The unbearable uncertainty of life in a time of death

“I’m hopeful that once all of this passes and coronavirus dies out, everything will go back to the way it was. But I don’t know …” – Laura Wolvaardt

TELFORD VICE | Cape Town

A thuggish question can stalk an otherwise genial interview like a virus searching out an unwashed hand. Interviewer and interviewee alike might consider the enquiry jarring, abrasive, even rude. But, more often than not, both know it’s coming. Like Laura Wolvaardt did.

Considering the collision between the crisis the world has been plunged into by Covid-19 and the fact that Wolvaardt turned down a place at one of South Africa’s leading medical schools to pursue a cricket career, this time the question all but asked itself.

Doctors help people stay alive. Cricketers … what do they do for us, exactly? We need, desperately, all the doctors we can find. If every cricketer vanished suddenly, who besides those nearest to them would notice? Has Wolvaardt doubted her decision to play cricket for a living when she could have become someone more useful to society?

“Not yet, actually,” Wolvaardt told Cricbuzz in reply to an admittedly more gentle riff on that theme. “Because even if I were in med school right now I would be sitting at home as well [due to lockdown]. Everyone is in the same dilemma. But it was something I thought long and hard about for two years after high school. Stellenbosch [University, where she was accepted] did keep my spot for me, so that option was open. But they were only able to do that for two years, which is fair enough. I can’t expect them to keep it forever not knowing when I’ll return.

“Earlier this year I had to make a final decision. I’d been putting it off and hoping that the answer would kind of appear in a cricket game, or I would do something and just know which I would want to choose. But it was definitely the right decision for me at the moment. If I had chosen to go to med school I wouldn’t have been at the [T20] World Cup this year, which went really well for us as a team. In games where we play well, I’m like, ‘Ja, this was the right decision’. So it’s frustrating at the moment; having chosen to play cricket fulltime and now not being able to play cricket. But when I’m on the field I don’t doubt it at all.”

Besides, it’s not as if Wolvaardt wasted the substantial resources required to produce a doctor by going through those motions only to hang up her white coat and not practise medicine. “[If she had chosen to study] it would still only be first-year medicine with another 10 years to go before I became a specialised doctor. If I were to start I would want to be 100% committed to it. I don’t think it’s something you can do when you’re itching to get to cricket practice after class. You’ve got to be all in and put in the hours. When I’m all cricketed out and not wanting to go to practice anymore I’ll maybe consider doing medicine again. I’d have to re-apply and go through that process again. It is difficult to get in. I think I was lucky the first time, or grateful that I got that opportunity. It’s a risk turning down a spot, it always is. So we’ll see.”

The use, to reporters and readers, of someone smart enough to have cracked the nod with a prestigious medical school is that when they are asked even abrasive questions they answer them properly. At a time when truth is hard to find amid the dangerous nonsense spouted by too many governments, when companies are less interested in keeping their employees alive than in making money, and when dolts confuse surfing the internet with research, Wolvaardt’s matter-of-fact honesty takes us back to a time when everything made more sense. That is, a few weeks ago.

“From a player’s point of view I would like to get playing as soon as we can and get back to practice,” Wolvaardt said. “But we all have to be patient. I guess if we start too soon we risk another one of those surge things, or whatever they call them, and we’ll be back where we started. It’s the right decision to limit contact as much as possible, and then we’ll just have to wait it out and see, with the numbers and the stats, if it’s safe enough to go outside.”

South Africa has been under one of the world’s more severe lockdowns since the clock struck midnight to herald March 27. No outdoor exercise was permitted until May 1. Citizens wearing face masks and staying at least 1.5 metres apart are now allowed to run, walk or cycle — not swim in the ocean or in public pools — between 6am and 9am. Universities, schools, cinemas, bars, hairdressers, gyms and the seating areas of restaurants remain closed. For seven weeks no-one has been able to buy alcohol or tobacco. At least, not legally. The measures appear to be working: the country’s coronavirus infection and death rates are among the lowest. But there are worrying signs that the authorities are enjoying enforcing their emergency powers too much.

“In everything I do in life, whether it’s studies or my cricket, I’m quite specific and calculated about what I do. I won’t do something for the fun of it.”

Wolvaardt spent the first month of lockdown, which dampened her 21st birthday on April 26, using little beyond her own bodyweight and resistance bands to train in her 20-metre long driveway: “I’m glad that we can run in the mornings now. It’s been a long few weeks. I’m not sure when we’ll get back to playing cricket, which is the most frustrating part. But I’m doing alright.”

There is reason for all of us to wonder just how mad the world is going to go. Of the global population of 7,594-billion, only 144 of us — or 0.000001896233869% of those alive — might have an inkling. They’re the people who, as of Saturday, are at least 102 years old and were thus around to experience the 1918 influenza epidemic that infected 500-million and killed an estimated 100-million. “Even my grandma [who is in her late 70s and lives in Belgium] was saying she never thought she would see something like this in her lifetime,” Wolvaardt said. “It’s crazy that we are all just indoors and no-one is doing anything. I was at the shops the other day and we had to wait and go in one-by-one. It’s insane to think that’s what it’s come to, compared to before, when we used to stand in buses and trains at the airport with thousands of people.”

The illness itself and the death and destruction — of the global economy, chiefly — it has, is and will cause are the biggest concerns. But lurking just out of focus in our collective consciousness is another thuggish question: what type of society will be left once the fog of dread lifts? And will it go completely, or linger like a mugger in the dark? How will cricket fit into that future imperfect society? Already there is serious talk about legalising ball-tampering, even corrupting the umpires into the bargain by having them oversee the practice. If players are no longer allowed to rub spit and sweat onto the ball to manipulate its condition within the currently permissible limits, other ways will have to be found for cricket to conjure the pretence that it is unchanged by the pandemic. 

“It’s more an aspect of men’s cricket because they play Test matches and we only play the white-ball formats,” Wolvaardt said. “In our games the ball never really gets old enough for reverse swing to come into play. We do shine it in 50-over games to try and keep it in as good a condition as we can because our fast bowlers always like the ball to have been worked on when they get it back at the death, but not excessively as the men do in Test matches.”

But there’s more to this than bodily fluids. Not to put too flippant a point on it, will umpires measure the gap between slip fielders to ensure social distancing is maintained? What might that mean for the Ashes, considering people have been told to stay at least 1.5 metres away from each other in Australia and two metres in England? Should cricket, or any mere sport, even be part of this conversation? 

“It depends on how early we go back,” Wolvaardt said. “If we go back and there’s still some small percentage of the population that has the virus they’ll have to try limit things as much as they can. Maybe no handshakes and no crowds, that type of thing. But I’m hopeful that once all of this passes and coronavirus dies out, everything will go back to the way it was. But I don’t know …”

Wolvaardt’s voice trailed away to a disconcerting silence. For someone whose brain is wired for science, uncertainty is not an option. If it is not or cannot be known it does not make sense, and if it does not make sense it is to be regarded as a threat. “In everything I do in life, whether it’s studies or my cricket, I’m quite specific and calculated about what I do. I won’t do something for the fun of it. I usually like knowing why, and what the purpose of doing something is. Technique, for me, is quite an important aspect. I work hard to make sure everything’s right. If I tick the boxes I’ll always have a good foundation to work from. It’s the same with my studies. If I study all the material and do everything that is asked of me or is in the guidelines, then the chances of success are better. It’s the same when I’m trying to build a long innings — staying patient and knowing what my role is.”

At the T20 World Cup in Australia in February and March, that role was to sit padded up watching Mignon du Preez and Suné Luus seal victory over England. Wolvaardt also wasn’t required against Thailand, who buckled under the onslaught of Lizelle Lee’s century and Luus’ half-century. When Wolvaardt finally got out there, against Pakistan, she faced 19 balls before stroking her first four. She hit seven more, including three consecutively to finish the innings 53 not out off 36. No-one else hit more than four boundaries, not least because of an unusually SCG outfield. Fifteen of her 38 scoring shots, including all but one of her fours, scurried away in the V or through the covers. In the semi-final against Australia, she opened the face of her bat to square drive the first ball she faced to third (Woman? Person? Surely not man?). Australia won by five runs, but not before Wolvaardt made an unbeaten 41 off 27. Her runs came from 13 of those deliveries, nine of them driven.

What this will tell the cricketminded scientists among us is that Wolvaardt drives like a dream. What it tells those of us who watch cricket to appreciate the quatrain of contrast in the bowling of Vernon Philander and Dale Steyn, to wonder what kind of impressionist painter Brian Lara might make, to try and see through the fire in Virat Kohli’s eyes and into his head, is that science and art can co-exist in one player.

Calling Wolvaardt’s driving surgically precise is lazy. Likewise comparing her technique, favourably, to Jacques Kallis’. Certainty and uncertainty surely have never lived as amicably as in the fluid sweep of her bat through the line of the ball, which seems almost incidental to the completion of the stroke; a pebble on an airport runway unnoticed by the jets grandly sweeping past. It’s difficult, for a long moment after the insignificant dot has been dispatched, to look away from Wolvaardt, much less to imagine that humans are on this earth to do anything but hit a cricket ball like that. This is what perfection looks like, and all it costs to witness it is the taking of your breath for a sliver of a second.

We do not need cricketers. Just like we don’t need musicians, painters and writers. Scientists and doctors keep us alive. But artists, cricketers among them, remind us why we want to live.

First published by Cricbuzz.

More than one disease haunts cricket

“Dané’s been trying to teach me, for the last 10, 11 years, that cricket isn’t everything. Because, for me, cricket is absolutely everything.” – Marizanne Kapp.

TELFORD VICE in Cape Town

MARIZANNE Kapp doesn’t have Covid-19. But she has a good idea of how people feel when they’re stricken by illness. And she’s lived with that knowledge for longer than the few weeks the pandemic has consigned the world to lockdown.

“I’m sick and tired of giving blood,” Kapp said during an online press conference on Thursday. Why has she been baring her veins to doctors? The cricket-watching public were given a clue when South Africa revealed their XI for the T20 World Cup semi-final against Australia at the SCG in March. Kapp, the team’s ace allrounder, wasn’t included. And not because of any of the usual injury suspects.

“I had a viral infection in Australia, and I made the choice to play the game against Pakistan [four days before the semi] when I wasn’t 100%,” Kapp said. “It was 30 degrees or more. That put my body into shock and I didn’t seem to recover. I was quite sick when I got home; I was off for another two to three weeks.”

No-one in world cricket is more competitive than Kapp. She is a brooding, bristling presence on the field. When South Africa lose, her teammates stay out of her way. Withdraw herself from a game as big as a World Cup semi-final? Good luck trying to convince her to do that, whatever her state of health. But her captain knows her better than anyone and probably gives her best interests a higher priority than Kapp herself.

“I was very conflicted,” Dané van Niekerk said. “It was a very difficult decision. The way she looked it would have been wrong for us to push her to play a game.” She spoke sitting beside Kapp, but there was no need to call the social distancing police — aside from being Kapp’s captain Van Niekerk is also her wife.

Kapp said she was “finally 100% now and training very hard”. A happy ending to a sad story? No. She has been through many episodes of illness and is steeling herself for still more: “I spoke to our team doctor because I seem to get sick literally every three weeks. I’m a vegetarian so I don’t always eat as well as I should. If I have a really tough game or a tough training session I seem to get sick the next day.”

Vegans and other vegetarians will take issue with that. Science proves humans do not need to consume animal products to remain healthy or enhance their performance. To the contrary, there is compelling evidence that a plant-based diet improves physical conditioning and is important in warding off lifestyle diseases typically contracted by meat-eaters. So Kapp’s diet is probably richer than non-vegetarians’ in the nutrients she needs to compete at elite level.

But that doesn’t immunise her against the strains and stresses of professional sport. “I’m quite annoyed with this lockdown situation, but my body has taken a beating over the last three to four years,” she said. “I’ve played in all the [South Africa] series, and I’ve played in the [English] Super League and the [Australian] Big Bash. Even though I don’t want this break it’s a good break for me.”

Not that her life has been put on hold completely: “We’ve been painting and cutting our own grass. We’ve not been doing nothing, we’ve been working hard. It’s almost harder than training for cricket. When we first heard this lockdown was going to happen I ordered some gym equipment. We’ve always had the idea to change our downstairs room into a small gym. We’re still trying to bargain with people to get a treadmill but the rest is sorted.” Van Niekerk, too, was keeping busy: “I wish I could say Marizanne started cooking, but that hasn’t happened. As a bit of a DIY person I’ve had to plaster walls and stuff.” 

Team dynamics are invariably complicated. How much more so when two members of the same team are the most important people in each other’s lives? And still more when one of them is the captain and the other a major player? “She says I’m tougher on her than on anyone else in the team,” Van Niekerk said. “We’re trying to set the precedent that when we’re around the team and we’re training and playing it’s strictly a professional relationship. We do have fights on the field, the same as anyone else, but I am a bit more tough on her because I want to show the team there’s no favouritism. It’s not that she gets to bowl 10 [overs] and somebody else doesn’t. Hopefully I’ve managed it well enough. She gets upset with me a lot of times on the field.”

And it’s not as if what happens on the field stays there. “I absolutely love watching cricket and talking cricket,” Kapp said. “A lot of times Dané will say, ‘No more cricket’. She’s been trying to teach me, for the last 10, 11 years, that cricket isn’t everything. Because, for me, cricket is absolutely everything. I’ve struggled a bit with that. Dané lives her life and cricket is the second thing she does. Sometimes it’s tough, but you also see how your teammates miss their partners or their husbands, and we’re lucky enough to always have the other person there. Especially when it’s not going well.”

It didn’t go well enough against Australia, who won a rain-affected semi-final by five runs. But Van Niekerk was able to see the bigger picture: “There were 86,000 people at the final [between Australia and India at the MCG]. I don’t think many men’s games get that. With time and people getting to love women’s cricket, we’ll get there. We’re moving in the right direction.”

Not that she wanted to add to the endless and tedious comparison between the game as played by men and women: “We need to accept women’s cricket for what it is. Yes, we’re females. But we train just as hard, we work just as hard, the skills stay the same. We might not hit the ball as far but we do hit the ball. And we bowl the ball and we field it and catch it. We keep on looking at things [in terms of] men and women. We need to look at it as cricket, and that’s it.”

But that’s easier said than done in a cricketscape that remains overwhelmingly male and male-orientated, which influences everything from the critiques about the way women play cricket to what they do when they aren’t in action. For instance, wit Kapp and Van Niekerk at home all day, every day, how hard was it to avoid eating badly or too much? Or to stay off the couch?

“We aren’t really unhealthy eaters,” Kapp said. “It is a bit difficult to stay away from the fridge when you’re at home for so long. But [Van Niekerk’s] brother-in-law and sister are staying with us and, every morning, at nine or 10 o’clock, they train together. And then me and my younger sister train. So we have a system going. As long as you stick with it. So far it’s working very well.”

Van Niekerk seemed more challenged by lockdown: “You’re stuck at home. You want to eat everything, more than you can eat. And what do we do all day? We gym in the morning and then we’re done. We try to keep ourselves busy to keep away from the food cupboard and the fridge, but it’s a luxury to have so much time. But we can’t eat unhealthily — it’s not as if Kentucky [KFC] are open, so you can’t get some nice deep-fried chicken. We’re using this time to get our bodies right for a very busy season. We’ve haven’t had the time to spend so much time on our bodies for a long time.” 

Those are respectful answers made more interesting by the contrast between them. But there was disrespect in the question. Would it be asked of Virat Kohli, AB de Villiers, Joe Root or David Warner? Or would it be assumed that, as professionals, they have the discipline to train and eat properly? Or that, as men, they were born with that discipline?

Or that, as women, Kapp and Van Niekerk weren’t disciplined? Or that, as female cricketers, they weren’t genuinely professional? Clearly, Covid-19 isn’t the only disease afflicting cricket. 

First published by Cricbuzz.

CSA’s horror hattrick: delinquent administration, derelict board, deadly virus

“There’s no historic data or literature. This is almost like a world war.” – Jacques Faul

TELFORD VICE in Cape Town

NOT long ago Cricket South Africa (CSA) were staring into a hole more than USD50-million deep. That was how much they were estimated to lose by the end of the 2022 rights cycle. So much for the good news: the coronavirus pandemic has blown the bottom out of the hole. Now, CSA don’t know how much more impoverished the game will be. 

“We’ve established a scenario planning committee that will look into it,” acting chief executive Jacques Faul told an online press conference on Friday. “There’s certain things that we can do immediately, but there is a low level of predictability.”

The cricket season has ended in South Africa, but unlike in other years the game won’t be able to pick up where it left off when next summer arrives.

“We know we’re not an island, so our world will be affected by the world economy and the South African economy,” Faul said. “Our funding model is based very much on incoming tours, so the moment that gets affected we get affected. But also our ability to service certain of our sponsors’ agreements will be influenced. We hope to have more strategy in the next two weeks. There’s no historic data or literature. This is almost like a world war.”

A previous delinquent administration overseen by a derelict board cost CSA millions in lost sponsorship and failed broadcast deals and exponentially more in squandered credibility. The relationship between CSA and their only assets, the players, crashed to an unfathomed low that was headed for the courts. One of their major affiliates, the Western Province Cricket Association, who host the showpiece event of the summer, the New Year Test, also unleashed their lawyers on CSA — and won.

Matters seemed to take a turn for the better in December when Thabang Moroe was suspended as chief executive. Faul’s interim appointment was followed in short order by that of Graeme Smith as acting director of cricket, Mark Boucher’s as the national men’s team’s coach, and the return of Linda Zondi as a selector. Only for South Africa to suffer their worst home campaign since readmission in 1991: they won only one of their five series and lost three. But that could be ascribed to the damage already done. Better days were surely ahead, even though most of that damn board clings to office and the shadow cast by the suspensions of several senior staff members — most of them unresolved, Moroe’s included — lingers still.

And then came coronavirus, changing the world as we know it in as yet unknowable ways.

CSA won’t feel the financial pinch immediately. So paycheques are safe. For now. “Broadcast rights have already been sold, so we don’t have to cut [salaries] at this stage,” Faul said. “It’s not to say it won’t happen in future, but we haven’t lost income at this stage that would trigger such a cut. We would first have to lose substantial money before that happens. For example, If we lose home Indian income, that might trigger a cut. But that hasn’t happened.

“If your future content doesn’t take place, then your money gets cut. But we can’t take a decision to cut salaries if we haven’t experienced an actual loss yet. That wouldn’t be a responsible thing to do at this stage.” But Faul warned that “the effect of the virus has been delayed at CSA, but it will come”.

A planned downsizing of the domestic game from the 2021-22 season will further shrink the amount of employment available in cricket, and CSA’s current contract with broadcaster SuperSport — whose revenues will also be ravaged by the havoc wrought by the virus — expires next year.

CSA’s next potentially profitable incoming tours, as currently scheduled, are Australia’s visit to play three Tests in February 2021, followed the next month by England for three ODIs and as many T20Is. That December, the only guaranteed money-makers, India, will be in town until January 2022 for three Tests and three T20Is. But first CSA will have to absorb loss-making ventures to their shores by Pakistan in October and Sri Lanka in January next year.

And spend money going to white-ball series in Sri Lanka in June and Test and T20I engagements in the Caribbean in July and August. Mercifully, in the financial sense, both are under threat because of the virus crisis. Even the T20 World Cup in Australia in October and November has been cast into doubt, which could be dispelled at an International Cricket Council teleconference on Thursday involving the national boards’ chief executives.

“A factor that will influence [the viability of the T20 World Cup] big time is, of course, international travel — when will that be open?” Faul said. “I guess you can play it behind closed doors. But you’ve still got to get visas and travel. There’s a lot of uncertainty.”

The only glimmer of positivity on Friday was confirmation that Smith, originally appointed for three months, had agreed a contract of two years. He was, for some, a controversial choice as director of cricket, an echo of being named South Africa’s captain at 22. But when so much is unsettled it is no small thing that this, at least, has been nailed down.

Smith brought the promise of good tidings: “We’re really hoping to close [a deal] potentially [to play] T20s [in South Africa] at the end of August with India. There’s a lot of doubt about what going to happen going forward, but we are in consistent discussions with the leaders of the BCCI.”

That would put money in CSA’s coffers. But India, as world cricket’s paymasters, won’t want for suitors banging at their door for a way to cushion the damage of the global disaster. Smith is a giant on the subcontinent, as he is everywhere cricket is played. But is he big enough to help CSA make India an offer they can’t refuse?

First published by Cricbuzz.

AB: Maybe. Or maybe not …

“It was very hurtful for me last year when people thought I assumed there was a place for me.” – AB de Villiers

TELFORD VICE in Cape Town

IF AB de Villiers plays for South Africa again, thank Mark Boucher. If he doesn’t, curse the coronavirus pandemic that has cast into doubt his mooted comeback at this year’s currently scheduled T20 World Cup.

In an interview with Afrikaans-language Sunday newspaper Rapport, De Villiers was quoted as saying, “I could write a book on ‘Bouchie’s impact just on my life, nevermind cricket. I rediscovered that when I played under him at the Spartans [in the Mzansi Super League] in December. He was born to be an instructor. When he talks there’s respect.”

De Villiers played in 176 of Boucher’s 461 matches for South Africa across the formats. When Boucher’s career was ended by an eye injury in Taunton in July 2012, during the first game of South Africa’s tour to England, De Villiers — long since a regular batter in the Test XI and already the white-ball wicketkeeper and captain — replaced him behind the stumps in whites.  

Boucher’s appointment as South Africa’s coach was announced two days before last year’s MSL final in Paarl on December 16, when the Rocks won by eight wickets despite De Villiers’ 37-ball 51 for the Spartans.

By then, Boucher had spoken about to De Villiers about rescinding the decision he revealed to a shocked cricket world in May 2018, when, at 34, he walked away from the international arena.

“‘Bouch’ asked me why don’t I give it another go,” De Villiers said. “He said ‘guys like us who love cricket want you there’, and it was very good to hear that. I’ve always said to him, ‘I’ve never not wanted to be there. I’ve always wanted to be there. It’s just, my life has changed’. The situation I’m in is that it isn’t just about me and my cricket dreams anymore. I have a family now and a bunch of other things play a role: my health, how much I can play in a year and how much I can tour.”

The T20 World Cup in Australia in November and December glints on the horizon as an apt stage for De Villiers coming back. But he was mindful of avoiding a repeat of the debacle that unfolded during last year’s 50-over World Cup in England after reports emerged that his casually expressed offer to come back had been rejected. Cricket South Africa said the selectors heard of De Villiers’ proposal on the same day the squad was announced, by which time he had taken himself out of the running by not being available for South Africa’s matches before the tournament.

“I am uncertain about giving a definite answer because I have been very hurt and burned in the past,” Rapport quoted De Villiers as saying. “Then people will again think I have turned my back on our country. I can’t just walk into the team. Like every other player, I have to work for my place and deserve it. It was very hurtful for me last year when people thought I assumed there was a place for me. I feel available and I will give it a go with everything I have, but I don’t want special treatment.”

The coronavirus outbreak, which has forced the cancellation or postponement of many events, has added to the uncertainty surrounding De Villiers’ possible return. The T20 World Cup remains on the schedule, but with much of the world in lockdowns that are being extended — including in South Africa — prospects of sport resuming in the next few months are fast receding.

“I can’t see six months into the future,” De Villiers said. “If the tournament is postponed to next year a whole lot of things will change.” Part of what could be different is De Villiers’ fitness — he has a chronic back condition that has taken him off the field in the past. “At the moment I feel available, but at the same time I don’t know how my body will see it and if I will be healthy at that time.”

With little or no gametime likely before the tournament, preparing properly will be a challenge. “If I am 100% as good as I want to be, then I will be available,” De Villiers said. “But if I am not I won’t open myself up to that because I am not the type of person who does things at 80%. Then I have to do trials and show ‘Bouchie’ I’m still good enough. They should choose me because I’m really better than the guy next to me. I’ve never been the type of person who felt I should get just what I wanted.”

About all that can be confirmed about De Villiers pulling on South Africa’s green and gold kit again is that the issue remains unresolved: “I’m terribly afraid to say now yes, I’m available. And then in six months my whole life has changed as a result of the virus, or other uncertainties around the world, and I have to withdraw. Then a lot of people will be angry with me again. And even if [the T20 World Cup] is not postponed, I last played cricket in January and may not be able to play for the next three months.

“My situation could change and I might get to a point where I have to tell ‘Bouch’ I was interested I would like to play a role but I’m not going to be able to play myself. I’m afraid of such a commitment and creating false hope.”

Too late: if De Villiers doesn’t play for South Africa again might he be part of their coaching staff?

First published by Cricbuzz.

All we know is that we don’t know

“What if the game falls over, it just can’t go on?” – Jacques Faul

TELFORD VICE in Cape Town

TO all the uncertainties facing cricket and everything else, add these: your premier team is without a title sponsor, you do not have a Test captain, the chief executive and the director of cricket are temporary appointees, and you are about to advertise for a convenor of national selectors, a new women’s coach and management component, and a new under-19 men’s coach and management component. Welcome to the realities of cricket in South Africa.

The existential threat posed by the global coronavirus outbreak has the potential to obliterate civilisation as we know it. Cricket is an infinitesimally small part of that equation, and South African cricket a still smaller part. But the game here seems to be doing its best to ensure that, as Cricket South Africa (CSA) acting chief executive Jacques Faul said during an online press conference on Tuesday with an eye on the bigger picture, “The world will never be the same.”

Whether that world will include what we could call big cricket is not at all certain. Perhaps permanently, perhaps for several seasons hence, the game could be confined to backyards and parks while the grand stadiums and gracious grounds of the present are put to more important use as testing centres and field hospitals. For the first time since cricket in South Africa was officially racially unified in 1991, how many black and how many white players are in a team is irrelevant — if the team doesn’t exist, how can that matter?  

“You’ve got to see what’s immediately in front of you, and then you’ve got to have a helicopter view,” Faul said. “What happens if [cricket is] not there for three months, six months, nine months …? We’ve only got to nine months, but you’ve got to take a long-term view of the scenario. You’ve got to assess the resources available now and how far they can stretch.

“We’ll probably do scenario planning on three levels. One is the worst case — you run out of capacity to run cricket and it becomes a recreational sport. The second is the most likely; probably a point between the best-case scenario and the worst. What if the game falls over, it just can’t go on? In assessing that, our biggest source of income is broadcasting. And if it’s going to fall over it’s going to come from there. That will be significantly important when you plan strategically. We list our biggest sources of income and then look at how their own environments have changed. There’s good and bad in it. [Broadcasters] would still like to stimulate high-level competition because that makes for a good product. We hope that will help us. But this has got us all nervous and all planning.”

Without cricket to put on their screens, some of the world’s biggest sport broadcasters would struggle to survive. And without broadcasters, international and much of professional cricket would struggle to survive. Who needs who more? Whatever else this is, or isn’t, undoubtedly it’s a moment of truth for the game.

“It’s funny how the world prioritises itself,” Faul said. “Health is the most important thing; the well-being of your loved ones. I really feel for poor people out there. Sport is the most important thing in our lives and it does feed a lot of mouths, but we’ve got to be honest — the world has got bigger challenges than our industry and our challenges.”

What South Africans can bank on, to some degree, is another instalment of the exciting but expensive Mzansi Super League. “We’re still in the final negotiations, but I can confirm that there will be MSL 2020,” Faul said. “We cannot give too many details other than stating that a third edition of the MSL will take place.”

But the unknown looms larger than everything and anything else. Players’ salaries, for instance, will probably become part of the lottery of cricket’s future. “At this stage we will have enough capacity to see us through the next season,” Faul said. “Where players would lose out is on match fees and winning bonuses. But we’ll have to look at the financial impact post this season — how much money will be available to contract players. We’ve got to crunch the numbers first and experience the total effect of Covid-19. For now, I don’t see anybody getting less money than they’ve been contracted for. In future, there is a likelihood that the players’ allocation would be less.” 

Faul is in his position, at least for now, because the previous permanent incumbent, Thabang Moroe, made such a mess of things that even CSA’s shambolic board couldn’t continue to look the other way — not before time, they suspended him in December. Part of the fallout is that Standard Bank, a sponsor for the past 21 years, will walk away at the end of April. In December, Graeme Smith was named acting director of cricket for three months. The reason given for the time limit was that Smith had a prior commitment to commentate on the IPL. Now that the tournament is in doubt his immediate future is also unclear, although he seems set to stay on with CSA.

Faf du Plessis relinquished the captaincy in February, and while Quinton de Kock has succeeded him in the white-ball formats there is no word on who might be in charge for the Test series in the Caribbean in July and August. That’s if the rubber goes ahead.

Part of the madness in Moroe’s method was to abolish the selection panel. After Moroe himself was jettisoned, Linda Zondi, the convenor of the disbanded selection committee, was brought back as an independent selector. Zondi had a successful tenure as convenor when that was a part-time post, and CSA could do worse than appoint him now that the job is to be made fulltime. Similarly, Hilton Moreeng, who has coached the women’s team to the semi-finals of the 2017 World Cup and the 2020 T20 World Cup, has done enough to keep his job. Not so Lawrence Mahatlane, whose under-19 men’s team have lost seven of the 10 one-day games they have played this year, which followed nine consecutive defeats in 2019.

Of all of those in limbo, Smith seems closest to surety. “We’re in final negotiations with Graeme and hope to make an announcement next week,” Faul said, prompting Smith to quip: “Otherwise today is my last day at work.” The jocularity swung back to Faul: “One of the things we’re talking around is that Graeme should shave that beard off before we employ him.” At that, Smith’s smile spread wide the fluff he currently sports on his chin.

The lightness of mood couldn’t last, of course. How did Smith assess his initial tenure, considering the national men’s team have won only seven of their 15 completed games since he came aboard? “Some aspects have been good, in some aspects there’s been a lot of learning. That’s been the most important thing in the past few months — to understand what’s in place, why is it in place, what has been the strategy around some of the decisions that have been made in the past. And then to assess all of that and try to formulate a way forward. There’s been a huge amount going on from a commercial perspective, to contracting, getting our teams performing well across the board, high performance … I feel I’m probably in a good place to look to implement some stuff, maybe debate some strategies going forward. If everything works out in the way we hope it does, I hope — in this uncertain time — that we will be able to put out a team at the [men’s] T20 World Cup [scheduled for Australia in October and November] that will be really successful, and by next summer to have an idea of who our 40, 45 players on the men’s side are to take the Proteas into the future.”

South Africa’s next engagement, if it goes ahead, is six white-ball games in Sri Lanka in June. Currently the players are training individually in a country on lockdown, where gyms have been shut and exercising outdoors is prohibited. But push will come to shove. “We need plus-minus six weeks to have our players fully ready for tours,” Smith said. “Financially, with stuff like holding flights, around that six-week mark is when decisions need to be made.”

The start of June is not quite nine weeks away. So much could change by then. Whether it gets better or worse is, like everything else, uncertain.

First published by Cricbuzz.

What does a cricketer look like? Think before you answer …

David Gower sees a “gulf between people who’ve been very lucky to be fit, able, talented and enjoy the game at the highest level” and “those who can play, those who think they can play, who definitely can’t play, those who have no ability but love watching”.

Jeremy Fredericks bowls, David Gower drives, and Mike Gatting looks on from midwicket. Photograph: Mark Sampson

TELFORD VICE in Cape Town

MIKE Gatting stood at the top of his run last week and delivered what someone in the watching crowd called the ball of the century. They were careful not to mention Shane Warne, nor which century. Perhaps the eighth, when not a lot of cricket would have been played. Gatting’s effort had darted directly down the pitch and past a flailing bat … bowled him! Just like Warne did to Gatting at Old Trafford on June 4, 1993 with the most celebrated leg break in the annals of the game. Famously, it flew towards Gatting on the line of middle stump, hooked legside through the air to pitch in the rough 30 or so centimetres outside leg, spat leftward with wicked turn, and nailed the top of off stump. It looked more like the work of an ice-blooded assassin than what it was: Warne’s first delivery in an Ashes Test.

All that connected his ball of the century with Gatting’s infinitely more modest offering was that both involved a ball. Not if you ask ‘Gat’. “Missed a straight one, just like me,” he quipped about his victim’s fate, to chuckles all around.

Anything resembling a cricket ground was a long way down. We were in Cape Town at the top of Table Mountain, which is not nearly as flat as it looks in scenic views broadcast from Newlands. Good luck finding a space up there big and level enough to serve as an oval and that isn’t formed entirely of unforgiving sandstone and haphazardly sprouted with legally protected indigenous flora called fynbos.

But playing what most of us would recognise as cricket wasn’t the point of the exercise. Nobody can play cricket on Table Mountain but almost everybody can play table cricket almost anywhere, which was the point of the exercise. Developed and facilitated by the Lord’s Taverners, the cricket charity founded in 1950, table cricket offers the physically and mentally challenged the chance to imbibe some of the spirit of cricket as it is more often played. It’s enjoyed by 8,700 children in 500 schools in England, where the finals are at Lord’s, and has also been established in Ireland, India and South Africa.

A netless table tennis table fitted with a firm boundary on three sides serves as the ground. The bowler delivers by rolling the miniature ball — which is either weighted to veer sideward, like a lawn bowl, or unweighted — down a ramp toward a batter armed with a small bat. The boundary is marked with designated scoring zones and bristles with movable shields manipulated by the fielding team. Hit the ball to a part of the boundary marked “4” or “6” and you score four or six. But should one of the fielders — teams comprise six players — slide the middle of their shield in front of the ball to intercept it before it reaches the boundary, you’re out caught. Should your stroke hit a shield toward its sides, you’ve not added to your score. There are no stumps but, should you miss the ball, you’ve been bowled.

Gatting, a Lord’s Taverners trustee, was in Cape Town to raise awareness and funds for the organisation. Their programme featured two games of conventional cricket and their party included David Gower. It was in that cause that Gatting and Gower went up the mountain and faced each other across the table — though it was commentator Jeremy Fredericks who was done by demon bowler Gatting.

Gower played cricket, metaphorically, in a tuxedo with a butler stationed at short leg stoically bearing a tray of G&Ts. He was class, right down to his pink socks.

It’s easy to accept Gatting as thoroughly human, and not only because he was proved mortal by Warne. As a Test player he was the epitome of grit and gumption with not a lot of thought given to matters of style and elegance. Getting the job done was the thing. Less so how he looked getting the job done. That wasn’t the way Gower played cricket: metaphorically, in a tuxedo with a butler stationed at short leg stoically bearing a tray of G&Ts. He was class, right down to his pink socks. He had style. He had elegance. He didn’t always get the job done, but for many that hardly mattered. Putting Gatting in the same frame as people who know life’s larger struggles up close and personal isn’t difficult. But Gower, who glided through the game on imported air? Gower admitted to Cricbuzz that there was a “gulf between people who’ve been very lucky to be fit, able, talented and enjoy the game at the highest level” and “those who can play, those who think they can play, who definitely can’t play, those who have no ability but love watching”. Importantly, he had room on his list for “kids who are physically unable to do anything active, so you can rule out cricket, tennis; all those games”.

“But sit them round a table like this … when you see them playing, the competitive urges come through, the smiles, the emotions, the tears. It gives them a very realistic chance of understanding some of the emotion of it all — getting some of the benefit and just enjoying the competition. The finals is an enormous, noisy, clattering day of hundreds of kids playing, wanting to win but building all the other things that we love about the game — a sense of camaraderie and team spirit, playing together, backing each other up. It’s an extraordinary thing.”   

Cricket isn’t good at being inclusive, even for those considered able-bodied. The skills required are diabolically ill-suited to how human bodies and minds prefer to do things. Stand side-on to the approaching bowler, squint over your front shoulder, curb your instinct to swing laterally, and poke your inverted elbow upward when driving; land with your foot parallel to the bowling crease but deliver, with a stiff elbow, the ball 90 degrees perpendicular in another direction even as your body hurtles down the pitch; catch a small, hard leather missile using only your bare hands; don’t think your time wasted if neither team win; don’t dare do any of the above should rain start falling.

Most aficionados’ idea of a cricketer is someone male and athletic in the ordinary sense. The amount of time and effort the commentators and even the players devoted to exclaiming how amazed they were that 86,174 people turned out for the women’s T20 World Cup final at the MCG on Sunday was evidence enough of that. Nobody went on in that fashion when 93,013 arrived to watch the men’s 2015 World Cup final at the same ground. When men play, mass adulation is taken for granted; even expected. When women play, they should be grateful for any attention they get. That Mitchell Starc returned home early from South Africa to watch his spouse, Alyssa Healy, in action in the final was among the biggest pre-final headlines. 

If talented, skilled, able-bodied women have to fight for their share of a spotlight focused sharply on the über-male, what chance do the differently abled among us stand of being accepted as cricketers? The Lord’s Taverners are trying to change the answer to that question, even if they have to resort to some of those über-males to validate their efforts.

But it can only help if David Gower thinks you’re extraordinary.

First published by Cricbuzz.

Some of South Africa’s players are from Mars, others from Venus

An Ivy League of about 25 schools have, still do, and are likely to continue to supply the bulk of South Africa’s male players.

TELFORD VICE in Paarl

STRANGE symmetry struck across the Indian Ocean last Sunday. Within the same minute, Quinton de Kock hoisted Adam Zampa to Mitchell Starc at mid-off and Dané van Niekerk slapped Sophie Ecclestone to Tammy Beaumont at point. Both De Kock and Van Niekerk were captaining South Africa in a T20 and both were opening the batting. But they were more than 22 yards apart. South Africa’s men’s team were playing Australia at St George’s Park. The women’s side were up against England at the WACA. Port Elizabeth and Perth are 8,112 kilometres from each other. So South Africa’s teams might as well have been on Mars and Venus. But that’s the case even when they’re in the same city.

King Edward VII School — otherwise known as KES — Afrikaanse Höer Seunskool — or Affies — Maritzburg College, Grey College, St Stithians and Hilton were the schools attended by De Kock, Faf du Plessis, David Miller, Pite van Biljon, Kagiso Rabada and Lungi Ngidi, who were all members of Sunday’s XI. Those institutions are likely to feature in the past of any South Africa men’s XI. As well as De Kock, KES has given cricket Ali Bacher and Graeme Smith: one school, three South Africa captains. And a host of mere internationals aside. Along with Du Plessis, Affies has produced AB de Villiers, Kruger van Wyk and Neil Wagner, among many others. The school’s website doesn’t bother listing alumni among first-class players: “Scores of Affies old boys currently play for senior provincial teams.” Graham Ford, Jonty Rhodes and Kevin Pietersen went to Maritzburg College, and Kepler Wessels, Hansie Cronjé and Ryan McLaren to Grey College. As did too many other prominent players to mention. The same is true of the rest of an Ivy League of about 25 schools that have, still do, and are likely to continue to supply the bulk of South Africa’s male players.

Those schools used to be reserved exclusively not only for whites but for the most privileged among them, and their status as cricketer factories is undiminished even in the modern, racially more equitable era. Soon after Makhaya Ntini was discovered in the impoverished village of Mdingi he was packed off to Dale College in King William’s Town. Geographically, that’s a journey of eight kilometres. In every other sense, it’s as far as Venus is from Mars. Ngidi followed a similar path to Hilton, and Andile Phehlukwayo to Glenwood High. So the school sport system has, in a handful of cases, proved a more effective mechanism for pulling blacks out of the economic and social deprivation they were assigned by dint of their race than almost 26 years of post-apartheid life. Cricket has helped propel them into the middle class.

But the homogeneity of that process means men who play cricket at a high level in South Africa have grown up with largely the same set of values and a similar regard for discipline and tradition, which would be recognisable to anyone who has been to an elite alma mater of the British or colonial sort. Apartheid tried to ensure that Mark Boucher and Ntini would live in starkly different worlds. But, thanks to cricket and the schools, that is not the case. Much of Boucher’s worldview would have been formed while he was still at Selborne College. So the authority he wielded, both as a senior player and now as South Africa’s coach, was and is readily understood and accepted.

That is not the reality in the South Africa women’s team. Sport is a major factor in maintaining the prestige of boys’ and co-ed schools. But in girls’ institutions academic performance matters far more than anything else. Hence no girls’ schools have a track record for producing top class cricketers. Rather, girls have to work their way into the game, vaulting prejudice as they go. They were accepted into the boys’ soft-ball cricket programme at a particular Cape Town co-ed junior school. But only for training: they weren’t allowed to play matches. Their parents objected, and won the right for their daughters to appear in games. When the players progressed to hard-ball cricket, the girls were again excluded. Another argument ensued, another victory was won. Cricket South Africa have made moves towards gender parity, but cricket as played by girls and women struggles to be taken anywhere near as seriously as that played by boys and men. Below international level women’s cricket structures are not as established as they need to be, and unlike on the male side of the divide the only women paid to play cricket in South Africa are in the national set-up. Consequently, in another departure from the men’s game, women’s teams are collections of contrasts. They haven’t been inculcated with uniform values that cut across race, class and religious lines. So Mars and Venus are in the same dressingroom.

The least conventional aspect of Mignon du Preez’ life would appear to be that she plays cricket for a living. She is married. To a man: Tony van der Merwe. Who is an urban planner. Without trying to be snide about Du Preez or Van der Merwe, that’s about as mainstream as modern life gets. Van Niekerk and Marizanne Kapp are also married — to each other. Shabnim Ismail and Trisha Chetty are in a long-term relationship. Sometimes. Laura Wolvaardt has put a career in medicine on hold to see how this cricket gig works out. Some of the players don’t need to know the price of a pair of batting gloves. Others wish they didn’t know. Still another knows the price of illicit drugs well enough to have fallen prey to substance abuse. None of the above would be accepted in a prominent men’s team in South Africa, much less the national side.

Imagine Rabada marrying Keshav Maharaj. That would be unfathomable to some, even those who know it would be legal and that they wouldn’t blink should two men whose names they didn’t know announce their engagement. They would also acknowledge that, statistically, some male players have to be gay. Steven Davies, who played 13 white-ball games for England between March 2009 and February 2011 and 225 first-class matches, most of them for Worcestershire and Surrey from May 2005 to September last year, came out as homosexual in February 2011. But there are none in his league of bravery in South Africa and few in the wider world, as there are in other sports considered central to sadly conventional ideas of masculine identity.

Are lesbians in sports like cricket tolerated by the majority of game’s traditional audience because the assumption is they are trying to be like men, and are thus hopelessly harmless to what is considered the norm? Would that ilk of cricket follower denigrate male gay players if they knew of them, because they would threaten the perceived manliness of the status quo? Does that traditional audience not give a damn about women’s cricket anyway, so they don’t care who plays it? The answer to all of these questions is, probably, yes.  

For a minute last Sunday, none of this mattered nearly as much as De Kock and Van Niekerk getting out at awkward stages. Both their teams recovered well enough to win narrowly. While the joy was shortlived for De Kock’s lot — their loss at Newlands on Wednesday confirmed their fourth consecutive series defeat — the women have secured a place in the T20 World Cup semi-finals.

Infamously, South Africa have yet to win a World Cup. Deep inside every cricketminded South African a small thought is growing: what if the women get there first? For some, that comes from a place of fear and insecurity. For many more others, it is a spark of wonder waiting to catch fire. If that happens, cricket in South Africa — regardless of who plays it — will never be the same.

First published by Cricbuzz.

Du Plessis does the decent thing

“I have strived to lead the team with dignity and authenticity during exhilarating highs and devastating lows.” – Faf du Plessis

TELFORD VICE in Cape Town

RARELY is a player defined by one innings. More rarely is that innings in his first Test. Even more rarely does he stay true to the example he set in that innings for the rest of his career. Faf du Plessis is that player.

A mould was cast in Adelaide in November 2012 when he batted for almost eight hours over two days to score an undefeated 110 to save the match. That mould has yet to be broken, and no-one who has since played for South Africa has fitted into it anywhere near as well.

But Du Plessis is no longer the captain that player became. On Monday he relinquished the leadership of South Africa’s Test and T20 teams. That followed Quinton de Kock succeeding him as the ODI captain last month. The presence of Du Plessis the player is also fading: he was rested for the ODI and T20 series against England. South Africa won neither of those rubbers, Du Plessis’ supporters will highlight to those who have been crowing for his removal as a prerequisite for progress.

Of the 524 words attributed to Du Plessis in a Cricket South Africa release, these hit home hardest: “I have strived to lead the team with dignity and authenticity during exhilarating highs and devastating lows. I have given my everything during my tenure. I have never been one to throw in the towel and do believe I am putting the team first and believe we have to stick through the tough times to get to the good times. In a perfect world I would have loved to lead the team in the Tests for the rest of the season as well as the T20 World Cup, but sometimes the most important attribute of a leader is to be selfless.”

Du Plessis captained South Africa 112 times from December 2012. He won 18 of 36 Tests, 28 of 39 ODIs, and 23 of 37 T20s. That’s 69 victories, a success rate of 61.61%. Or better than Graeme Smith’s 57.39% and Shaun Pollock’s 61.34%. He won 21 of his 31 bilateral series across the formats, eight of them away — five in Asia and two in Australia. He is the only South Africa captain to take a home Test series off Australia. But, as with Smith and Pollock before him, there is a time for even the best to go.

That time is now. South Africa having lost 11 of the last 15 completed matches they played under Du Plessis — a sorry story that started in May last year at the World Cup. The initial alarm had sounded in February when Sri Lanka became the first Asian team to win a Test series in South Africa.   

“The last few weeks of rest away from the game have given me a lot of perspective on the great privilege and honour I have had in representing and leading my country in the three formats of this wonderful game,” Du Plessis was quoted as saying. “It has been a rewarding, sometimes tough and other times a lonely road, but I would not replace the experience for anything, because it has made me the man that I am proud to be today.

“When I took over the leadership I did so with the commitment to lead, perform and, most importantly, to serve. As the team heads into a new direction with new leaders and a young crop of players I feel it will be in the best interests of South African cricket to relinquish the captaincy in all formats. This was one of the toughest decisions to make, but I remain fully committed to supporting Quinton, Mark [Boucher] and my teammates as we continue to rebuild and realign as a group.”

That Du Plessis was captain all the way until Monday is testament to his hardiness. He has, in little more than nine months, played under three head coaches. He has endured the retirements of AB de Villiers, Hashim Amla, JP Duminy and Vernon Philander, and the partial retirements of Dale Steyn and Imran Tahir. He has seen a selection panel dissolved. He has had to put up with suits who know good whisky when they drink it but have no taste for doing right by the game. He is the first South Africa captain to have to recast his role in the shadow of a director of cricket. He has spent the last of his time at the helm putting up with the shrieking of idiot opportunists who can’t see past the fact of his whiteness.

“After the 2019 World Cup I made the decision to continue in my role as captain while the team went through a rebuilding phase following the retirement of some key senior players and a complete overhaul of the coaching staff that we had worked with until then. It was important to me that I stayed to help the team find its feet and plot a new way forward while assisting in identifying the next generation of leaders within the players’ group during a time of turbulence in South African cricket. The last season of my captaincy has been the most challenging to date as I had a lot of off-field issues that I devoted my energy towards.

“South African cricket has entered a new era. New leadership, new faces, new challenges and new strategies. I remain committed to play in all three formats of the game for now as a player and will offer my knowledge and time to the new leaders of the team.”

None of which is to meant to cast Du Plessis as perfect. His message to black South Africans last month after Temba Bavuma was dropped during the Test series against England — “We don’t see colour” — clanged with tone-deafness for the new era he acknowledges. Any South African who doesn’t know race remains the defining factor of our hopelessly unequal, far from democratic society is cocooned in privilege and, thus, in wilful ignorance.

Du Plessis’ defence of his overly defensive tactics while Mark Wood and Stuart Broad, England’s last pair, were smashing his bowlers to all parts of the Wanderers amounted to reminding his inquisitors that they didn’t have similar questions for Joe Root after Keshav Maharaj and Dane Paterson had done the same at St George’s Park. Wood and Broad started their raid after England had been reduced to 318/9 in the first innings of a match that had yet to unfold significantly. They took their team to 400 and put them in control of the narrative. Maharaj and Paterson came together after South Africa had crashed to 138/9 needing another 152 just to make England bat again. They added 99, but Root had no pressing need to end the stand. Could Du Plessis honestly not see the vast difference between those scenarios?

Only De Kock scored more runs in Tests for South Africa last year, and no-one made more for them in ODIs in 2019. But Du Plessis has gone 14 innings, all of them in Tests, without scoring a century. If he wasn’t the captain would he still be in the XI?

That there is exponentially more good than bad to say about Du Plessis as a player and a leader is plain to all but those who attack him with ulterior agendas. There is also this, and it outweighs everything else: he is a decent man. And he deserves decency in return. We will be fortunate to see his like again.

First published by Cricbuzz.

Another decider, another defeat

“He’s a discussion in the media and in the public. He is no discussion for me.” – Mark Boucher on the possible return of AB de Villiers to international level.

TELFORD VICE in Cape Town

AGAIN there was almost no separating the teams. Again a close contest ensued. Again the crowd wen’t home richly entertained. But weasel words like almost, close and entertained don’t cut it. The stone cold truth is South Africa haven’t won any of their last seven series — a bleak sequence that started almost 11 months ago and includes their dismal World Cup campaign.

England’s five-wicket win in the deciding T20 at Centurion on Sunday means they go home with two trophies. Good thing, perhaps, that the second of the three ODIs was washed out: a clean sweep would be too much. Already, it’s difficult to stomach the fact that South Africa lost their way after winning the first match in each of the three rubbers.

Sunday’s pill was particularly difficult to swallow. Despite scintillating batting by Temba Bavuma, Quinton de Kock, Heinrich Klaasen and David Miller to put up only the second score of 200 or more at this ground, they still weren’t good enough. Eoin Morgan tried to make the South Africans feel better by starting his post-match television interview with: “It was a hell of a game.” Not for everybody, pal. For some, it was simply hell. De Kock offered: “We were confident but we knew it was a great pitch.” Not only that, the outfield was as slick as an ice-rink and the thin Highveld air offered no resistance to the scything ball. Nearly a third of all the total runs flowed in fours. More than a third soared in sixes.

“It’s the way the game is going,” Mark Boucher shrugged his shoulders and told reporters. “The guys play with no fear. That’s something we encourage as well although you need facilities to be in your favour to go out and play like that. On the day you might have to play a different way; try and be smart because your awareness has to be good to exploit what the conditions offer you. It’s a ‘free your mind and hit the ball’ sort of game at the moment.”

None of South Africa’s bowlers escaped Centurion with an economy rate in single figures. Lungi Ngidi, Tabraiz Shamsi and Bjorn Fortuin were mauled for more than two runs a delivery. South Africa’s bowling has improved significantly under Charl Langeveldt but his charges failed him this time.   

“We bowled a couple too many soft deliveries which they managed to capitalise on,” Boucher said. “They’ve got aggressive players. When you’re chasing a high score like that, you’ve got no option but to come out and play. But we missed our areas too often. Our bowling let us down today. The mindset to go for yorkers was right but the execution wasn’t good.

“It’s difficult to train for those sorts of things because we play and then we travel [leaving little time for practice during series]. I don’t think the skill is where it should be and that’s something we need to work on. They hit one or two [yorkers] for boundaries which were good shots but inbetween we bowled too many soft balls.”

So, here we are. Graeme Smith, Boucher and Jacques Kallis haven’t had the effect that was promised far and wide when they were appointed in December. Neither has the removal from the equation, for the T20s, of Faf du Plessis. That, too, was heralded as, potentially, a great leap forward. Now what? South Africa have four days to find an answer to that question before Friday, when they will be at the Wanderers to play the first of three T20s against Australia.

Bavuma, who has transformed himself into a white-ball wizard in this series — only the captains scored more runs than he did, and no-one scored them more emphatically — might not be part of that effort. He pulled up with a hamstring problem while fielding and must be in doubt for Friday. We’ll know on Monday, when the squad is due to be announced. Might it feature the return of one Abraham Benjamin de Villiers? De Villiers ending his self-imposed international exile in time to be considered for the T20 World Cup in Australia in October and November has been a slow-burning conversation for weeks.

But Boucher was done talking about that: “He’s a discussion in the media and in the public. He is no discussion for me. I have had chats with him and we will probably know pretty soon what’s going to happen with him. Like I said from day one when I took over, if we are going to a World Cup I would like to have our best players here. If AB is in good form and he is raring to go and he makes himself available for the time we have asked him to be available, and if he is the best man for the job, then he must go. It’s not about egos or anything like that, it’s about sending your best team to the World Cup to try and win that competition.”

Quite who’s ego might be bruised by De Villiers coming back isn’t certain. But it won’t help his possible reintegration that Du Plessis spent too much of last year’s ODI World Cup in England going on about exactly that. It emerged that De Villiers had made — apparently casually — an offer to return and that it had been declined. That happened because De Villiers hadn’t played ODIs since February 2018 and was thus ineligible. A similar scenario looms ahead of the T20 World Cup: he will have to feature in at least some of South Africa’s remaining eight games in the format before the tournament in order to be considered.

Will he be named on Monday? Will Du Plessis? Will Kagiso Rabada, who like Du Plessis was rested for the England T20s? All are important questions. But their answers, whatever they are, won’t take South Africa any closer to improvement. For that to start happening they will have to win consecutively games, something they haven’t managed since their last two matches of the World Cup in June 2019, both of them dead rubbers. They’ve had 14 completed games between then and now, and have twice shambled to a hattrick of defeats.

That’s not good enough for any ambitious team, much less a side who harbour a longing as grand as triumph on the global stage. Almost won’t get them there. Neither will close games matter if they keep ending up on the wrong side of the equation. And it won’t matter how entertaining they are. You want to win? Then go out and win.

First published by Cricbuzz.

Full Steyn ahead

“Is there another T20 World Cup? Next year? Wow. That’s shortlived. So, if we win it, we only win for a year?” – Dale Steyn hits the ground running.

TELFORD VICE in Cape Town

CRICKET’S oldest kid hit full speed on Tuesday, talking up a storm about this, that and the next thing. He was, he said several times between the barest pauses for breath, excited about everything from the present to the future, and much inbetween. He was so upbeat about his plans for what would come next for him that he was reluctant to discuss them. Maybe he feared he would explode with enthusiasm.

“There’s a lot of exciting things just over the horizon for me post-cricket but I love playing cricket. I wake up every day and I can’t see myself doing anything else right now. I’ve sat down with various people and spoken about options after cricket, which I am really excited about. But as long as that drive is to still play at the highest level, and get batters out and fox them and outsmart them, and all that kind of stuff, if I can do that, I am going to continue to do that and then once I can’t do that anymore — well once I decide that I don’t want to do it anymore — then I’ll be done.”

Dale Steyn, 36 going on 16, has been on this highway to happiness for 15 years. Looking at him and listening to him, you wouldn’t think he has lurched from one injury to the next for more than the last four of the same years. Before he broke his bowling shoulder at Kingsmead in December 2015, Steyn had featured in 81 of the 101 Tests South Africa had played since his debut. Of their 46 Tests after that first calamity, he was fit for only 12. Or parts thereof. He went from being involved more than 80% of the time to less than 27%. In August the finest Test fast bowler of the age acknowledged that even he was mortal and hung up his whites.

“I want to extend my career for as long as I can. If you’re playing Test cricket and you’re going to bowl 20 overs in a day, I could play five T20s and that’s the same thing. It was a smart decision. South Africa were going to India, where there were spin-friendly conditions, and I knew there were one or two up-and-coming quicks they were looking at. So it was probably the right time to say, ‘Okay cool, let’s walk away’.”

But only as far as the white-ball dressingroom. Even so, the 2019 World Cup turned out to be even less memorable for Steyn than it was for a team who lost five of their eight completed games and finished seventh: he went home without playing a match because of another shoulder issue. No matter. There are T20 World Cups to aim for this year and in 2021.

“Is there another T20 World Cup? Next year? Wow. That’s shortlived. So, if we win it, we only win for a year? It’s okay. Maybe this one. This one would be a nice one to go and then finish off with and reassess after the end of this year and then I will kind of figure out what I want to do.”

What might that be? “I don’t want to tell you right now. There’s some good things. A good friend of mine has started a business and he specialises in retired players, and we’ve had some great conversations about other players he has had in the football world and what they are doing and where they are going and some of the things that are lined up are exciting. And it doesn’t have anything to do with commentary or coaching, which is quite nice. That excites me.

“I’ve got an agent right now [former ODI off-spinner Dave Rundle], but he doesn’t quite know what to do once you retire. Who wants a player once you’re retired? Sponsors might not want to have you because you are not on TV. Managing that space is very important so we have sought advice from other people who do that. There’s a lot of things that are quite exciting.”

Last year’s edition of the Mzansi Super League fuelled Steyn’s upbeat default setting. Only Imran Tahir and Tabraiz Shamsi took more wickets, and he bowled a dozen fewer overs than Tahir and six fewer than Shamsi. Steyn’s strike rate — 12.8 — was the best among bowlers who sent down at least 30 overs in the tournament.   

“I decided to play a braver brand of cricket,” Steyn said. “I tried one or two different things that I wouldn’t necessarily do and I thought I would use that as a nice time to experiment, and it worked out quite nicely. Every game was a bonus. I didn’t think I would be playing. Now I am here and I think I want to continue in that kind of vein and just keep experimenting and keep trying to change to my game. If I’m going to play one more game, I’m going to try and take a wicket every ball. I’m not going to go, ‘Oh, okay, I’m just going to try and defend a boundary’. I’m going to give it a good crack.”

England, you have been warned. Steyn is in the squad for the T20 series that starts in East London on Wednesday. He last played international cricket in March last year, and has missed South Africa’s last 22 matches across the formats. So this rubber is big for him, but in more ways than the obvious.

“You want to win every game that you play but it’s all about learning, really. If we win a World Cup no-one is going to care whether we lost or won against England in February, but it doesn’t mean we don’t go out there to win. This is a very young group of players. My role when I come into the side now is, obviously, I want to do well and I want to perform. But I want to kind of orchestrate that bowling line-up. I want to be able to guide them. I want to stand at mid-off and really say, ‘Look, what are you thinking? What ball are you going to bowl? Hopefully they can learn and get better every game while I’m there. That’s what I want to do.

“Where the team wants to go is something we are going to have sit down and discuss. I just got here yesterday, so I’m not into those discussions yet. My job is to make sure guys are making the right decisions on the field. That’s what I want to achieve out of this.”

Then what? “After this, I think I am going to Pakistan for the PSL, then the IPL, and then there’s not much. I am not looking at anything after that, just the Proteas and giving it everything I’ve got, until the World Cup. And then we will just assess from there. Anything the Proteas are doing, I’m just putting my hand up and saying I’m available — pick me, don’t pick me. We’ll see how it goes to the World Cup.”

Don’t pick him? He’s Dale Steyn, and he’s going anything but quietly into that good night. 

First published by Cricbuzz.