‘Only Kumar put brakes on Bavuma’ — Boucher

Opinion: Bavuma scores too slowly. Fact: Bavuma’s strike rate is higher than most T20I openers of his generation.

Telford Vice | Cape Town

RARELY does a collision between fact and opinion in sport end happily. Temba Bavuma will know that. So will Mark Boucher. The opinion is that Bavuma scores too slowly in T20I cricket. The relevant facts, as Boucher laid them out at a press conference on Tuesday, say otherwise.

The only players among the 22 who took guard during South Africa’s drawn series in India who finished with a lower strike rate than Bavuma’s 103.38 were Tabraiz Shamsi, Marco Jansen, Lungi Ngidi and Anrich Nortjé. Bavuma’s performance stuck out, and not in a good way.

“Temba struggled during the tour, there’s no doubt,” Boucher said. “As coaches, we sit down and think, ‘Why did he struggle?’ But he really struggled against one bowler and that was [Bhuvneshwar] Kumar. Most of the guys struggled against him. Let’s give him credit where it’s due. Kumar is a fantastic bowler in those conditions. There were times when the ball was swinging a lot, which made him very dangerous. Also the bounce was up and down a lot, especially with the new ball.”

Bavuma scored 13 runs off the 25 deliveries he faced from king of swing Kumar: a strike rate of 52.00. Against the rest of India’s attack he made 48 off 34: a tempo of 141.18. Kumar’s economy rate of 6.07 was the best in the series — Lungi Ngidi’s was 5.77 but he bowled just 4.3 overs. India’s other bowlers combined had an economy rate of 8.03, almost two runs an over higher than Kumar’s. Only Harshal Patel’s strike rate of 10.4 was better than Kumar’s 14; Ngidi’s 6.7 excepted. Thus Kumar is isolated as the problem. But he isn’t going anywhere: the South Africans will doubtless have to contend with him again in Perth on October 30, when the teams are set to clash in the T20I World Cup. 

“We look at it as coaches and say how do we have a look at that particular bowler and how do we give [Bavuma] more options? With other bowlers his strike rates are fine. There is no major concern from my side. He will know that he wants to score better and quicker. If you look at the teams around the world, there’s maybe one or two players in your top sides where there’s space for … I wouldn’t say a nudger, nurdler; there’s no space for a nudger, nurdler in today’s cricket … but certainly for a stabiliser in the innings. We see [Bavuma] in that mould. His stats outside the powerplay are very good. It’s just one little period of play and against one particular bowler that we need to work on. We’ve got a plan with regards to that.”

Bavuma’s career strike rate during the powerplay is 103.33. Outside the powerplay it’s 134.76. Boucher was confident Bavuma would respond positively to the coaches’ attempts to even that score, and push it higher: “Temba loves being challenged. He wants to work on his game; he wants to improve. I’ve got no doubt that given a bit of time, when we get him to a bowling machine and work on a couple of things, he will come through. He is a tough character and someone we need in our team. As coaches we are going to be working extremely hard to get him right against that particular bowling style.” 

Twenty-two other players have opened the batting in T20Is as often or more than Bavuma since he did so for the first time in February 2020. Eight of them have had a better career strike rate in the position than Bavuma’s 128.57 as an opener. West Indian Evin Lewis is at the top of the list with 155.73. Malta’s Bikram Arora brings up the rear with 98.31. Five are striking above 140 — including Quinton de Kock, Bavuma’s opening partner — and two others above 130. Seven are in the 120s, and eight below that. The average, including Bavuma’s performance, is 124.70 — almost four runs slower than Bavuma. How much did this swirl of stats matter?

“There should be a number,” Boucher said. “As a player, you want to set yourself a goal. People sometimes look at it in its entirety and say you need to strike more, but how do you get to striking that? Is it just about giving a player one more option to score? How do you set yourself up? We’ve had conversations about your first 10 balls that you face. What’s your goal? Is it 10 off 10 or 14 off 10? It’s one boundary extra that you’re looking at, and 14 off 10 is [a strike rate of] 140.

“The margins are not as big people think. It’s maybe just another scoring option [that’s required]. There’s certain conditions where you’ve just got to be smart and play it how you see it — whether you’re chasing a high total or a low total, all those things can come into play. It’s about giving players the different options that they need.

“We did it last year with regards to scoring all around the wicket. You would have seen reverse sweeps come in; guys who have never lapped before, they’ve got the lap option and the reverse lap. If you give batters one or two more options, it’s challenging players and also pushing them to become the best in the world. It’s very necessary. It’s also about mindset. Some guys are not used to going out there and taking a risk in the first six balls. You might think it’s near impossible for a guy to get to a strike rate 140 if he is at 120, but it could be about merely adding another shot to his repertoire.”

Boucher said the split between the mental and technical requirements to enable players to make leaps like that successfully and consistently was skewed “80-20” in favour of the mental aspect: “You need to have the know-how to play a shot and an option. You’re mindset’s got to be, ‘I’ve got to try and move my strike rate up a bit. I’ve got to be open to that.’ Once you get the confidence of adding that extra shot to your batting, or ball to your bowling, it’s having the mindset to go out there and really trust it. We want to be smart. We don’t want to just go out there and play maverick cricket. We have conversations after every game about how we can get better, not only from a technical but from a mindset position as well.”

That discussion would have been different after the matches in Delhi and Cuttack, when the South Africans held their nerve and reeled in the targets, compared to the games in Visakhapatnam and Rajkot, when they seemed to lose focus at the crease and paid the price.   

“We almost didn’t want to pull the trigger and put their bowlers under pressure,” Boucher said of the Vizag match, when South Africa were dismissed for 131 chasing 180. The target was 170 in Rajkot, where the visitors crashed to 87 all out. “The chat was, ‘Let’s go out playing our new way rather than going back to our default that we were guilty of a year or so ago.’ You’re not going to win World Cups with a mindset where you are tentative. You’ve got to go out there and play. Other teams in the world have shown us how to play — India and England. That’s really the way forward, especially in the shorter version of the game.”

As a respected and popular leader, Bavuma is central to guiding South Africa on that journey. But first he will need to get over the elbow injury that forced him to retire hurt in Rajkot and prompted his withdrawal from Sunday’s washout. Boucher said Bavuma was due to have his elbow scanned on Tuesday: “We were really worried after the injury because he couldn’t bend his arm at all. But the next morning he was able to bend it, so that was some good news.”

Bavuma’s full return to fitness in time for the tour to England, which starts in three weeks’ time, would be even better news. That and an upward trend in his strike rate.

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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India arise to keep series alive

“With the bat, we just didn’t pitch up.” – Temba Bavuma

Telford Vice | Cape Town

FOR a while there in Visakhapatnam on Tuesday, Anrich Nortjé had equalled his most expensive over in T20Is. Then the message came from on high to the umpires that the third delivery, a vicious bouncer, had screamed to the boundary after ricocheting off the grille of Ruturaj Gaikwad’s helmet. Unlike what had been decided on the field, neither bat nor gloves were involved.

So four runs were chalked off Nortjé’s account, leaving the 20 he conceded to Steve Smith in the last over of the innings at Newlands in February 2020 unmatched as his biggest hiding yet in the format. Not that Gaikwad’s assault was far behind qualitatively as well as quantitatively, what with him slamming fours through point, mid-on, midwicket and third. That the last ball of the over eluded Gaikwad’s horizontally slung bat and earned not a run only cast what had gone before in stark relief.

Gaikwad and Ishan Kishan were rampant in their 60-ball stand of 97, India’s highest opening partnership of the series and their highest in the 18 T20Is they have played against South Africa. Only eight times in the 64 games in the format they have played at home have their first-wicket pair scored more runs. Thus their total of 179/5 would have disappointed them.

Gaikwad and Kishan took 10 or more runs off an over four times. After they were separated, in the 10th over, India reached double figures in an over only three more times — two of them in the throes of the slog at the end of the innings.

India were 48 without loss after the first five overs. They scored 49/1 in the next five, then 41/2 and another 41/2 to finish. Somehow, we saw 15 fewer runs in the last half of the innings compared to the first. And that despite first David Miller and Rassie van der Dussen, the owners of two of the safest pairs of hands in the game, putting down catches five balls apart in the 14th and 15th overs. Without Hardik Pandya’s late blast of 31 not out off 21, the home side might not have escaped the 140s.

South Africa reeled them back with canny bowling. Kagiso Rabada went for a dozen runs in his second over and 11 in his last, the penultimate of the innings. But the other two cost just four each. Wayne Parnell was hit for a dozen off the last, but only 20 in his other three. Dwaine Pretorius’ first two overs, both in the first half of the innings when Gaikwad and Kishan were going strong, yielded nine runs each. His other two went for 11. Nortjé bounced back from his 16-run mauling to limit the damage to seven in the only other over he bowled. South Africa’s spin suit wasn’t as strong. Tabraiz Shamsi and Keshav Maharaj had a combined economy rate of 10.00. The seamers banked a rate of 8.21.

But, not for the first time, the bowlers were let down. Or was it that India, having lost their way with the ball and crumbled when faced with the South Africans’ determination at the crease in the first two games, found a way to not only survive but prosper?

With Bhuvneshwar Kumar all but unhittable in his first two overs, when he had the ball zigging and zagging at will and went for only seven runs, and Yuzvendra Chahal doing much the same, albeit noticeably more slowly, in his haul of 3/20, the visitors had nowhere to go but to Rajkot for Friday’s match with bloodied noses. None of their partnerships reached 30. Neither did any of their batters. Maharaj’s strike rate — 137.50 for his eight-ball 11 — was their highest and the only one of 130.00 or more. The tone was set in the first 10 overs of their reply, when they slumped to 63/4 — 34 runs and three wickets worse off than their opponents were at the same stage of their innings. They were hemmed in by intelligent bowling and cleaned up by a flawless display of catching.

“With the bat, we just didn’t pitch up,” Temba Bavuma said in his television interview after his team had been bowled out for 131 to earn India victory by 48 runs, their biggest victory over South Africa in the format. “We didn’t get the partnerships and we didn’t have momentum.” 

At the Kotla on Thursday, Van der Dussen and Miller were key to the successful chase of a record target of 212. In Cuttack on Sunday, Heinrich Klaasen stood tall with his career-best T20I score to reel in another win. Indeed, going into Tuesday’s match, India had lost five of their six completed T20Is against South Africa at home.

Even so, an India team without Rohit Sharma, Virat Kohli and Jasprit Bumrah — who have been rested — and Ravindra Jadeja, Deepak Chahar and Suryakumar Yadav — who are injured — and under the guidance of first-time captain Rishabh Pant remain an India team. As South Africa have proved, they are beatable. But rarely easily. Therein lay the kernel of a series that remains rudely alive with two games to play.

First published by Cricbuzz.

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Classy Klaasen no poor relation

“It’s a blessing from above that this innings came for me at this time of my career.” – Heinrich Klaasen

Telford Vice | Cape Town

THE poor man’s Quinton de Kock. It’s a slap in Heinrich Klaasen’s face to describe him in those terms, but he can take it. He’s had plenty of experience of being underrated and overlooked, of being doubted and damned by faint praise. And he’s still standing.

“I decided that if I get out today I’d rather go my way and try to be positive,” Klaasen told a press conference in Cuttack on Sunday after scoring a career-best 81 off 46 balls to guide South Africa to victory in the second T20I, and with that a 2-0 lead in the five-match series. “It was just one of those days that it came off. It’s a blessing from above that this innings came for me at this time of my career.”

Among South Africa’s current players, only De Kock, David Miller, Reeza Hendricks, Rassie van der Dussen and Temba Bavuma have scored more runs in the shortest format — all of them except Bavuma in more innings than Klaasen. Only Aiden Markram has a higher strike rate than Klaasen. 

And yet Klaasen, who made his debut in February 2018 and has captained South Africa in seven T20Is, has played in only 54 out of a possible 134 matches for South Africa across the formats. He has featured in 21 series, but been involved in all the games in a rubber only 10 times.

Some of Klaasen’s absences are explained by injuries, and it doesn’t help his cause that he is competing for game time with De Kock, the leading South Africa batter of his generation and one of the best wicketkeepers in the game. That teams have at least four vacancies for middle order batters like Klaasen, only two for openers like De Kock — in white-ball matches — and only one for ’keepers like De Kock and Klaasen, complicates the issue. If someone can keep and open the batting, that’s two important boxes ticked.  

But De Kock’s retirement from Test cricket in December didn’t earn Klaasen, who has scored 4,893 runs at 45.30 with 11 centuries in his 127 first-class innings, more cracks of the nod. Instead the vacancy was filled by Kyle Verreynne, who is almost six years the 30-year-old Klaasen’s junior and had a first-class average of 51.05 when he made his Test debut a year ago. So it’s up to Klaasen to take whatever chances that come his way, like the one he was given by De Kock being ruled out in Cuttack because of a hand injury.

Sometimes, there has been room for De Kock and Klaasen in South Africa’s XI. De Kock opened the batting and Klaasen kept wicket in the third Test in Ranchi in October 2019 — Klaasen’s only match in the format — and De Kock has been behind the stumps with Klaasen in the field in 24 white-ball internationals. But South Africa’s team isn’t big enough for both of them to play together more regularly.

Bavuma wouldn’t have chosen to be without the devastating De Kock on Sunday, but he was happy he had Klaasen on hand. “It was a fantastic innings by ‘Klaasy’; fantastic ball-striking by him,” Bavuma said in an audio file released by CSA on Monday. South Africa were chasing just 149, but with Bhuvneshwar Kumar in sniping form they had slumped to 29/3 when Klaasen came to the crease in the sixth over. When he holed out to long-on to the last ball of the 17th, South Africa needed only five more runs to win. Klaasen’s eagle eyed, sweet swinging hitting — more than 70% of his runs were smote in fours and sixes — dominated stands of 64 off 41 balls with Bavuma and 51 off 28 with Miller. “I tried to hang around as much as I could and allow a guy like ‘Klaasy’ to get himself in, kind of play around him,” Bavuma said.

Besides a big bat, Klaasen brought sharp thinking to the equation. “I said to Temba that the spinners were the guys we needed to target,” Klaasen said. “The seamers were a little bit up and down, so we could take less risks against them. If we could take the spinners down properly, that’s most of the work done.” Thanks largely to the stellar Bhuvneshwar’s 4/13, India’s economy rate in the 13 overs of seam they bowled was a sparkling 6.00. Their 5.2 overs of spin were more than twice as expensive: an economy rate of 13.13.

“A freak injury with ‘Quinnie’ and his hand [put Klaasen in the XI], and ‘Klaasy’ took that opportunity with both hands,” Bavuma said. “He’s a big player for us in the middle of the innings. We know what he can do. We back him 100%. We have a lot of belief in him, and he showed again why he’s a part of this team.”

Team management have told Cricbuzz that De Kock underwent scans on his hand on Monday, but that his status won’t be confirmed before the third T20I in Visakhapatnam on Tuesday. So Reeza Hendricks seems set to open the batting again and ’keeper Klaasen is likely to be given another go in the middle order, and that with the series waiting to be won. If Klaasen delivers another performance like Sunday’s, India will struggle to keep the rubber alive.

South Africa are stronger when De Kock is in the mix, but they aren’t weaker when the poor man’s De Kock plays instead. Not for nothing, ‘Klaasy’ rhymes with classy. 

First published by Cricbuzz.

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Klaasen king in Cuttack

“A lot of people were gunning for my head and a lot of staff members have backed me. This is one way to say thank you to them.” – Heinrich Klaasen

Telford Vice | Cape Town

UNTIL the last two overs of India’s innings on Sunday, it seemed South Africa were set to continue their brief but charmed relationship with Cuttack’s Barabati Stadium. The visitors had played there only once before — in a T20I in October 2015 — but their six-wicket win was India’s only loss in their last nine completed games at the ground going back to January 2007.

Here we go again, the South Africans might have been thinking after 18 overs. India had dwindled to 118/6, and Dinesh Karthik had faced only 14 balls and Harshal Patel just four. Anrich Nortjé and Dwaine Pretorius, who would bowl those last two overs, had taken 3/46 in the six overs they had sent down between them: an economy rate of 7.67 and a strike rate of 12.00.

The full house of 45,000 were restless with unease. India have played on 49 grounds at home. Only on nine of them do they have a better win/loss ratio than at the Barabati. But the national team had last visited the ground in December 2019 for an ODI against West Indies, and before that in December 2017. Were the crowd’s lesser spotted guests to let them down? Only three of India’s first 18 overs had yielded 10 or more runs each, and eight had gone for five or fewer each. Was something not much better than the 92 all out — India’s total in that 2015 T20I against South Africa — on the cards?

The nervous murmuring in the stands only grew as Nortjé limited Harshal and Karthik to singles off the first four balls of the 19th. Karthik pulled and cut fours off the last two deliveries, which were separated by a wide. Pretorius began the last over with an off-side half-volley, which Harshal duly clubbed through mid-off for four. Harshal missed a big-eyed slash at a widish leg cutter, and took a single to cover off another. That allowed Karthik into the frame to launch consecutive sixes over mid-off and down the ground, mighty blows that flew far into the suddenly giddy crowd. A mere single trickled off the bottom edge of Karthik’s bat to end the innings, but he had done his bit with a 21-ball 30 not out. Those last two overs had gifted the total 30 precious runs.

Considering India had lost 4/50 from the seventh to the 14th overs, showing the wisdom of Temba Bavuma not deploying a spinner until the ninth over and for only four overs in all, their 148/6 represented a significant recovery. The fans seemed if not happy then at least satisfied that their team were putting up a fight. They probably hadn’t factored in that only in a dozen of India’s 62 T20Is at home have their recorded lower totals.

The odds were surely tilted in India’s favour by a pitch that wasn’t ill-suited to the occasion, but which did demand the full attention of all who batted on it — a surface that required perfect timing and steady application; qualities that aren’t always apparent among batting successes in this format. As David Miller said in his television interview: “If it’s keeping low every now and again, it does get into your head. You’re never sure whether to go forward or back.” Quinton de Kock’s absence because of a wrist injury further complicated South Africa’s task, and was keenly felt when masterful swing bowling by Bhuvneshwar Kumar did for Reeza Hendricks, Pretorius and Rassie van der Dussen inside the powerplay with only 29 runs scored. Bhuvneshwar “got the ball to talk” Bavuma acknowledged on television.

Enter De Kock’s replacement behind the stumps, Heinrich Klaasen, to play perhaps the innings of his life and certainly his first for South Africa since October 2021. Invariably a cool head under pressure, Klaasen went several degrees cooler still in a stand of 64 off 41 balls with Bavuma and an effort of 51 off 28 with Miller. That the cussed, curatorial Bavuma should have scored only 15 runs with Klaasen is no surprise for a selfless soul who is content to get the job done without fanfare. But it takes some doing to overshadow the marauding Miller, who faced just six deliveries fewer than Klaasen while they were together but contributed exactly half as many as the wicketkeeper-batter’s 32 runs to the partnership.

The sweat shook off Klaasen as his innings wore on, and some of his singles were hobbled rather than run because of cramp. But he kept swinging sweetly and connecting crunchily, hitting seven fours and five sixes in his 46-ball 81 — which was ended just five runs away from victory when he holed out to Harshal to end the 17th. Had being able to study the pitch at close quarters during India’s innings helped him come to terms with how to bat on it, he was asked on television. “It always gives you an indication, but that didn’t make it easier.”

Klaasen has played 54 matches for South Africa in all formats, always done a solid job in the gloves and pads, and made a white-ball century along with seven half-centuries. But, in a cricket culture that is frequently dazzled by the emphatic and that doesn’t often appreciate the understated, Klaasen is the kind of player too readily deemed expendable. “A lot of people were gunning for my head and a lot of staff members have backed me,” he said. “This is one way to say thank you to them.”

The gratitude to Klaasen for this win, nailed down by four wickets with 10 balls to spare, and meaning South Africa need only one more from the three remaining games to claim the series, should go a lot further than the dressing room.

First published by Cricbuzz.

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How Wanderers helped make Kohli’s India

Whether South Africa have learnt their lessons from the bruising 2018 Joburg Test will be gleaned when the teams clash on the Highveld again this month.

Telford Vice | Cape Town

INDIA’S most recent Test in South Africa, at the Wanderers in January 2018, did not go gentle into that good night that falls softly when, finally, the sprinklers soak the stretch of uncovered earth that is spent and striated after serving us as many as five days of keenly contested cricket. Instead a pitch of payback for a nasty Nagpur surface during South Africa’s series in India in November 2015 dominated proceedings, and the headlines. 

Michael Holding, then more a commentator on the game than its social justice conscience, held the front page: “Two out of a hundred; it’s a shit pitch. This is not a cricket pitch, this is dangerous. Call it off. Forget it. You can’t play cricket on that. I have no idea what has gone wrong but I know it’s not a good cricket pitch.” Something’s up when a fast bowler complains about a pitch that aids and abets fast bowling.

Play was suspended late on the third day, so that umpires Ian Gould and Aleem Dar could consult match referee Andy Pycroft on what to do, after Jasprit Bumrah had nailed Dean Elgar on the helmet. It was the first time in the match a batter had taken a blow to the head, but the ninth time in not quite nine sessions that the medics had been called onto the field to deal with the results of the ball thudding into various parts — mostly the hands — of different bodies. The man who then ran the Wanderers, Greg Fredericks, the chief executive of the Gauteng Cricket Board and someone rendered unafraid by his long years spent fighting apartheid, including from inside a jail cell, paid a cautious visit to the pressbox to gauge the media mood. 

More than three hours later, the ICC explained: “The on-field umpires will continue to monitor the pitch, and consult the match referee should the pitch deteriorate further. The welfare of the players is paramount and two of the most experienced match officials are in charge of the game and will take appropriate decisions.” Play resumed on the fourth morning, after a delay while the maligned groundstaff dealt with a wet outfield. Parthiv Patel’s broken finger — he was replaced by Dinesh Karthik — was the closest we came to serious injury. Life went on.

Less often recalled than all that is the result and its context. India won, by 63 runs with a day and a bit to spare, on the most un-Asian pitch imaginable. Asked to meet a challenge the South Africans had calculated was beyond them, they did. And more: that was India’s first success outside Asia and the similar surfaces of the Caribbean since July 2014, when they won at Lord’s. Before that they went 14 Tests outside of their comfort zone without winning, 10 of them lost. That lean run started after they were victorious at Kingsmead in December 2010. But the Wanderers win marked the start of a happier part of the journey for Virat Kohli’s team. They have since played 20 Tests in England, Australia and New Zealand, winning seven and drawing three. Was the relative allround sledgehammer India have become, regardless of conditions, forged in the molten heat of four days in Joburg in January 2018?

The way Kohli saluted the end of the game and the series, by taking a deeply cynical bow, a veritable physical sneer, a bombastic cameo, offered strong evidence in favour of that argument. India’s captain, as tall a totem as any team have ever had, was viscerally angry, and just as clearly incandescent with pride, and as close to the edge of the cliff of unacceptable behaviour as even he could dare to go, and also defiant in the face of the arrogance of opponents who thought they could dictate terms in their own backyard. He was magnificent.           

Whether South Africa have learnt their lessons from that bruising, in every sense, match will be gleaned when the teams clash on the Highveld again later this month. They were to have resumed hostilities where they left off, but practicality has trumped poetry and the series will start in Centurion on December 26 before returning to the scene of 2018’s passion on January 3 and moving to Newlands on January 11.

Of South Africa’s XI at the Wanderers almost four years ago, Hashim Amla, AB de Villiers, Faf du Plessis, Vernon Philander and Morné Morkel have retired. That’s damn near half a damn fine team. India will return with four of their five stars from that gnarly encounter: Cheteshwar Pujara and Kohli, who scored a gritty half-century each, and Bumrah and Mohammed Shami, who claimed five-wicket hauls. Shami’s 5/28 in the second innings — centred on a 10-ball burst of naked aggression that earned him three wickets for a single run — was a thing of shimmering beauty, the equal of the best fast bowling yet seen in a country not short of quality quick stuff.

The missing piece of the puzzle is Bhuvneshwar Kumar, who gutsed out 125 balls at the batting crease, was last out and ninth out for his 63 runs, took four wickets and limited the damage to 2.24 an over, and was named the player of what has turned out to be the last Test in which he has appeared.

And so that good night came and the sprinklers soaked the now cursed uncovered earth that was spent and striated after a contest that veered beyond keen into dangerous territory. It is one of the secret pleasures of cricket writers to be there when that happens, to see the pitch and the outfield take their rest and reward in respectful silence and splendid isolation unsullied by trespassers like spectators, players and umpires. As the water flows onto the ground below, so the ideas and the words they generate flow into keyboards, and from there into the ether itself, in the pressbox above. Everything about the scene changes. Coolth wafts over, the sun bids a spectacular adieu, the light fades to velvet, insects spike the sky. There is magic.

Covid has taken that from us: we will have to be out of the ground an hour after play ends. But we will, like all who see it, take the cricket with us. It is ours to keep.

First published by Cricbuzz.

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Steyn steals show after SA fightback

The responsive pitch was part of the reason for Bhuvneshwar Kumar’s success, but not as much as his own effort.

TMG Digital

TELFORD VICE at Newlands

NONE of the batsmen who faced Bhuvneshwar Kumar in the first hour at Newlands on Friday managed to lay much bat on ball. But, after tea, Kagiso Rabada, batting at No. 9, hit him high over his head for six.

It was that sort of day for India, who competed early but faded as the first day of the test series wore on to let South Africa back into the game.

The accurate and consistently threatening Kumar was easily the most penetrative of India’s bowlers on the first day of the test series, and but for a dropped catch would have claimed sixth five-wicket haul. Instead he took 4/87.

But, as good as Kumar was, and as well as he was supported, South Africa were better.

They recovered from a horror start, shambling to 12/3 inside five overs, to total 286. The cavalry came in the shape of a century stand between AB de Villiers and Faf du Plessis, and Morne Morkel, last out for two, was alone among the home side’s last eight in not making a decent-sized lump of runs.

By stumps India were 28/3, or 258 behind and 58 away from avoiding being told to follow on.

One of India’s wickets belonged to Dale Steyn, who because of dire shoulder and muscle injuries bowled in a test for the first time since November 2016.

Du Plessis won the toss and chose to bat, and watched from the dressingroom as his top order of Dean Elgar, Aiden Markram and Hashim Amla came matching back in short order.

That brought De Villiers and Du Plessis together at the crease, and they shared a partnership of 114 before being removed three overs apart.

De Villiers batted aggressively for his 65, which came off 84 balls and included 11 fours.

Du Plessis, who faced 104 deliveries for his 62 and hit 12 fours, was solidly circumspect.

The first two deliveries of the match, bowled by Kumar, sailed past Elgar’s legs.

But the third seamed away from the left-hander, who nicked it and was caught behind.

Kumar trapped Markram in front with an inswinger in his next over, and in the medium pacer’s following over Amla steered an edge to the wicketkeeper.

That earned Kumar figures of 3/4 from the first 17 deliveries he bowled.

The responsive pitch was part of the reason for Kumar’s success, but not as much as his own effort.

India stayed on top until the ninth over, when De Villiers slashed Kumar over the slip cordon for four and crashed his next delivery through point for another boundary.

For all Kumar’s superiority, it fell to debutant seamer Jasprit Bumrah to separate De Villiers and Du Plessis in the seventh over after lunch, when De Villiers drove at an inswinger and angled it onto his stumps.

Hardik Pandya had a cutting Du Plessis caught behind to reduce South Africa to 142/5.

Quinton de Kock and Vernon Philander steadied the home side with a stand that reached 60 before De Kock edged Kumar to the wicketkeeper.

Kumar might have bagged a fifth scalp in the seventh over before tea, but Shikhar Dhawan at third slip botched a chance offered by Keshav Maharaj before he had scored.

South Africa were dismissed with 11 overs left in the day’s play, and in the second of them Dale Steyn ran in to bowl to joyous cheers.

With his 14th delivery he induced a leading edge from Dhawan and claimed the skied catch himself.

Cheers turned to roars, and Steyn’s scowl to a broad smile.

Virat Kohli walked in, and came close to having to walk out immediately when Steyn’s bouncer looped off his leading edge and plopped to earth on the pitch.

By then Vernon Philander had had a hard-driving Murali Vijay caught in the gully and soon the menacing Morkel would have Kohli taken behind with the first ball of his second spell.

Morkel didn’t concede a run in his two overs and bowled beautifully, but the moment was Steyn’s.

It was, no doubt, good to be back.

Will India’s quicks be up to scratch in SA?

“Whether those guys can actually stand up and deliver, time and time again, is going to be a big ask for them.” – Dale Steyn

Sunday Times

TELFORD VICE in Cape Town

INJURY relegated Dale Steyn from the leader of South Africa’s attack to a spectator for most of the first test he played against India, and he kept a keen eye.

“Our bowlers are a lot more experienced now and if we play on a similar wicket I don’t give India much of a chance,” he said.

It was December 2006 on an all-swinging, all-seaming Wanderers pitch, and India found a way to beat South Africa by 123 runs well inside four days.

Ashwell Prince’s five-and-a-half hour, 223-ball 97, one of only three scores bigger than 50, was the closest anyone got to a century.

The way the Indians found went through the slinging right arm of a mad-haired fast bowler who had come to cricket from breakdancing and would be drummed out of the game as a matchfixer: Shanthakumaran Sreesanth took match figures of 8/99 and smashed Andre Nel over his head for six. The visitors’ other proper quick also wasn’t half bad: Zaheer Khan claimed 5/111.

They earned India their first win in the 10 tests they had played in South Africa. Eleven years and seven matches later   they have added only one more success — at Kingsmead in December 2010, when Zaheer and Harbhajan Singh took a half-dozen wickets each and Sreesanth grabbed four.

No-one needs reminding that fast bowling rules in South Africa. Steyn did so anyway with a shot across the bows of the Indian squad who will be here in the new year.

“India being one of those places where spin dominates, they tend to turn to their spinners all the time,” he said.

“Here, they’re going to have to turn to their seamers. It’s the guys who consistently put the ball in the right area who are going to ask questions the whole time.

“Whether those guys can actually stand up and deliver, time and time again, is going to be a big ask for them.”

This time “those guys” are no-one of Zaheer’s quality nor Sreesanth’s chutzpah. Instead they are Ishant Sharma, Umesh Yadav, Bhuvneshwar Kumar, Mohammed Shami and Jasprit Bumrah along with allrounder Hardik Pandya.

Between them they have played 164 tests, 99 of them in the subcontinent. Only Ishant and Shami have earned test caps in South Africa, where they average 54.16 and 43.83.

What were Steyn’s thoughts on that little lot?

“I think ‘Bhuvi’ is the one guy who can land the ball consistently in an area,” he said.

“In South Africa you can be all over the place and then bowl one good ball and get a wicket, but I think our batsmen are good enough to combat that whereas I don’t think their batsmen have been put under consistent pressure, especially of late.

“Our seam attack consistently puts guys under pressure. I don’t think India have been put under pressure for long enough, so they might struggle.”

India have played 27 of their last 31 tests in Asia, and the other four on the similar surfaces of the Caribbean.

Not since January 2015 have they seen a faster pitch, in Sydney, and the last time they won on a genuinely away pitch was at Lord’s in July 2014.

All of which are a long way from Newlands, where the series starts on January 5, and even further from Centurion and the Wanderers, where it is set to end on January 28

“The idea is to prepare pitches naturally but to give South Africa every advantage,” one groundsman said this week.

India, you have been warned.