Deluge drowns decider, but lessons learnt

“We’ve asked a few questions on this tour, and we’ve got some good answers.” – Mark Boucher

Telford Vice | Cape Town

“KAPTEIN span die seile” boomed around the Chinnaswamy at the scheduled start time for Sunday’s deciding T20I, confusing thousands of pairs of ears in the packed stands. “Captain span the sails” is a cheesy Afrikaans pop song about a woman waiting for a man. She’s over the horizon — in some lines where the sun sets, in others where it rises. Hence the imploring to set sail.

The crowd were in the dark about all that, but they didn’t need rain and its implications for cricket explained. Enough of it was falling when the first ball was due to be bowled to chase the players from the field, blotting their shirts as they ran for cover.

For the fifth time in the series, South Africa had won the toss. For the fifth time, they had chosen to field. This time, Keshav Maharaj had taken the team sheet to the middle. Temba Bavuma’s elbow, which he had injured diving to make his ground in Rajkot on Friday, had kept him out. Reeza Hendricks replaced Bavuma, Tristan Stubbs cracked the nod as an extra batter — Tabraiz Shamsi made way — and Kagiso Rabada, who missed Friday’s game with a niggle, came in for Marco Jansen. India retained the XI who had battled back from 2-0 down to level matters heading into the decider.

Had Lungi Ngidi not spent the entire IPL working on his fitness instead of playing even a single match for Delhi Capitals, he might not have kept the damage down to 20 runs in three overs while dismissing Ruturaj Gaikwad and Hardik Pandya in Rajkot — and so he might not have kept his place on Sunday.

But the rain meant Ngidi had to wait for the best part of an hour to let fly in an innings reduced to 19 overs. Visibly leaner and with a bright sharpness in his eyes that maybe comes with playing just his second match in 89 days, he tore in to Ishan Kishan with the fourth ball of his first over — an effort of 140 kilometres an hour that veered down leg and was called wide. His next delivery was full and 18 kilometres slower. It flummoxed the floundering Kishan and nailed his off stump. With the second ball of his next over, Ngidi conjured another off-cutter — which Gaikwad hoisted into mid-on’s cupped hands. But the return of the drizzle had been apparent even as Ngidi loped to the wicket, and he bowled only one more ball before the covers came on again. And stayed on.

Thus we will never know whether South Africa would have rediscovered the calm determination that put them within a victory of claiming the series after the matches in Delhi and Cuttack, or if India’s momentum would still have burned in the wake of their stirring victories in Visakhapatnam and Rajkot.

“It would have been an exciting end to what has been an exciting tour,” Maharaj said in his television interview. Rishabh Pant also rued what might have been: “The way the whole team showed their character was great to see. We’re finding different ways to win, which we never used to see.” Indeed, India won without Rohit Sharma, Virat Kohli and Jasprit Bumrah, who were rested, and the injured Ravindra Jadeja, Deepak Chahar and Suryakumar Yadav.

At a press conference, Mark Boucher said Aiden Markram’s absence because of Covid-19 had upset the visitors’ core gameplan: “We wanted to play six batters with Aiden being our sixth bowling option. It was a massive loss for us. He’s ranked third in the world [as a T20I batter], so that was always going to hurt us.” 

But Boucher was grudgingly satisfied with a drawn series: “You don’t just rock up in India and expect to win.” And because: “We’ve asked a few questions on this tour, and we’ve got some good answers.” Most of them will be about South Africa’s batting, particularly their tendency to score slowly in the powerplay.

They will have time to think about that on their journey across the Indian Ocean. The captain has spanned the sails and the horizon calls. This ship is going home. 

First published by Cricbuzz.

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India on top except where it matters

“If he gets faster, great for him. If I get faster, great for me.” – Anrich Nortjé on the uncapped Umran Malik.

Telford Vice | Cape Town

INDIA have the top batter, the top three bowlers, and two of the top three totals in their T20I series against South Africa. What the home side don’t have is the series lead. Thus they have no option: deny the South Africans victory in the penultimate match in Rajkot on Friday, or endure the charade of a dead rubber in Bangalore on Sunday.

The visitors kept composed heads under the pressure of a record chase to reel in a target of 212 in Delhi, and they were efficiency on legs in limiting the Indians to 148/6 in Cuttack. But India found their feet — in the first half of their innings and throughout South Africa’s — to pull one back by a record margin in Visakhapatnam.

Considering the format’s reputation for dishing up nothing but empty calorie cricket, this has been an intriguing rubber; more like a clash between skilled, disciplined welterweights than the heavyweight slugfests T20 was allegedly designed to deliver.

Ishan Kishan, the series’ leading run-scorer, has hit the ball fearsomely hard but with as much elegance as power. No-one has taken more wickets than Bhuvneshwar Kumar, Harshal Patel and Yuzvendra Chahal. Bhuvneshwar, in particular, has made for riveting viewing with his unfailing ability to make the ball do his bidding on a bespoke length.

The South African subplot has been no less gripping. David Miller’s matchwinning credentials are well established, but who would have thought Rassie van der Dussen would have batted his way out of the wet paper bag that was the initial stage of his innings to be Miller’s most valuable partner in Delhi? In Cuttack, Quinton de Kock’s absence because of a hand injury conjured an opportunity for Heinrich Klaasen — who took it in style, making his career-best score to put the visitors 2-0 up.

That India found way to bounce back in Vizag was a blessing: one dead rubber would be bad enough; two would have been an awfulness that this keenly contested series wouldn’t have deserved.

And here we are, on the eve of another instalment in the unfolding drama. This one might include De Kock, who was busy in the nets on Thursday — an indication that his hand has healed enough to hold a bat. Might it also feature the as yet uncapped Umran Malik, who lit up the IPL by taking 22 wickets in 14 games for Sunrisers Hyderabad, most of them with deliveries closer to 150 kilometres an hour than 140? Given India’s resurgence in Vizag, where their attack did most of the winning, that seems unlikely.

But De Kock versus Malik … wouldn’t that be something to see.

When: June 17, 2022; 7pm Local Time

Where: Saurashtra Cricket Association Stadium, Rajkot

What to expect: Only three T20Is have been played here. In October 2013, Australia’s 201/7 wasn’t enough to stop India winning by six wickets. Four years later New Zealand’s 196/2 proved 40 runs too good for the home side. India won by eight wickets after restricting Bangladesh to 153/6. So there are runs in this pitch, but clever bowling can curb big scores. 

Team news:

India: With the series on the line, it’s unlikely the hosts will hand out any debut caps just yet. Unless a last-minute injury concern strikes, India could go in with an unchanged line-up.

Possible XI: Ruturaj Gaikwad, Ishan Kishan, Shreyas Iyer, Rishabh Pant (c, wk), Hardik Pandya, Dinesh Karthik, Axar Patel, Harshal Patel, Bhuvneshwar Kumar, Avesh Khan, Yuzvendra Chahal

South Africa: If Quinton de Kock returns, Reeza Hendricks is likely to sit out. Considering De Kock had a hand injury, Heinrich Klaasen might keep wicket. Aiden Markram has returned home after contracting Covid-19.

Possible XI: Temba Bavuma (c), Quinton de Kock, Dwaine Pretorius, Rassie van der Dussen, Heinrich Klaasen (wk), David Miller, Wayne Parnell, Kagiso Rabada, Keshav Maharaj, Anrich Nortjé, Tabraiz Shamsi

What they said:

“I can’t worry about that because I can’t bowl as fast as Umran, plain and simple. I’ve never been an express fast bowler, so my focus has always been on developing skills around my bowling and whatever limitations and advantages I have. No matter how you do it, winning the game for the team is the ultimate goal.” — Harshal Patel on not trying to be Umran Malik.

“If he gets faster, great for him. If I get faster, great for me. I don’t think we’re competing to try and bowl the fastest ball. It’s about winning games and contributing.” — Anrich Nortjé on not trying to outgun Umran Malik.

First published by Cricbuzz.

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ABD: a peacock or just some guy?

“A famous cricketer you say? I’m getting a picture …” – a much repeated moment in the life of AB de Villiers.

Telford Vice | Cape Town

YOU know you’re a star when your parents pull a crowd who wouldn’t have had a clue who they were if they had passed them in the street. But by then there was no doubting the star status of AB de Villiers.

The second Test of South Africa’s unhappy series in India in November 2015, at the M Chinnaswamy Stadium, was De Villiers’ 100th. He was welcomed to the crease at his other home ground — he played 84 matches in Centurion and 65 in Bangalore — like a son. On his way to the middle, another of the city’s famous adoptees, Virat Kohli, took a moment out of stamping his authority on his first home series as captain to shake De Villiers’ hand.

An hour had passed during which South Africa, still reeling from having been routed inside three days on 22 yards of designer dust in Mohali, discovered they had lost the ability to bat on a greentop. Stiaan van Zyl, Faf du Plessis and Hashim Amla had been dismissed, and all for 45 runs.

De Villiers, then the top-ranked Test batter, changed that narrative in an innings that began with him leaping down the pitch to Ravichandran Ashwin — and then lunging, elegantly as you like, into a forward defensive. He batted through four partnerships that realised 132 of the total of 214, and made 85 before being sawn off by a questionable decision for caught behind off Ravindra Jadeja. It was an arresting performance that, like all of De Villiers’ best, seemed at once frenetic and effortless. The only spot of calm was where he was, or where he kept his thoughts.

The delivery that was gifted his wicket became the last ball before tea, which somehow prompted the appearance of De Villiers’ parents in the pressbox, where they were received by the mostly Indian reporters present like celebrities in their own right. “I never played cricket in my life,” his father, also Abraham Benjamin — and also AB — said. “Where I come from there was only one ball.” He made an oval shape with his hands, indicating a rugby ball. “Do you know this ball?” There was silence, which Millie de Villiers broke with, “They don’t know.”

South Africa’s last three wickets tumbled to the first 45 balls of the third session. India were 80 without loss at stumps. And that was, effectively, the end of the match: all of the last four days were lost to rain. That allowed De Villiers’ innings – and the eight wickets shared by Ashwin and Jadeja — to stand in splendid, stark relief. It was its own fine thing that defied being blended into the team effort even though it did much for the collective.

He had a knack for this; for creating a whirlwind of which he was simultaneously part of and apart from. On another occasion at M Chinnaswamy, at an IPL game in May 2018, the chants of “ABD” cut through the wall-to-wall din of probably the loudest crowd in cricket — who invoked De Villiers’ name even though he was not playing because of illness. He was nowhere near the 2019 World Cup in England when news broke that discussions had taken place about him coming out of international retirement to play in the tournament, which destroyed South Africa’s already waning confidence.

Perhaps if you’re as hot a player as De Villiers was, it’s best to keep away from the flames. Or maybe that was one of the few available ways to keep it real. Because the truth of it is that De Villiers is special only on a sports field. That is no insult: clearly he has made his parents proud, and just as clearly he adores life as a husband and a father. Even so, millions of people around the world know how that feels. They are special to the people in their lives, but, beyond those boundaries, that does not make them special. De Villiers, the cricketer, is as special as a person could be without hurting themselves.

But see him out of his professional habitat and you might as well be looking at a peacock marooned on an iceberg. That’s a kind description of the discombobulated mess he was, understandably, at a press conference in the aftermath of the 2015 World Cup semi-final at Eden Park.

Or he could be mistaken for just some guy. In November 2012 he was no more than another beer-buzzed bro among those who shambled into a pub — “The Lucky Shag”, no less — on the banks of the Swan in Perth late on the night that South Africa celebrated the completion of a successful Test series. In Gqeberha — then Port Elizabeth — in March 2018, on the eve of what became the “Sandpapergate” series against the Aussies, he was a harried parent in a restaurant at the team hotel trying to convince his children to eat something not made of sugar. In July 2019 he went unnoticed by the locals when he took time out from playing for Middlesex in the T20 Blast to come to Deptford Park, just south of the Thames, in London to open an artificial pitch that had been laid by a charity that funds public cricket facilities.

“Do you know AB de Villiers,” a woman present was asked. “Who? No.” She was informed: “He’s a famous cricketer from South Africa. A very famous cricketer. That’s him out there; in the pink shirt.” Around De Villiers were around 30 excited children who knew exactly who he was, among them the woman’s. “A famous cricketer you say? I’m getting a picture …”

It’s difficult to know who or what AB de Villiers would have been had he not become AB de Villiers. His identity is so tightly bound to his shimmering talent as a cricketer that, when he isn’t holding a bat or diving for a ball, he seems almost not to exist. He is the tail of his own comet.  

De Villiers’ announcement on Friday that he has retired from all cricket means his wife, Danielle de Villiers, and Millie and AB senior have their spouse and son back from his all-encompassing previous job. Two little boys and their baby sister are about to discover that, happily, their father is more than someone who appears on television from faraway places wearing strange clothes and doing even stranger things. De Villiers belongs to them. He does not belong to cricket, or to those who follow the game.

It seems he does not need to make more money playing cricket. He certainly doesn’t need to endure more bio-bubbles in the cause of playing cricket. Is he a peacock on an iceberg, or just some guy? We’re about to find out.

First published by Cricbuzz.

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Dillon du Preez: the IPL’s afterthought allrounder

He had to prepone his wedding. He was sledged by Shane Warne. He came close to a bomb blast. He would do it all again.

TELFORD VICE in Cape Town

YOU’VE sat in the dugout in three different cities watching your teammates play the first seven matches of the tournament. You’re finally given a game. You bowl eight balls without anyone taking a run off you. By then you’ve claimed three wickets. Not just any wickets: Sachin Tendulkar, Ajyinka Rahane — with consecutive deliveries — and JP Duminy.

But you play only one more match in the competition. When it’s all over you have bowled seven overs of a possible 64 — more than eight times fewer than the hardest working member of your team’s attack — and faced 13 balls, or less than 4% of the number received by the busiest batter in your dressingroom.

You have a right to feel hard done by, denied the chance you have earned to give of your best. You are Dillon du Preez.

“To be honest, I was happy I got the two games,” Du Preez told Cricbuzz about playing for Royal Challengers Bangalore in the 2009 IPL. That he was on the books at all was, he said, a case of the franchise big wigs thinking “we’ve got some leftover cash, let’s sign another allrounder”.

The other side of that equation was more complicated. Du Preez explained: “I got the call from [RCB coach] Ray Jennings to say, ‘Do you want to be part of the IPL?’. I said, ‘Don’t ask me ridiculous questions — I’m there.’ He said, ‘OK. You need to be in India on the 10th of April.’ I said, ‘Can I be there on the 11th? I’m getting married on the 10th …’.

“[Jennings] words were, ‘There are a lot of nice places in India where you can get married.’. We actually moved the wedding to the 20th of March. Only to find out about a week after that that the IPL would start on the 18th of April and that it was being moved to South Africa! My wife’s still pissed off with me.”

That wasn’t the only bit of unsmooth sailing for Du Preez. RCB lost four of their first seven games, prompting a rethink for their match at the Wanderers against Mumbai Indians, who had won four of six. “Jennings came to me the night before and said, ‘Listen, you’re playing tomorrow’,” Du Preez said. “I actually couldn’t sleep — I had been told I was a back-up player for guys like [Jacques] Kallis or [Dale] Steyn. I was getting into the changeroom the next day when I remembered that I had left my playing shirts at the hotel. I had to send the security guard back to my room to get my clothing. So it was a great start.”

All was forgotten when, with his third ball, he drew Tendulkar into an untidy drive with a fullish delivery outside off. The healthy edge flew to Rahul Dravid at slip. “I remember running through to the guys and celebrating, and on my way back to my mark I thought, ‘What just happened?’. I mean, that guy invented cricket! I couldn’t believe it.”

Du Preez’ early success sparked a second slip, Robin Uthappa. Who’s idea was that? “I was floating in the clouds. I’ve no idea. I want to take credit for it, but I really don’t know.” Whoever was responsible, it proved an inspired decision. Du Preez’ next delivery was identical to his previous ball, Ajyinka played a stroke similar to Tendulkar’s, and Uthappa took the catch.

Enter Duminy to face the hattrick attempt, which was pitched shorter. The left-hander shouldered arms and was struck high on the front leg. Nonetheless, RCB yowled like a choir of scolded cats. “It wasn’t out,” Du Preez said. “I went up for the lbw shout — on a hattrick ball you have to — but it was never out.” Duminy became Du Preez’ third victim in his next over, when he flailed at a short, wide effort and was taken behind by Mark Boucher.

In the same over Du Preez found a defending Dwayne Bravo’s edge. But the ball dribbled to earth. He clanged Sanath Jayasuriya on the helmet. Conceding two singles was the closest he came to getting anything wrong.

So he was granted another over. Anil Kumble’s misfield to Jayasuriya’s extra cover drive off the first ball cost three runs. Two dots and a single to Bravo followed. The afterthought allrounder was looking good: 2.4-1-7-3. Then Jayasuriya produced an unlovely but emphatic horizontal swipe to smear a short ball over mid-on for four. Du Preez, his tail up and trusting the fastest pitch in the country to be on his side, retaliated with another semi-bouncer — which Jayasuriya dispatched many metres over the midwicket fence. “He smacked me so hard it almost hit the scoreboard.”

Even so, Du Preez had done enough for Kumble to entrust him with the last over of the innings. But his planets had lost their alignment. Abishek Nayar blitzed a four down the ground and edged another boundary to the fine leg. Four runs off the next three balls took the over’s damage to a dozen runs. Bowl the last one and get the hell out of there … Not only did Du Preez overstep he also flubbed a simple throw for a runout, which resulted in overthrows: “Thanks for reminding me. I forgot about that.” The free hit was worth just one — Nayar’s top edge plopped in front of mid-on — but the 16 runs Du Preez conceded in that over were as many as he had given up in his first three combined.

All ended happily for RCB with Jacques Kallis and Uthappa scoring unbeaten half-centuries to seal victory by nine wickets with a ball short of two overs remaining. “I was sitting in the bus on the way back to the hotel really chuffed,” Du Preez said. “You’re playing with some big guns — Kumble, Dravid, [Virat] Kohli was still casual — so when you get a game you feel like you have to perform to prove that you’re part of this; that you fit in and are on par.”

Du Preez kept his place for RCB’s next match, against Rajasthan Royals in Centurion four days later. Before he could get his hands on the ball, he had to bat. He walked out in the 15th over with RCB having crashed to 72/6 and his coach’s barked instruction uppermost: “Don’t get out! Be there at over 18!” Sergeant-major Jennings, Du Preez said, “has a funny way of making you feel bad for not doing what he says”.

“This guy is a legend, but he’s a clown.” – Du Preez on Shane Warne.

But other words fogged the calm head Du Preez needed to succeed in his mission: “Shane Warne was standing at cover giving me a mouthful. I stood there looking at him and I wanted to have a full go in Afrikaans. I did say something — I’m not going to tell you what — but I was thinking, ‘I’m not even facing. Why are you having a go at me?’. I wanted to climb in and smack him out of Centurion. He was in my face for a few overs, and I was at the non-striker’s end thinking, ‘This guy is a legend, but he’s a clown’.”

It seems a good thing, for Du Preez, that Warne had only one over left when he took guard. He faced just two balls from the Australian, squirting a single backward of square leg and surviving a threatening slider. There were four balls left in the innings after Du Preez shoved Amit Singh’s slower ball down long-on’s throat. Gone for 10 in a measly total of 105. But at least he had followed Jennings’ orders.

The highlight of Du Preez’ three overs, no two of them bowled consecutively, was a short delivery to Yusuf Pathan, who was beaten for pace and top edged to fine leg. It had little impact on a match Rajasthan won with three wickets down and 30 balls remaining.

That confirmed RCB’s fifth loss in nine games. But they won four of their last five to finish third in the standings before sweeping past Chennai Super Kings by six wickets in their semi-final. Only to go down by six runs to Deccan Chargers in the final. Du Preez was returned to the spectators’ ranks for all seven of those matches — despite the fact that the semi and the final were played at the Wanderers, where he had performed so well. But no bitterness lingered: “Just being part of it was amazing, sitting in the changeroom with people like Anil. I was 12 or 13 when I first saw him play. When guys like that talk, you listen.”

Du Preez never bowled nor faced another ball in the IPL. But, as his contract was for two years, he was in India for the 2010 edition. “It was again nice being part of it, but after six weeks I had started moving my bed to the other side of the hotel room and putting the TV somewhere else just to get a different view of things. It was tough. My wife was pregnant, so she couldn’t fly over.”

That’s not to say he left with dull memories only: “Before a game against Mumbai in Bangalore there was a massive bang. We were told to go into the changeroom, and that it a generator had blown up. But on the TV next to the officials while they were telling us that it was reported as a bomb. Kevin Pietersen said, ‘This is not my bread and butter, so that’s it — I’m done, I’m not going onto the field’. I was 12th-man but I didn’t walk around the field. I stayed in the changeroom. Dale Steyn played a loose shot and got out, and on his way back to the changeroom — while I was looking out at the field — he smacked his bat onto the steps next to me. I thought it was another bomb!”

In fact, two bombs had exploded an hour before the scheduled start of the April 17 match, injuring 15 people and reducing to rubble a section of the wall around M. Chinnaswamy Stadium. A third was discovered and defused by police. In other countries the match would have been called off. But not in India: the start of play was delayed by an hour. According to contemporary reports, Bangalore police commissioner Shankar Bidari said, “It is a minor bomb blast, but investigations are in full swing to find out who is responsible.” Seven people connected to jihadist organisations were arrested.

You might consider the trip a mistake. But you’re not Du Preez: “Even if I had to pay for my own flight I would have gone, just to be part of it.” And for the money? “Some guys could buy a casino or a cruise ship with what they make from the IPL, but not me.” How much did he earn? “Was it USD50,000? I can’t remember.”

“I wanted to put my foot through that laptop [when he was confirmed as unsold for the 2011 IPL]. I didn’t, probably because I was stiff from bowling and I couldn’t get my leg up high enough.”

That September, in the Champions League, which was in South Africa, Du Preez garnered enough attention — a 25-ball 46 against South Australia helped, as did cleanbowling MS Dhoni in the semi-final against CSK — to keep himself in the reckoning for the 2011 IPL. And so to the player auction … “I sat in front of my laptop for two days. My name would come up and then go away again. I wanted to put my foot through that laptop [when he was confirmed as unsold]. I didn’t, probably because I was stiff from bowling and I couldn’t get my leg up high enough.”

Self-deprecation comes more easily to Du Preez than to many other fast bowling allrounders. Maybe it was drummed into him early. His first-class debut was for Free State against West Indies in Bloemfontein in December 2003. The visitors batted for all but three overs of the first two days to total 618. But Du Preez’ breezy positivity served him well even in the throes of all that. Four of the six bowlers went for more than a hundred runs each. Not Du Preez, who took 3/75 — among them Shivnarine Chanderpaul, who was bowled for 245 to end a desperate drudge of an innings that lasted almost eight hours into which 369 balls disappeared without trace. That done, Du Preez, batting at No. 10, clipped 56 off 66 balls. Then he dismissed Wavell Hinds and Ramnaresh Sarwan. “I always hated bowling in ‘Bloem’,” Du Preez said, a reference to the unfailingly somnambulant surfaces at his erstwhile home ground. “I don’t think I took one five-for there.” Not quite: he claimed one in first-class cricket and another in a limited overs game. But he spread 14 five-wicket hauls in first-class, list A and significant T20 games among other grounds — despite playing 86 matches of all sorts in Bloemfontein.

Now 38, and after a playing career that never reached international heights but took him to Leicestershire on a Kolpak contract in 2008 and, in 2012, back to Asia for the Uthura Rudras in the Sri Lanka Premier League, he is now coaching. The Free State women’s team were among his first charges. “Sometimes it’s tough because there tends to be more emotion after a bad game. But they’re tougher than a lot of the guys — if they get cut during a game they go back onto the park and play.” Perhaps the most important skill he learnt was to knock on the dressingroom door before he entered: “Yes, that’s crucial.”

Eleven years after her preponed wedding, his wife, Nicola, would expect no less.

First published by Cricbuzz.