago Van der Dussen, a reassuring presence in South Africa’s line-up, scored a yeoman 134 in extreme heat in the first ODI in Chester-le-Street. Rickleton reeled off two centuries, a 95 and three half-centuries in eight first-class innings for Northamptonshire in June and July.  

You might have heard Zondo’s name mentioned for reasons other than his achievements on a cricket ground. In October 2015 he was, at then captain AB de Villiers’ insistence — and with the acquiescence of Hussein Manack, the selector on tour — left out for the deciding match of an ODI series at the Wankhede. CSA investigated and decided his omission was wrong, and Zondo’s testimony to the Social Justice and Nation Building project in August last year revealed how deeply affected he had been by his treatment.

“I switched off mentally for the rest of the day and I detached myself from the team because it was clear I was not wanted,” Zondo said. “Switching off helped me cope with everything that was happening. The hardest part was watching players who were selected ahead of me having the opportunity to shine for South Africa on a world stage, in India, and having a chance to play and potentially impress and get future IPL opportunities.”

Dean Elgar’s flight to India for the subsequent Test series was brought forward to enable him, rather than Zondo, to feature in the white-ball decider. It is not often remembered that South Africa piled up 438/4 in that match, with Quinton de Kock, Faf du Plessis and De Villiers all scoring centuries, and also largely unhighlighted that the visitors won by 214 runs. Neither is it recalled that Elgar took guard at No. 7 with four balls left in the innings, faced only two of them and finished five not out. Was Zondo, albeit then uncapped, honestly not trusted to do something similar, or better?

If you’ve heard Zondo’s name for still another reason, it might be because his father, Raymond Zondo, was appointed South Africa’s chief justice in March. In June 2017 Zondo senior was named as the presiding high court judge in an inquiry into allegations of state capture and corruption during Jacob Zuma’s tenure as president from May 2009 to February 2018. In a damning and shocking report that runs to more than 5,000 pages, Zondo found that “the [ruling party] ANC under Zuma permitted, supported and enabled corruption”.

Zondo junior and the rest of South Africa’s squad have found in England circumstances that will feel oddly familiar to them. They are no strangers to the water restrictions that are being implemented here, and the planned power outages that loom because of the surge in energy prices — prompted by Vladimir Putin’s war in Ukraine — are common on the sharp tip of Africa.

Then there are the dots connected by history. When the English refer to 1976 as their last properly hot summer, they’re not only talking about the weather. In the build-up to a Test series that year, Tony Greig said of his team’s imminent opponents: “You must remember that the West Indians, these guys, if they get on top are magnificent cricketers. But if they’re down, they grovel, and I intend to make them grovel.”

Greig’s words, spoken in the thick, rough accent of the Eastern Cape of his birth, where he had leaned on his privilege and the luck of having a Scottish father to make the leap to England, did not land well. A white South African who had failed to denounce apartheid or racism telling black people he wanted to make them grovel?

Michael Holding and Andy Roberts answered the question on behalf of millions worldwide by taking 28 wickets each in the series, and Viv Richards and Gordon Greenidge by scoring three centuries each. And they were only the brightest stars in West Indies’ 3-0 triumph. 

Also in 1976, indeed during that series, South Africa’s winter was turned white hot by government’s insistence that Afrikaans — the language of the country’s oppressors — be used in black schools. The reaction was what became known as the Soweto Uprising, which killed between 176 and 700 mostly young people and lit the touchpaper for what became, in 1994, the defeat at the ballot box of apartheid.

Raymond Zondo was 16 when Soweto’s flames were lit, and almost 34 when Nelson Mandela became South Africa’s first rightfully elected president. Khaya Zondo is 32 and still fighting for fairness. Will he get it on Wednesday? And, if he does, will it rain? In Africa, that would be a blessing. But not at Lord’s.

First published by Cricbuzz.

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Riots rip up SA’s script in Ireland

What do you represent, in this of all weeks, if your shirt reads “South Africa”?

Telford Vice | Cape Town

IT doesn’t take much for supporters to become unhappy with their teams: South Africa’s performance at Malahide on Tuesday gave their fans umpteen reasons to wonder whether the sky was falling. But teams aren’t often disturbed by the actions of their supporters, or of the people they purport to represent. South Africa are that rare team going into Friday’s third ODI against Ireland.

For days now riots have wracked Gauteng and KwaZulu-Natal, the two most populous of the country’s nine provinces. At last count, more than 100 people had been killed and upwards of 2,000 arrested. The unrest was sparked by the jailing last Thursday of Jacob Zuma for contempt of court in the wake of his refusal to comply with a court order to testify at a judicial inquiry investigating state corruption from 2009 to 2018, when he was president.

Looting began with the poor breaking into shops to steal food and clothing, hardly surprising in the most unequal and one of the most unjust societies in the world. Soon people were rampaging through shopping malls in search of all manner of booty, including the kind only the affluent can afford. Matters took a darker turn when major infrastructure was targetted for destruction.

Food stores have been destroyed and medical facilities attacked, impacting South Africa’s already faltering attempts to combat Covid-19. Trucks taking vital fuel from South Africa’s major port in Durban to the economic engine of Johannesburg have been hijacked and set on fire. Many roads in those two cities are strewn with so much debris they are unusable by regular traffic.

Armed vigilante groups have formed to control access to their residential areas. They don’t hesitate to shoot at those who do not do their bidding. A mother was forced to throw her baby off a burning building, into the arms of bystanders. Mercifully, they caught the child. Other South Africans are holed up at home, terrified and praying the savagery doesn’t reach them. The most abhorrent racism is rampant on social media.

The police have proven themselves at best inept and at worst complicit: their vehicles have been seen, live on television, driving away from active crime scenes. On Monday Cyril Ramaphosa, South Africa’s current president, announced the deployment of the army to quell the chaos. Not until Thursday did the havoc begin abating. But supermarket shelves are bare, petrol shortages loom, much needed facilities have been razed, and thousands of jobs are gone.

The latest published explanation is that powerful figures tried to use Zuma’s imprisonment to exploit South Africans’ crippling tribal and racial divides, and their toxic relationship with social media, to stoke insurrection. And that the blaze they ignited exploded beyond their control.

The rolling storm of violence has been at or near the top of international news bulletins, and so beamed in often graphic detail to Temba Bavuma and his squad in Dublin. If you were them, would you be proud — or even willing — to walk onto a field wearing a shirt reading “South Africa”? What, exactly, would you be representing? Should you be there at all, sheltered in a comfortable hotel and playing a mere game on a lush, manicured field, while swathes of your country are in flames lit by your compatriots? Who could think of cricket while that is happening, perhaps to people dear to you? Or being perpetrated by people you know?

Word from the South Africa camp is that the players and management are “extremely concerned and anxious”. Some have apparently been directly affected or have family that have been affected. Who are they and how had they been impacted? They won’t say, not least because that would be construed as an excuse.

It’s not difficult to understand why, because at times at Malahide on Tuesday it did seem as if the sky was falling on the South Africans. Asked during an online press conference on Thursday whether management were laying awake in their beds wondering what to do about the team’s poor showing, bowling coach Charl Langeveldt said: “Do you mean sleepless nights about the batting, the bowling or the fielding? … We have to get better in all three disciplines.”

He was more equivocal when asked if events at home had distracted the players, giving an answer that veered from references to bio-bubbles to changing time zones. But he also managed to say: “We’ve got families as well. It’s not an excuse. We still need to focus on the game.”

The contrast between the way South Africa played in the Caribbean in the preceding weeks — they won both Tests and prevailed in a decider to clinch a T20I series they started as underdogs — and the shambles of their 43-run loss on Tuesday, their first ever defeat by Ireland, is stark.

And that even though batting conditions are better at Malahide than they were in St Lucia or Grenada and that West Indies made for stronger white-ball opposition than the Irish. Might the crash in the visitors’ performance be ascribed to the fact that South Africa’s streets weren’t on fire while their men’s team was in the Caribbean? It’s hard to see how that is not the problem: not since the Soweto massacre of 1976 — before any of the current players were born — has their country seen this level of self-inflicted civil catastrophe.

That’s not to take away from Ireland’s clear superiority in all departments on Tuesday. They played an old-fashioned style of ODI cricket, following slow-burn batting with steady rather than spectacular bowling. The catches that came their way weren’t especially difficult, and they held them. No-one could have asked more of Andy Balbirnie’s team.

But they will ask for more on Friday. Another win and Ireland will have an unprecedented series victory over a team from a major Test-playing country. That would mobilise masses in other ways and other places: to celebrate in pubs all over the Emerald Isle.

When: Friday July 16, 2021. 10.45am Local Time  

Where: Malahide, Dublin

What to expect: Decent weather, a touch of seam movement, some spin, and an Ireland team bent on making history.

Team news

Ireland: Changes? Whatever for?

Possible XI: Paul Stirling, Andy Balbirnie, Andy McBrine, Harry Tector, George Dockrell, Mark Adair, Curtis Campher, Lorcan Tucker, Simi Singh, Josh Little, Craig Young

South Africa: Quinton de Kock, who was rested for the first two ODIs, is set to return; probably at the expense of Aiden Markram. Not before time, Lizaad Williams seems set to get a game, maybe ahead of Andile Phehlukwayo.

Possible XI: Quinton de Kock, Janneman Malan, Temba Bavuma, Rassie van der Dussen, Kyle Verreynne, David Miller, Keshav Maharaj, Kagiso Rabada, Anrich Nortjé, Lizaad Williams, Tabraiz Shamsi 

What they said

“It’s our first win against South Africa and it would be unprecedented to get a series win, but that will be our target on Friday. The guys have worked hard over the last 10 days and I’m excited to see what the confidence of this win can do moving forward.”— Andy Balbirnie dreams big, and why not.

“One of the things in the life of a sportsman is to quickly get stuff like this out of your head and look forward to your next challenge.” — Janneman Malan on South Africa’s performance on Tuesday, but the same applies to what’s been happening at home. 

First published by Cricbuzz.

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