Little from captains Pollock and Smith on Ntini’s claims

“Black and Afrikaans South Africans are part of South Africa, for better or worse, forever. English-speaking South Africans are still ‘soutpiels’.” – historian and author Richard Parry.

TELFORD VICE | Cape Town

THE captains in almost 90% of the matches Makhaya Ntini played for South Africa have yet to respond meaningfully to the former fast bowler’s claims that he was shunned by his white teammates. Instead they have offered vague and limited comment that is sure to further polarise a game ever more acutely divided along racial lines. 

An enduring icon as the first black African to play for the national team, Ntini made the allegations on national television last Friday, saying he ran to and from the ground rather than take the team bus to avoid the loneliness that came with being ignored by his teammates — who he said he would hear making dinner plans in which he was not included.

Ntini was the only black African to play Test cricket for South Africa for almost three years before Mfuneko Ngam made his debut in December 2000. When Ntini retired he was among just five black Africans who had featured at that level. More than 10 years after he hung up his whites, the names of only four more have been added to the list.

From January 1998 to January 2011 Ntini played 284 matches across the formats for South Africa. Shaun Pollock was his captain in 88 of them and Graeme Smith in 167. Cricbuzz asked Smith, via Cricket South Africa (CSA), and Pollock if they knew of Ntini’s feelings, if they noticed whether he was being shut out of team interactions, and — if they had — what they did to remedy the situation.

Pollock’s only reply was: “Regarding your questions Makhaya is your person to speak to.” Smith? A CSA spokesperson said, “As director of cricket, Graeme is fully focused on his task at hand, which is transforming cricket for the future, and is preparing some exciting announcements for the coming weeks that will be clear evidence of that. He has however engaged directly and amicably with Mr Ntini about the contents of his interview.”

That might have happened at the 3TC Solidarity Cup in Centurion on Saturday. Ntini and Smith took a knee alongside each other and raised a fist while wearing Black Lives Matter (BLM) armbands on the boundary before the start of the match. They also shared commentary stints, during which they seemed at ease in each other’s company. If there was anger or awkwardness between them they hid it well. But, asked if he and Smith had spoken about the issues raised during the previous day’s television interview, and whether he was satisfied with the outcome of the discussion, Ntini did not respond.

One-sided communication on issues of race has been the norm since Lungi Ngidi was asked, during an online press conference on July 6, whether South Africa’s players would take up the BLM conversation among themselves. In a comprehensive answer he said the discussion had started and that he was keen to continue it, even lead it. That prompted a backlash against Ngidi from former white players, which sparked support for Ngidi from former black and brown players — along with accounts of their own experiences of racial discrimination within the game.

What we have seen, heard and read from black and brown players over the past three weeks has been, sometimes, a release of hurt rather than the straight up truth. Perhaps that is how it has to be until all of it is out there.

It seems worth pointing out that the question to the black Ngidi came from a white reporter, if only because after that black and brown players have spoken publicly on the matter on social media or exclusively to black or brown reporters and interviewers.

Richard Parry, a UK-based South African cricket historian and author — most recently of Too Black to Wear Whites, the powerful story of Krom Hendricks’ struggles against empire and racism in the game in South Africa in the 1890s, which he co-wrote with Jonty Winch — didn’t struggle to understand why that was happening: “There is a point at which it is exhausting to explain yourself. One of the things that’s underlying BLM internationally is that, ‘We’ve done this stuff. We did this stuff in the ’60s. We did this stuff in the ’90s. How many more times do we have to do this? How many more times do we have to get shat on because we’re trying to end the individual oppression that we are subject to on a daily basis? What’s the point in talking to white reporters when we’ve got to start from the beginning? They don’t get it’.

“That’s certainly a lesson from the broader international movement, that the lessons of history are not being learnt. And that the lack of communication from black players in those settings is partly a feeling of, ‘How many times? How many times do we have to go through this?’.

“BLM is saying there’s significant discrimination towards blacks, whether it’s on or off the cricket field. That’s just the reality of life and it has been for a very long time. There’s a history of this, which grinds you down.”      

Maybe that’s why some of what black and brown players have said has not been interrogated as thoroughly as it should have been. When it has, several of their claims have been shown to be overstated, others simply untrue. But a greater truth arches over everything: there is no doubt that black and brown figures in the game — players and coaches in particular, less so administrators — have got and are still getting a raw deal, even in theoretically democratic South Africa. Racism is dead. Long live racism. So what we have seen, heard and read over the past three weeks has been, sometimes, a release of hurt rather than the straight up truth. Perhaps that is how it has to be until all of it is out there.        

Five current South Africa players didn’t need those frustrations unpacked for them, and they weren’t who many might have thought they would be. The first cricketers in the country to publicly stand with Ngidi and BLM were Rassie van der Dussen, Faf du Plessis, Anrich Nortjé, Marizanne Kapp and Dwaine Pretorius. All are white Afrikaners, people who in previous generations were the architects and enforcers of apartheid — which put whites above all others, wrote legislation to keep them there, and has damned South African society to ongoing decades of crippling inequality.

But black Africans and white Afrikaners are not as disparate as a cursory reading of the country’s history might suggest. “There’s always been a closer history between blacks and Afrikaners — Afrikaners may not have treated them well but nonetheless there was a closer relationship — than between blacks and English-speaking South Africans,” Parry said. “They both had agrarian cultures; rooted in the land with a sense of what the land was and their relationship to the land. There’s an argument to say that this still exists in these guys’ self-identification. That connection is still strong, although not everybody feels it.

“There’s a level of anger and negation of the system as it is by English-speaking South Africans, much more so than among other South Africans. Black and Afrikaans South Africans see this in the long term. They’re part of South Africa, for better or worse, forever. Whereas English-speaking South Africans are still ‘soutpiels’.”

The Afrikaans word is a mild pejorative that denotes those South Africans who, by dint of their UK heritage, are said to have one foot in Africa and the other in Britain; leaving significant parts of their male anatomy dangling in the ocean. The term has been in common use for decades, rarely causes offence, and is the equivalent of calling an Afrikaner a “dutchman”.

Most “dutchies” and “souties” are happy to be labelled as such, and often describe themselves accordingly. It really is harmless banter. But those who engage in it are white, so they are not condemned to live lesser lives because they have been artificially classified — a distinct difference to what it has meant and still means to be black and brown in South Africa. BLM confronts this deep-seated injustice head on, and demands change for the better. In a society not short on seismic shifts and explosive moments, this sticks out as among the most seismic and explosive yet. Not before time, South Africans are staring at their unvarnished, imperfect, contested truth. It’s not a pretty picture.

“It’s the end of the reality of the rainbow nation, in a sense,” Parry said. “In Europe, for example, everyone is in favour of BLM. The entire English cricket team takes a knee, before the [first] Test match [in Southampton], with the West Indies players. There was never a question of them doing it. There’s nobody saying, ‘We wouldn’t do this’, even though there are still huge issues around slavery and empire in the UK. So while there’s a consciousness of history about that, the capacity of the team itself to build bridges and operate within the present is quite strong. In the South African context I think there’s clearly still some basic resistance to internationalising the issue. There are strong elements of racism in South Africa, and that’s based on a lack of communication between racial groups.”

Despite South Africa having changed so much, even since Ntini made his debut, attitudes remain in lockstep with the past. If you’re old enough, Boeta Dippenaar’s rejection of BLM in an interview with Cricbuzz on July 9 might have sounded familiar: “It’s got all the characteristics of a leftist movement — ‘If you don’t agree with what I propose you do, then you’re a racist’. The movement itself has gone beyond what it stands for. It’s now nothing short of thuggery — ‘I throw stones and break windows because I stand for this’.”

In 1971, as opposition to apartheid mounted and organised itself into protests against tours by South Africa’s all-white teams, one of the pariah’s players was quoted as saying: “I see these demonstrations and riots as part of a Communist-inspired idea to smash the vital links which have for years forged the Western [sic] nations firmly together. We cannot afford to give them the scent of victory … A principle is involved and any measure of success for this kind of defiance would see the idea far beyond the realms of sport.”

The 49 years between those likeminded comments is a long time in politics and in cricket, enough for anyone to understand that apartheid was evil and that isolating South Africa from international sport was the least the world could do. Let it not take as long for the remaining unconvinced outposts of civilisation to accept that BLM is a vital and required reaction to a crisis that started in 1526, when the first European slave ship set sail across the Atlantic.

That’s 494 years of wrong and not nearly enough done to make it right. Dippenaar was wrong on July 9. As was the man who spoke in 1970, a fast bowler who had by then played all of his 28 Tests: Peter Pollock. Three years later he became the father of someone who would be South Africa’s record wicket-taker in Tests for three months short of 15 years: Shaun Pollock. Almost 25 years after that Peter Pollock convened the selection committee that picked South Africa’s first black African player: Makhaya Ntini.

People change. So do the times. But never fast enough. Forty-nine years is a long time in everything. Except, perhaps, in hearts and minds.

First published by Cricbuzz.  

Processing…
Success! You're on the list.

And the 3TC game’s clear winner is …

“That’s why we stand together.” – Makhaya Ntini after all involved took a knee and raised a fist before the match.

TELFORD VICE | Cape Town

WHO’S winning? The most annoying question asked of the cricketminded by the non-cricketminded finally earned some relevance in Centurion on Saturday. One match. Three teams. Eight players a side. Each team faces 12 overs, six from each of their opponents’ attacks. In innings split into two halves. So, who’s winning?

Ummm … Dunno. Wait until the game is over. At least that hasn’t changed, but this has: nobody won the 3TC Solidarity Cup. Instead, the Eagles were named gold medallists for scoring the most runs, 160/4. The Kites’s took silver with their total of 138/3, and the Kingfishers’ 113/5 left them with bronze.

The who? The what? Here’s something you will recognise: Aiden Markram hammered 70 off 33 balls, AB de Villiers hit 61 off 24, and Dwaine Pretorius banked an unbeaten 50 off 17, and Anrich Nortjé, Glenton Stuurman, Andile Phehlukwayo and Lutho Sipamla took two wickets each.

De Villiers owned the shot of the day, a one-handed muscle down the ground for four to a furious full toss on his gloves from Nortjé. When Nortjé’s next effort disappeared far over the midwicket boundary, SuperSport commentator Pommie Mbangwa boomed: “Don’t bowl there! Don’t bowl there! Don’t bowl anywhere!”

The cause was good. All profits will go to a hardship fund to alleviate the plight of those suffering financially during the coronavirus pandemic. The overarching scenario was not good: Centurion is in the epicentre of Covid-19 cases in South Africa, which is among the countries with the highest infection rate in the world.

Also not ideal was the fact that the match — the first competitive team sports event in South Africa since the country went into lockdown on March 27 — was robbed of two of its biggest stars. Kagiso Rabada withdraw after the death of his grandmother and Quinton de Kock pulled out due to “unforeseen personal circumstances”. Whether the virus was involved in Rabada’s case has not been disclosed, but one of De Kock’s close family members has tested positive.

That wasn’t the game’s only collision with reality. After a dozen days of social media turmoil in the wake of Lungi Ngidi expressing his support for the Black Lives Matter (BLM) movement, with noteworthy opinions flying for and against and Cricket South Africa making a public relations mess of things, the focus was firmly on the 3TC game to write a new chapter in the story.

The players wore BLM armbands and all involved took a knee and raised their right fist before the first ball was bowled. That included Graeme Smith and Makhaya Ntini, who commentated on the match. “‘Mackie’, I was next to you in the build-up; I could feel the emotion coming from you,” Smith said when the pair were on air together. “That’s why we stand together,” Ntini replied. “A very important message is being put out today,” Smith said.

“It’s one of our greatest moments,” Ntini said. “Everyone can see that, as South Africans, we all stand up and plow the same furrow together. We stand together. The more we do this the more change will happen. Here’s Lungi. He was the first one to voice it, and everyone [who has since supported BLM] stood by him.”

Over to Smith: “Rightly so. There’s no need for Ngidi to be attacked at all. I think he’s handled himself extremely well.”

Their interaction seemed sincere and warm, which only added a layer to the narrative in the wake of Ntini saying in an interview on SABC television on Friday that he was shunned by his teammates during his playing days. So he would decline to take the team bus, on which, he claimed, the other players would avoid sitting next to him.

“I would say, ‘I’ll see you back at the hotel’,” Ntini said. “And then I would run all the way back to the hotel. I would say I would meet them at the ground. I was running away from that loneliness — driving from the hotel, 20 minutes to the ground, and driving back from the ground, 20 minutes to the hotel.

“Those are the kind of things we, as players, thought we would take to the grave. Even though they were painful, you can’t run around telling people what happened to you because there was that sense that, ‘He’s a sore loser; he didn’t appreciate what was given to him’.

“Running around taking five-fors and 10-fors and high-fiving, it’s a joyful [expression] of the pain you’ve gone through. You wish you were collectively happy with everyone who surrounded you, and that not only in that moment are they happy for you.”

Smith was Ntini’s captain in 167 of the 284 matches the fast bowler played for South Africa across the formats. Shaun Pollock led teams that featured Ntini 88 times. Cricbuzz have asked both for comment on Ntini’s claims on Friday. Neither has yet replied.

Phehlukwayo took the conversation a step further on Saturday in the moments after Heinrich Klaasen dragged one of his deliveries onto the stumps. With the bails still tumbling through the air, Phehlukwayo cocked his right fist in the air and whipped the front of his playing shirt over his head to reveal a printed T-shirt underneath.

“Black lives matter,” its legend read, in bold capital letters. That’s who’s winning.

First published by Cricbuzz.

Processing…
Success! You're on the list.

Virus won’t vex 3TC

Business travel permitted, so players gather.

TELFORD VICE | Cape Town

CRICKET South Africa’s (CSA) attempt to tie knots in overcooked spaghetti is set to go ahead despite the tightening of travel restrictions in a global Covid-19 hotspot. So the Solidarity Cup, a charity event featuring three teams of eight players in a single match of 36 overs in a complicated new format called 3TC, remains scheduled for Centurion’s empty stands and deserted grass banks on Saturday.

Some have wondered how that could happen given that Centurion is in Gauteng, the epicentre of coronavirus infections in a country that is, the World Health Organisation said on Monday, among the four where the disease is spreading fastest. Consequently, leisure travel across provincial boundaries was prohibited on Sunday.

Half of the 24 players named in the three 3TC squads are not based in Gauteng, which would seem to take them out of the mix. But business travel is permitted, and Cricbuzz has learnt that the players will arrive on Tuesday.

CSA originally wanted to play the match on June 18, but could not secure express permission from government in time. Two alternative venues — Skukuza and Potchefstroom, neither of them in Gauteng — have been on stand-by should anti-virus regulations force a change of plan.

Over-arching health concerns aside, 3TC’s complexities could hamper it being acknowledged as more than a gimmicky vehicle for the first facsimile of cricket to be played in South Africa since the country went into lockdown in March. For instance, the remaining not out player after the rest of a team have been dismissed will keep batting — but only if they are able to scamper back for a second run, or hit a four or a six.

Others will make the point that cricket would not have been played in South Africa between April and September. So why rush an awkward gnu like 3TC blinking into the weak winter sunshine?

Because the organisers hope to raise as much as USD178,000 for a hardship fund meant to ease some of the financial suffering the virus has forced on people in the wider cricket industry, whose bills can’t stay unpaid until the game gets going again.

And because, if Saturday’s event helps 3TC transcend the uncertainty over how it might look and feel in action, the format could help develop the game. With teams facing six overs from each of their opponents’ attacks, the hope is that the format will allow weaker sides to share a field with stronger outfits. Who wouldn’t be inspired to keep playing cricket if they could, in circumstances less serious than usual, face an over from Kagiso Rabada or bowl to AB de Villiers?

There are, then, good reasons to give 3TC a go, and to give it a go in the here and now of a struggling economy. But there are valid and pressing fears about it being trialled in the here and now of a pandemic.

“Life is a combination of magic and pasta,” Federico Fellini said. CSA and their partners in this venture have been cooking the pasta for weeks. Tying knots in it elegantly and, most importantly, safely, is where the magic will need to be conjured.

First published by Cricbuzz.

Processing…
Success! You're on the list.

Prince fires BLM broadside

“Any form of transformation has been met with resistance.” – Ashwell Prince

TELFORD VICE | Cape Town

ASHWELL Prince claims South Africa’s team leadership brushed aside reports of spectator racism during a tour to Australia. Contemporary reports say otherwise, but other parts of Prince’s social media broadside will fuel a fire that has burned steadily brighter with arguments by current and former South African players for and against supporting the Black Lives Matter (BLM) movement.

Prince, who played 66 Tests and 52 ODIs from February 2002 to December 2011, tweeted on Friday: “[In] Australia [in] 2005 a number of us encountered racist incidents on the boundary. When we brought this to the attention of the leadership at lunch we were told, ‘Ah, it’s only some people in the crowd, not the majority. Let’s get back out there.’”

Graeme Smith captained that team and Mickey Arthur was the coach. The black and brown players in the squad were Makhaya Ntini, Prince, Herschelle Gibbs, Garnett Kruger and Charl Langeveldt.

Contacted in Colombo on Friday, Arthur, now Sri Lanka’s coach, recalled an incident during the first Test in Perth when Ntini reported abuse after fielding near the boundary, as did Kruger, who was targetted when he carried drinks to his teammates.

South Africa’s management complained to match referee Chris Broad, and Cricket Australia arranged for additional security on the boundary. Arthur said the entire team were disturbed by the episode, and denied that it had been taken lightly. 

A report at the time in the Melbourne Age said, “The incident prompted the ICC to reiterate its zero tolerance stance against racism. CA vowed that the policy would be enforced and spectators ejected should such behaviour be repeated at the Boxing Day Test in Melbourne or the third Test in Sydney.”

The article said Prince, Shaun Pollock and Justin Kemp were among the players who objected to the abuse, which included the word “kaffir” — the most serious racist slur used by white South Africans, many of whom have moved to Perth. Ntini was quoted as saying it was “absolutely uncalled for” and “unbearable”, and that, “As a South African we are united now; we are singing one song and we play sport with one heart.”

That has never been the case, according to Prince’s thread of 10 hard-hitting tweets on Friday. He painted a picture of a country struggling to escape the grip of white supremacy, which has also tainted cricket. “The system is broken and has been for some time, both in society and in sport,” Prince wrote.

South Africa’s tour of India in November 1991 ended 21 years of their isolation from world cricket because of apartheid. But the team that took the field in the three ODIs was as white as those that purported to represent the country when it was illegal for blacks and whites to play sport together.

“And so ever since day one this narrative [that blacks don’t play cricket] had to be driven and protected, and any form of transformation has been met with resistance,” Prince wrote. “Real, authentic change, inclusivity, non-racialism has never been able to establish itself.”

On Monday, Lungi Ngidi expressed his support for BLM only to be slammed by white former players. Cricket South Africa at first hesitated to share Ngidi’s stance unequivocally, only doing so on Thursday after the explosive difference of opinion between the fast bowler and the former players had been widely reported.

In a release on Friday the South African Cricketers’ Association came out in strong support of Ngidi, with chief executive Andrew Breetzke quoted as saying, “Freedom of expression is an enabling right that all South Africans support. We must, therefore, respect Lungi, as a sporting role model, when he exercises his freedom of expression on the important matter of racial discrimination. To subject him to unfair criticism is to undermine his right.”

Push will come to shove on July 18, when the Solidarity Cup in Centurion will herald cricket’s first appearance in South Africa since the start of the coronavirus lockdown in March. Prominent messaging in favour of BLM will be expected by many, but dreaded by others. For still others, the time for mere gestures is long gone.

First published by Cricbuzz.

Processing…
Success! You're on the list.

CSA mull response to Black Lives Matter

“We need to figure out how we can be effective about it as well, also authentic, and spread the messages that are meaningful to us as South Africans.” – Graeme Smith on CSA’s pending Black Lives Matter stance.

TELFORD VICE | Cape Town

SOUTH Africa carries more resonance for Black Lives Matter (BLM) than most countries, but cricket here has yet to decide how to add its voice to the overarching global debate. After Lungi Ngidi made plain his feelings of support for the movement, Graeme Smith said the practicalities needed to be finalised.

The England and West Indies players wore BLM logos on their collars and took a knee before the first ball was bowled in their Test Series, which started in Southampton on Wednesday. Umpires Richard Kettleborough and Richard Illingworth — effectively the ICC’s official representatives on the field — did likewise. The Windies’ players wore black gloves on their raised right fists as they knelt, echoing the human rights salute US Olympians Tommie Smith and John Carlos gave as they stood on the podium in Mexico City in 1968.

Those measures would no doubt have met with Ngidi’s approval. He was asked during an online press conference on Monday whether South Africa’s players would back BLM, and replied: “That’s definitely something that we will discuss once we are together in person. We have spoken about it and everyone is well aware of what’s going on. It’s a difficult one because we are not together, so it’s hard to discuss. But once we get back to playing that is definitely something we have to address as a team.

“As a nation as well, we have a past that is very difficult because of racial discrimination. So it’s definitely something we will be addressing as a team and if we are not, it’s something I will bring up. It’s something that we need to take very seriously and, like the rest of the world is doing, make a stand.”

At another online presser, on Wednesday, director of cricket Smith answered a question on the matter by saying: “We are very aware of what’s going on around the world and of our role at CSA [Cricket South Africa]. Lungi answered it very well when he said we are all in our own little pockets, and I think it’s important that in the future we all come together and figure out how we can play our role in the BLM movement; how we can be effective in doing that.

“My belief in these things is that it’s important to have buy-in and that of everyone invested in it as well, and I have no doubt that will be the case. But the discussion in each team environment and as CSA about how we handle it going forward is important.

“We do have the 3TC approaching on Mandela Day, where we are doing a lot for charity, and that will be our first occasion with the BLM movement. But as far as our iconic men’s and women’s teams are concerned there needs to be discussion.

“We’re discussing various ways of handling it. The kit has gone to print already. We need to figure out how we can be effective about it as well, also authentic, and spread the messages that are meaningful to us as South Africans. And how that affects us on a daily basis.”

South Africa’s players have not been in the dressingroom together since March 12 in Dharamsala, where the first of what were to have been three T20s against India was washed out. The rest of the tour was called off shortly afterwards because of the coronavirus pandemic.

Something like cricket will return on July 18 — which would have been Mandela’s 102nd birthday — when three teams of eight players will play a single match of 36 overs in Centurion in a new format called 3TC that has been devised by Paul Harris, a South African banker. Proceeds from the Solidarity Cup, which organisers hope will reach USD177,000, will go to charity.

The venture was met with derision because of its complicated rules and novelty, but it will take a great leap towards respectability if it treats BLM with due seriousness. While logos on shirts seem unlikely, a few on the outfield, for instance, would make a significant impact.

First published by Cricbuzz.

Processing…
Success! You're on the list.

Covid and killer cops: What matters for Lungi Ngidi

“It’s something that we need to take very seriously and, like the rest of the world is doing, make a stand.” – Lungi Ngidi on Black Lives Matter.

TELFORD VICE | Cape Town

THE world was different the last time Lungi Ngidi stood at the top of his run, ball in hand, ready to wreak havoc. That was on March 4 in Bloemfontein, where a flat pitch and a vast, fast outfield reduces bowlers’ bang to a whimper.

But Ngidi wreaked havoc regardless, taking a career-best 6/58 — the finest figures yet by a fast bowler in the 30 ODIs played in Bloemfontein, where only Imran Tahir and Lance Klusener had previously claimed five or more wickets in a match in the format. Three of Australia’s top four — David Warner, Steve Smith and Marnus Labuschagne — were among Ngidi’s victims, the latter two removed by consecutive deliveries. 

Never short of pace and presence, Ngidi brought patience and precision to the party. Janneman Malan’s unbeaten 129 followed him becoming, four days earlier in Paarl, the only man to be dismissed by the first delivery he faced in international cricket. That probably cost Malan his place in the squad to play three ODIs in India that was announced two days before the Bloem game. So he stole the headlines. But Ngidi did at least as much to win the match, which South Africa did by six wickets to clinch the series with a match to spare.

Rested for the last game of the rubber in Potchefstroom three days after that, Ngidi no doubt looked forward to wreaking more havoc in India. The first match, in Dharamsala on March 12, was washed out and the last two were cancelled because of fears over a virus that seemed to be named after a brand of Mexican beer.

Almost four months on the coronavirus pandemic has killed more than 500,000 people around the world and put much of life as we know it — cricket included — on hold as authorities scramble to try and slow its spread.

That’s not all that’s changed. George Floyd’s graphic, public and, importantly, videoed killing by a police officer in Minneapolis on May 25 has galvanised the globe in protest against systemic racism. But Floyd is one among many: since Ngidi was last on the field US law enforcement officers have killed 156 people. Last year 327 lives were taken this way. This year the total is already 327. Most of the killed have been black men. Most of the killers have been white.

There’s not a lot of sport to watch due to the pandemic, but much of what there is to see has been graced by gestures in support of the Black Lives Matter movement raised to combat the epidemic of police killings. Like players in football’s English Premier League have done since the season resumed on June 17, West Indies’ cricketers will wear “Black Lives Matter” on their shirts in their Test series in England, which starts on Wednesday.

Will they also “take a knee” — kneel — during the playing of national anthems? This form of protest against racial oppression was pioneered by NFL quarterback Colin Kaepernick in 2016 and has gone viral since Floyd’s death. So much so that those who have remained standing during anthems have been slammed on social media and felt the need to explain their inaction.

Like the rest of South Africa’s cricketers Ngidi has not yet had the opportunity to join that conversation in public. But that doesn’t mean he and his teammates haven’t been talking politics in private.

“That’s definitely something that we will discuss once we are together in person,” Ngidi said during an online press conference on Monday. “We have spoken about it and everyone is well aware of what’s going on. It’s a difficult one because we are not together, so it’s hard to discuss. But once we get back to playing that is definitely something we have to address as a team.

“As a nation as well, we have a past that is very difficult because of racial discrimination. So it’s definitely something we will be addressing as a team and if we are not, it’s something I will bring up. It’s something that we need to take very seriously and, like the rest of the world is doing, make a stand.”

South Africans lived under racism from 1652, when Europeans first settled there, until the inaugural democratic elections in 1994. The 342 years of brutally racist repression used to govern the country between those landmark dates created what remains, according to several authoritative sources, the world’s most unequal society.

Covid-19 has only served to widen the disparities, with the largely black poor — who comprise more than 80% of South Africa’s population — significantly less able to ward off the virus. Their residential areas are more dense than affluent districts and they are less likely to have access to water. That hinders social distancing and regular hand-washing, two key defences against the spread of the pandemic. Poorer South Africans are also more likely to have to endure unwarranted violence from the police and army during lockdown. The country got its own George Floyd on April 10, when Collins Khosa was beaten to death by soldiers at his home in Johannesburg.

“There’s temperature checks at the gate, there’s hand sanitisers, we fill out forms. It’s a whole process before you can actually bowl a cricket ball.”

Ngidi is far removed from all that, but Covid-19 has had a dramatic effect on his life despite the fact that, on June 26, government cleared South Africa’s cricketers to return to training and playing. “It’s difficult and it’s different,” he said. “We have to book [training] sessions now, so there are certain groups of guys that come in at a certain time and when they are done another group comes in. I don’t think we are exceeding numbers of about five at the moment.”

Cricket South Africa named a 45-man high performance training squad last Monday. The players are practising at their nearest franchise ground, which in Ngidi’s case is at Centurion.

“As the bowlers we each have our net. We each have our balls. There is no touching, hardly any communication as well. Before going to the gym you have to let them know so they can sanitise the area before you come in and sanitise once you leave, for the next group.

“There’s a whole lot of things you need to remember as well. We have to test regularly now. There’s temperature checks at the gate, there’s hand sanitisers, we fill out forms. It’s a whole process before you can actually bowl a cricket ball.

“It’s very frustrating but also very necessary at this point and especially with us coming up with the 3TC game next week. Even though it is a bit of a schlep and it is hard work, we still need to do it because we’ve got a game to play next week.”

On July 18, three teams of eight players — including Ngidi — will trial a new format, 3TC, in a single match of 36 overs at Centurion. Organisers hope the Solidarity Cup will raise as much as USD177,000 for charity.

“From what they explained to us, it is going to be very different,” Ngidi said of the complicated rules, which allow for the last not out player in an innings to keep batting. “I still don’t fully understand what’s going on. I know it’s going to be a different type of game. It is still a bit confusing but with everything they have explained, I am looking forward to how it’s going to play out.”

For now, Ngidi is getting used to the strangeness of the new normal in a country that has one of the fastest coronavirus infection rates in the world: “It feels like some biohazard kind of event has happened. There’s no touching, you barely ever take your masks off other than when you are within a certain distance of people. The filling out of forms, the bookings, it’s a mess to be honest with you but its very necessary because obviously its a very serious pandemic.

“I don’t believe Covid is something we can take lightly. It does feel like something out of a movie because the safety precautions that are being taken are something you have never experienced before as a player. We no longer go into the changerooms. You get changed in your car and you go straight to the field or straight to the indoor nets. We don’t gather in groups anymore and it feels weird since it’s a team sport. You’re playing by yourself but everyone is still there. It is very different.” 

One of the differences is that players will no longer be able to spit on the ball to help their team’s bowlers. “The first thing we are coming back to is white-ball cricket and I am well aware that it only swings for the first three or four overs anyway,” Ngidi said.

“A few of the boys have complained. Once [the ICC] said there’s no saliva, a few of the batsmen posted on the group that now they are going to be driving on the up.”

Without saliva keeping one half of the newer ball shiny, and weighting one half of the older ball, it will be less likely to swing. Thus batters will be able to trust that the ball will arrive on the same line at which it was delivered. That will allow them to decide, earlier than usual, which stroke to play and help them execute it more forcefully.

“Already we can see what type of mentality the batsmen are coming with, so now we have to find a gameplan to get the ball to swing,” Ngidi said. “Maybe a damp towel is the best thing but you’ve got to find something to shine [the ball].”

That and other issues will make Ngidi a keen watcher of what happens when England and West Indies mark the return of the global game at Southampton on Wednesday.

“I am glad that someone else is playing before we do so that we can see how everything is going to work. The basics of the game will still apply but just to see how everyone is going to be handled off the field and how interaction is going to work with camera staff and all those guys, and to give us a blueprint of what to do to get our cricket going again …”

The world is different. How much more different it will become we don’t know, although it’s a given that Covid-19 and cops will keep killing people. As for the rest, we’re about to find out.

First published by Cricbuzz.

Processing…
Success! You're on the list.

Lockdown life lands big fish De Kock

“It’s going to be tough to play professional games. We’re going to have so many regulations. Realistically, I don’t foresee cricket being played for a while.” – Quinton de Kock on the game’s return in South Africa.

TELFORD VICE | Cape Town

CRICKET wants Quinton de Kock back from the coronavirus lockdown sooner rather than later, but the hankering is not mutual. South Africa’s white-ball captain and all-format wicketkeeper last picked up a bat four months ago. And he doesn’t plan on doing so with earnest intent for a while yet, despite being in the 45-man high performance training squad named last Monday.

During an online press conference after Cricket South Africa’s (CSA) awards on Saturday, when he was the major men’s winner, De Kock told reporters: “Look, I could be honest. Or I can be … I’ll give you my honest opinion: I’ve done nothing. Lockdown has been, you know, lockdown. I haven’t done anything. Obviously I’ve kept up with fitness. I’ve done my training in the gym and what not, but I haven’t hit a ball yet.”

Whyever not?

“There’s still so much time until the next serious cricket game is going to happen. So to go back to serious training … I don’t know when it needs to happen. I mean, you can go back to hitting balls, for now. But we could actually be hitting balls for no reason. That’s where I feel I’m at.”

The international schedule says South Africa are due in the Caribbean to play West Indies in two Tests and five T20Is from July 23 to August 16. But clearance to train was only obtained from government on June 26 and South Africa’s borders remain closed. Thus the tour exists only, and is likely to only ever exist, as an itinerary.   

“I’m sure other guys have trained, but I kind of needed a little bit of lockdown,” De Kock said. “I needed a break to spend time with myself, my family, friends. You know, do my own thing. I’ve really taken to it and really enjoyed it. I’ve tried to really stay away from cricket. But as soon as we get the full go ahead, when serious cricket is going to happen, then I’ll get back into it. I’m not too sure when it’s going to happen, but as soon as we get the go ahead then I’ll get back into it ASAP.”

Reminded that he was in the training group, De Kock said: “Obviously we’re all part of the squad. But, because of the regulations, it’s hard to have such a big squad in a certain environment. I’m based in a very remote place. There’s not much cricket around where I live. I’ve made sure my fitness is up to date. Practice almost becomes muscle memory. For me, at this point in my career, a break is more important than training.”

De Kock lives in Knysna, a picturesque seaside town in the Western Cape famed for its verdant forest, breathtaking views from craggy coastal cliffs, and South Africa’s finest oysters. It’s no doubt close to heaven for De Kock, who is happiest when he has a fishing rod — not a bat — in his hands. In August last year he went all the way to Bolivia with another of his ilk, Dale Steyn, in hopes of hooking the infamously feisty golden dorado.  

“I don’t need all that stress on myself. I could see from a mile away that I didn’t need the Test captaincy on top of my shoulders.”

As the 45-man squad cannot train together because of South Africa’s anti-virus regulations, the players are to report to their nearest franchise venue to practise in small groups. The nearest such ground to De Kock is St George’s Park in Port Elizabeth, 261 kilometres east of Knysna. But Port Elizabeth is in the Eastern Cape and travel across provincial lines is not freely permitted under the current rules, although De Kock might qualify for a permit. The closest regularly used franchise venue to Knysna that is also in the Western Cape is Paarl, some 437 kilometres to the west. It’s not on the coast, but the area offers decent trout fishing for intrepid anglers like De Kock.

He wasn’t about to take the bait: “It’s going to be tough to play professional games. We’re going to have so many regulations. Realistically, I don’t foresee cricket being played [in South Africa] for a while. I’m talking at least a month. Obviously we’ve got the three game thing, so we’ll play that. But international cricket, I don’t know.

“You’ve got guys like Jacques and Graeme, they’re on it. I haven’t been part of their conversation so I don’t really know. I’m sure they’re keen to get some cricket played.

“I’ve really enjoyed the lockdown, but it comes to the point where I also want to get back on the field and start playing. So I’m very unsure. I’m a bit in the clouds as to what’s going on.”

Jacques Faul and Graeme Smith, CSA’s acting chief executive and their director of cricket, are indeed working hard on getting the game back on the field. Their first step towards that happening is “the three game thing”, a single match of 36 overs contested by three teams of eight players in a new format called 3TC. Originally scheduled for June 27, the venture had to be postponed because CSA couldn’t secure government permission in time for it to go ahead as planned.

That has since been granted, and the game is now slated for July 18 in Centurion, which is in Gauteng — where around 4,000 new Covid-19 cases are being reported daily. Consequently the province’s premier, David Makhura, is considering enforcing a tougher version of lockdown. Faul told Cricbuzz on Sunday that CSA had identified Skukuza, a rural hamlet in Mpumalanga, and Potchefstroom in North West as viable alternatives if Centurion is rendered off limits for cricket in the coming days.

Not that De Kock, who is due to captain one of the 3TC sides, is wondering whether he might soon have the chance to angle for barbel in Mpumalanga’s Sand River, catch carp in the Vaal River in North West, or try his luck trawling for empty beer cans and other rubbish in Centurion Lake, which is undergoing rehabilitation in the wake of years of pollution.

De Kock was last on the field in Potchefstroom on March 7, when he captained South Africa to a six-wicket win to seal a 3-0 sweep in an ODI series against Australia. That was their only success in their last seven rubbers across the formats, not counting a disastrous 2019 World Cup campaign in which they won only three of their eight completed matches. So De Kock’s seeming ambivalence about getting back on the horse won’t sit well with some.

But he wasn’t betraying snowflake tendencies when he said he was enjoying lockdown. Not since 2012 has he had such an extended break from the game. Even so, he played 55 matches that year and has reached 50 games on this annual scoreboard five times in the previous eight years. He hit 40 matches in 2011 and has not dipped beneath that benchmark since. The time he spent in Bolivia with Steyn was one of only 11 full months in the past 96 — eight years — in which he has not played cricket.

Small wonder De Kock was relieved when Smith said in April that, because of his already demanding workload, he would not succeed Faf du Plessis as Test captain. “Me and [South Africa coach Mark Boucher] had a very informal chat,” De Kock said on Saturday. “I told him, look, I don’t know how I feel about being Test captain also. The reality is that’s just too much for me to handle. I know that and I realise that. I don’t need all that stress on myself. I could see from a mile away that I didn’t need that on top of my shoulders.”

Besides, having the white-ball leadership thrust on him in the throes of the tumult cricket in South Africa has been though on and off the field in recent months was challenging enough. Along with a new captain, the team has welcomed a new coach, and his backroom staff, twice since the World Cup. The chief executive is among seven suspended senior staff members, four board members resigned, and longterm sponsors severed ties.

A measure of the solid repair job Faul is doing was the announcement on Thursday of a new headline sponsor, Betway, for the men’s Test and ODI formats, the men’s T20 team and the women’s teams. But CSA have a long way to go before they can consider themselves out of the woods. And even though they expect to record a profit this year — not least because operations have been severely scaled down. For instance, staging Saturday’s awards online instead of shelling out for a venue and for the travel, accommodation, wining and dining costs of hundreds of guests probably saved CSA around USD117,000.

Players tend to try and remove themselves from all that, but they are not immune to the effects of instability, as De Kock explained: “There were a lot of changes, especially after the World Cup. Faf had a lot of pressure put on him, and my thing was to make sure I back him. It was difficult. But I found a way, mentally, to get past it.

“Playing for a high-profile cricket team you go through so many changes at so many different times that it almost becomes the norm to get past the difficult times. So it was difficult at stages but we got through it, which is the important thing.”

Doubtless a fishing rod and a stretch of water helped De Kock reach that peace.

First published by Cricbuzz.

Processing…
Success! You're on the list.

Players back at work, but probably too late for Windies tour

“The players will train in small monitored groups with identified coaches from their nearest franchise teams.” – CSA

TELFORD VICE | Cape Town

SOUTH Africa’s top professional men’s players are going back to work, but not yet as a squad. Instead the government has cleared them to practice at their closest franchise venue.

A Cricket South Africa (CSA) release on Monday said the “high performance training squad officially returned to training on Monday following approval from the minister of sport, arts and culture, … Nathi Mthethwa, on Friday”.

March 15 marked the last time cricket was played in South Africa at a significant level. The season would have ended in April ordinarily, but was curtailed because of the coronavirus pandemic. As of Monday evening the country had reported more than 138,000 cases of the disease, 2,456 of which had proved fatal.

South Africa’s tour of Sri Lanka this month has been postponed but they are still — officially, at any rate — due to arrive in the Caribbean in just more than two weeks’ time. That seems ever more unlikely, what with South Africans having been various stages of lockdown since March 27 and CSA director of cricket Graeme Smith saying six weeks of preparation would be required before the team could take the field in a match.

“The players will train in small monitored groups with identified coaches from their nearest franchise teams,” Monday’s release said. “These sessions will be in accordance with the guidelines set out by the CSA COVID-19 steering Committee and approved by the National Institute of Communicable Diseases (NICD), an arm of the [health department].”

CSA’s chief medical officer, Shuaib Manjra, was quoted as saying: “We engaged with the NICD, who were comfortable with our protocols and responses to their queries for further details in some respects. Our prevention programme, besides the regular testing of players and support staff, is predicated on personal hygiene measures and creating a sanitised ecosystem. COVID-19 compliance managers at each venue have assumed responsibility to ensure all the elements of the protocol are implemented.”

The meticulous wording of CSA’s release follows the debacle that unfolded after June 17, when they said they would return to play on June 27 by launching a new format, 3TC, which would involve three teams of eight players each contesting a single match of 36 overs. Smith said then that “everything has been okayed” with government for the venture, which it was hoped would raise USD173,000 for charity. But the game had to be postponed after it emerged that CSA did not have express permission from the authorities, not least because it was due to be played at Centurion — a Covid-19 hotspot*. 

The tone and content of Monday’s release was an indication that lessons have been learnt.    

South Africa’s high performance training squad: Quinton de Kock, Dean Elgar, Lungi Ngidi, Aiden Markram, Junior Dala, Theunis de Bruyn, Rassie van der Dussen, Shaun von Berg, Dwaine Pretorius, Heinrich Klaasen, Temba Bavuma, Reeza Hendricks, Kagiso Rabada, Tabraiz Shamsi, Wiaan Mulder, Bjorn Fortuin, Andile Phehlukwayo, David Miller, Marques Ackerman, Sarel Erwee, Khaya Zondo, Daryn Dupavillon, Keshav Maharaj, Senuran Muthusamy, Keagan Petersen, Imran Tahir, Lutho Sipamla, Edward Moore, Anrich Nortjé, Sisanda Magala, Glenton Stuurman, Jon-Jon Smuts, Rudi Second, Pite van Biljon, Raynaard van Tonder, Gerald Coetzee, Pieter Malan, Zubayr Hamza, Janneman Malan, Faf du Plessis, Tony de Zorzi, Beuran Hendricks, Nandré Burger, George Linde, Kyle Verreynne.

*CSA said on Wednesday they had secured government approval to play the 3TC match on July 18.

First published by Cricbuzz.

Processing…
Success! You're on the list.

Is 3TC saga part of cricket’s wider malaise?

“This document was maliciously sent to journalists to discredit CSA its employees, and, in particular, Mark Boucher.” – CSA on claims that Boucher is a 3TC shareholder.

TELFORD VICE | Cape Town

THEORIES that Graeme Smith and Mark Boucher are founders and shareholders in the company that owns 3TC, the new format that could be used to restart cricket in the country, have been hotly denied and could become a police matter.

Smith and Boucher played 93 Tests together and are now Cricket South Africa (CSA) employees. Their involvement in separate projects directly linked to their positions would have the potential to create conflicts of interest — especially if money is a factor.

A planning document is circulating that lists Boucher, the coach of South Africa’s men’s team, among eight people each described as a “3TC founder/shareholder”. The name of Smith, CSA’s director of cricket, is also on the list but without a designated role in the company. Even so, he has been described in various conversations as a 3TC shareholder.

But CSA and 3TC are adamant that Smith and Boucher do not have active roles in 3TC. CSA concede both were involved in devising the format’s concept, which they declared to CSA, but that does not constitute a conflict.

Consequently, CSA are considering lodging a case of crimen injuria, a crime under South African common law defined as an act of “unlawfully, intentionally and seriously impairing the dignity of another”. Not that it is apparent who the charge might be laid against.

“CSA has established the existence of and are in the possession of a fraudulent document claiming that Mark Boucher is a shareholder of 3TC cricket,” a CSA release on Tuesday said. “This information is incorrect, and it is emphatically pointed out that Mark Boucher is not a director of this company. This document was maliciously sent to journalists to discredit CSA its employees, and, in particular, Mark Boucher. We will launch an internal investigation into the origin of this false and fraudulent document and will also lay criminal charges.

“It is very important that the person/s who act with the intent of harming cricket are exposed and rooted out of the game. We will leave no stone unturned to make sure that the malicious perpetrators face the full might of the law.

“[3TC chief executive] Francois Pienaar … has confirmed that Mark is not a director and that no other CSA employee is in any way associated with 3TC. Pienaar welcomes any forensic investigation into this initiative, should there be a need for anyone to look into and test this.”

But if Smith and Boucher are not part of 3TC why are their names swirling in this context? Welcome to the fiercely, sometimes unfairly, contested terrain of all things cricket in South Africa.

The suspension of CSA chief executive Thabang Moroe in December drew a line in the sand. In this scenario, Moroe and the interests of blacks in cricket stand on one side of that line while Smith — who is believed to have made accepting his appointment, also in December, conditional on Moroe’s removal — is on the other representing what blacks have called a white “coup”.

CSA have performed demonstrably better at operational level with Moroe out of the way. But 3TC’s inaugural fixture, the Solidarity Cup, a charity event which was scheduled for Centurion on Saturday, had to be postponed because express permission for it to be played had not been obtained from government. 

The exposure as false of Smith’s assertion during 3TC’s launch last Wednesday that “everything has been okayed” with government offered his enemies a weapon, which they might have used to fire the allegations about his and Boucher’s involvement in 3TC.

If so, the plot has clumsily conceived. As a source close to the situation told Cricbuzz on Tuesday: “It’s a one-off game where everything goes to charity. It would be the worst shareholding you could have.”  

3TC’s confirmed founders and shareholders include 1995 World Cup-winning Springbok captain Pienaar, cricket commentator Mark Nicholas, and banker Paul Harris, who originated the concept.

Cricbuzz understands that none of the shareholders currently earn any money from 3TC — one of them said they were working on the Solidarity Cup “pro bono, it’s all sweat equity” — but the company has been established as a professional entity and could conceivably turn a profit in future.

The copyright for 3TC’s rules is owned by Advent Sport Entertainment and Media, Pienaar’s group, whose stable includes the Cape Town Marathon and Varsity Sports, which runs competitions across nine codes. Pienaar has a personal stake in 3TC. Applications for trademarks have been made, and 3TC has registered itself and its format with the Format Recognition and Protection Association in the Netherlands. The format has been licenced to CSA for R1, or less than six US cents.

A single 3TC match features three teams, who face each of their opponents’ attacks for half their allotted overs. The team who score the most runs are declared gold medallists. It is hoped the format will help develop the game because it should give weaker teams the chance to play with and against stronger sides. 

The format has been developed over the past 22 months after Harris hit on the idea when he wanted to play cards with his wife and daughter in a game designed for two players only. 

Saturday’s game would have seen teams of eight players contest a match of 36 overs. Organisers aimed to raise up to USD170,000 for CSA’s hardship fund meant to benefit economic victims of the coronavirus pandemic.

But, at CSA’s presentation to the parliamentary sport, arts and culture committee on Friday, sports minister Nathi Mthethwa said: “You did come to us and cricket has been working very well with us‚ but while your request for June 27 has been processed it hasn’t been approved.

“There are things we need to do and there are ongoing consultations with the department of health. People are being tested and we would want the details of that if there’s an indication of any player who has tested positive. We are still processing it‚ so it mustn’t be put as if it is approved because it will pass here if it is approved.” 

In a release on Saturday the ministry said: “Upon receipt of the plans as required by the directions the minister must apply his mind as to whether sports bodies have complied with all the requirements as proclaimed in the directions. During the period of processing the plan, no sports body is allowed to resume training or playing.”

The fact that Centurion is in a coronavirus hotspot will only have complicated CSA’s request. Neither will the cause have been helped by seven positives for the virus being recorded from approximately 100 tests conducted by CSA’s six franchises. But Smith and Boucher, it seems, are not part of the problem.

First published by Cricbuzz. 

Processing…
Success! You're on the list.

No permit, no play: CSA forced to delay 3TC

“It has become clear that more work is needed in preparation, including [government] approval.” – CSA admits they don’t have permission for 3TC.

TELFORD VICE | Cape Town

CRICKET is safe from 3TC. For now. The newest format of the game was to have been unveiled at Centurion next Saturday: three teams consisting of eight players each would have played a single match of 36 overs. But South Africa’s government has not approved the venture.

Centurion is in a coronavirus hotspot, which means Cricket South Africa (CSA) would need approval from the health ministry as well as the department of sport to use the venue for the match. Currently, they have neither. Despite repeated assurances from CSA director of cricket Graeme Smith at 3TC’s launch on Wednesday that “everything has been okayed” with government after extensive presentation and consultation, the match has been postponed.

“The operational teams behind the solidarity match and event partners in collaboration with CSA, 3TCricket and SuperSport met to consider the readiness to host the event on June 27,” CSA said in a release on Saturday. “Following this meeting it has become clear that more work is needed in preparation, including approval. A new date will be announced in due course.”

The match had been billed as the Solidarity Cup and was meant to raise funds for people in the game who have suffered financially because of the pandemic. The concept is the brainchild of multi-millionaire banker Paul Harris, who said he hit on the idea when he wanted to play cards with his wife and daughter in a game that was designed for two.

But the special provisions of 3TC — a team’s 12 overs at the crease would be split into blocks of six overs against each of their opponents’ attacks, and they would bat in order of their highest scores in the second half of their innings — threaten to complicate the format past the point where it remains a reasonable facsimile of cricket.

Still, with one of Harris’ companies sponsoring the event, the three teams each securing commercial backing, and SuperSport agreeing to cover the broadcast production costs, CSA couldn’t afford to look this gift horse in the mouth — especially as they are more cash-strapped now, because of Covid-19, than they were before, when they were projected to lose up to USD57.5-million by the end of the 2022 rights cycle.

But that’s no excuse for CSA to make the level of noise they made on Wednesday without having express approval to stage 3TC from the government of a state whose population is 19th on the global list of countries that have had the most cases of the virus. South Africa has been in various stages of lockdown since March 27, and although restrictions are being eased — chiefly because the economy is struggling — experts are adamant peak infection rate has not been reached.

On Wednesday, Smith said: “There are permits in place for players to be moving around now. We know that domestic travel has opened up for business purposes as well. We’ve been working very closely with the minister of arts and culture [and sport, Nathi Mthethwa]. We’ve presented extensive medical plans on the return to training and the return to play for professional non-contact sport. We have been gazetted and we’re excited to move forward. The best way to do that is with an opportunity to raise as much money as possible for everyone who has fallen on hard times.

“We’ve done an extensive amount of work. I lose track of how much we’ve presented to the ministry through the director general. We have submitted again post gazetting. We’ve got a meeting this afternoon with everybody again. We’re ready to go. We’ve worked together with government on this and we’re excited to have their support.

“We’ve presented our plans — from hotel to ground to stadium to zoning. Everything has been handled. It’s been cleared. The medical team are driving everything, and everything has been okayed.”

It appears that is not so, and so Smith has dented his standing as the antidote to much that is wrong with the way the game is run in the country. But South Africans who know cricket as a tussle between two XIs in innings of 20 or 50 overs, or until 10 wickets have fallen or a declaration has been made, won’t be unhappy that remains the case. For now.

First published by Cricbuzz.

Processing…
Success! You're on the list.