Kallis completes SA’s suddenly experienced backroom

South Africa’s support staff will take 1 464 international caps into the series against England. Against India they had 266.

TELFORD VICE in Cape Town

JACQUES Kallis joined South Africa’s staff on Wednesday, taking to six the major appointments made from Saturday to try to pull out of a tailspin before the men’s Test series against England starts next Thursday.

A Cricket South Africa (CSA) release said Kallis had “been named as the team’s batting consultant for the duration of the summer”. He will join the squad, which was named on Monday, at their camp in Pretoria on Wednesday. 

That follows the news that Charl Langeveldt would return home, which broke on Tuesday in Bangladesh, where he has been the national team’s bowling coach, on a two-year contract, since July 27. CSA sources confirmed Langeveldt’s involvement, although whether he will come aboard as a consultant or a fulltime coach remains unclear.

“I can confirm that we have received a formal request for [Langeveldt’s] release,” Bangladesh Cricket Board chief executive Nizam Uddin Chowdhury told Cricbuzz on Tuesday. “We value our strong cricketing relationship with CSA. We have also taken into consideration that he was a South African international cricketer and we understand his reasons for wanting to work with his own team. The board has decided to release him with immediate effect.”

Graeme Smith was unveiled as CSA’s acting director of cricket on Saturday, along with Mark Boucher as coach, Enoch Nkwe as his assistant and Linda Zondi as the independent selector. The addition of Kallis and Langeveldt means South Africa’s backroom experience going into the England series amounts to 1 464 international caps of all descriptions, or more than five-and-a-half times as many as the 266 they had at their disposal when they toured India in September and October. That served them well enough in a drawn T20 rubber, but they came badly unstuck in a Test series the home side dominated in all aspects and won 3-0.

Kallis was the pre-eminent allrounder of the age for many, and for even more he remains the best player South Africa have yet produced. In a Test career that stretched from December 1995 to December 2013 he played 165 matches, scoring 13 206 runs — averaging 55.25 — with 45 centuries and 58 half-centuries. All of those achievements are South Africa records, aside from Graeme Pollock’s average of 60.97 from 23 Tests. Kallis also claimed 292 wickets — sixth on South Africa’s alltime list — including five five-wicket hauls.  

As a coach he took Kolkata Knight Riders to the 2015 Indian Premier League eliminator, where they lost to Sunrisers Hyderabad. What kind of skills coach he might make at international level isn’t known, but he is unlikely to add significantly to the verbal clutter of team meetings: Boucher has famously said he and Kallis, who are longstanding friends, are able to sit around a fire “for four hours” without uttering a word to each other.

Langeveldt, who played six Tests, 72 one-day internationals and nine T20Is, was among the best death bowlers of his era and took the first one-day hattrick for South Africa, against West Indies at Kensington Oval in May 2005. He became South Africa’s bowling coach after the 2015 World Cup and had a significant positive effect on the skill levels and variation shown by his charges. But Ottis Gibson was appointed head coach in August 2017, and South Africa’s dressingroom wasn’t big enough for two former fast bowlers.

Langeveldt’s return is likely to be the least heralded of the appointments South Africa have made in these breathtaking few days, but it could have the biggest impact. Unlike the other members of the six who have played at international level, he has also coached at that hot coalface. And with success. When push comes to shove at Centurion next week, that’s what will matter most.

First published by Cricbuzz.

Domingo to head up Bangladesh’s burgeoning boerewors brigade

“There are many names of coaches that spring to mind including Duncan Fletcher, Graham Ford, Mickey Arthur and Adrian Birrell.” – Corrie van Zyl lists some of the coaches lost to the game in South Africa. 

TELFORD VICE in London

BANGLADESH’S burgeoning boerewors brigade gained another member on Saturday when Russell Domingo was appointed head coach of the improving Asians’ men’s team.

Many will see his success as another nail hammered into the coffin of an ailing game in South Africa.  

Domingo, a former South Africa assistant and head coach who is currently in charge of the A side, will join fellow South Africans Neil McKenzie and Charl Langeveldt — Bangladesh’s batting and bowling coaches — in Dhaka.

All three were in South Africa’s dressingroom during Domingo’s tenure as head coach, which ran from 2013 to 2017.

“We have been very impressed with his passion and coaching philosophy,” Bangladesh Cricket Board president Nazmul Hassan was quoted as saying in a release.

“He has a clear idea of what is required to take the team forward.”

South Africa and Bangladesh had identical records at this year’s World Cup: three wins from eight completed games.

But the Bangladeshis’ successes — over South Africa, West Indies and Afghanistan — were signs of the gathering strength of their team, and the good work done by McKenzie and Langeveldt, who were both spurned by South Africa and have since had their Bangladesh contracts extended.

Indeed, the South Africans’ loss to Bangladesh, which followed their defeat by England and preceded being beaten by India, was the most crushing blow of a failed campaign that has prompted a rash of panicky restructuring by Cricket South Africa (CSA).

“I have followed Bangladesh’s progress with keen interest and I am extremely excited to assist the team in reaching the goals that they are capable of,” the release quoted Domingo as saying.

“I look forward to continuing the ongoing development of current players whilst also looking towards the future and developing some new bright stars from within the talent pool of Bangladesh cricket.”

In a CSA release, acting director of cricket Corrie van Zyl tried to put a positive spin on the news: “Russell has kept us in the loop throughout this process and, although we are sorry to lose his services, we wish him well and know that he will be yet another one of the coaches who have come successfully through our development system to coach at provincial or franchise level and end up at the very top.

“There are many names of coaches that spring to mind including Duncan Fletcher, Graham Ford, Mickey Arthur and Adrian Birrell.

“Gary Kirsten’s first significant coaching position was as batting consultant to the Warriors when Russell was in charge there and he has gone on to be a World Cup winner.”

Van Zyl neglected to mention that Kirsten didn’t win the World Cup with South Africa — he guided India to triumph in 2011 — and that none of the other coaches he named are still significantly involved in the game in the country.

New Zealander Daniel Vettori is the spin bowling expert in a Bangladesh coaching staff that, for their first trick, will take charge of a one-off Test against Afghanistan in Chattogram that starts on September 5.

Malibongwe Maketa, freshly fired as South Africa’s assistant coach in the wake the World Cup, is now the A team’s interim coach while Cobras coach Ashwell Prince will take Domingo’s place for a spin camp in Bangalore from August 17 to 23.

First published by TMG Digital.

Langeveldt could be lost to SA cricket

TMG Digital


TELFORD VICE in Cape Town

CHARL Langeveldt’s skill and experience could be lost to South African cricket in the wake of the end of his tenure as the national team’s bowling coach.

Langeveldt told TMG Digital on Wednesday that he was in the running for an overseas position, despite attempts being made in this country to hang onto him.

The appointment in August of Ottis Gibson as South Africa’s head coach meant the writing was on the dressingroom wall for Langeveldt.

Both are former fast bowlers, and that dressingroom wasn’t big enough for the two of them — which Gibson confirmed to reporters in Johannesburg on Monday.

Langeveldt seems to have accepted his fate with good grace, saying on Wednesday, “That’s how international cricket is; you’ve got a job one day and the next day you’re fired.

“But I understand. You can’t have two bowling coaches and that is Ottis’ speciality.”

Gibson also said on Monday that he was “in discussion with CSA [Cricket South Africa] about a few key positions that I think can make a difference in this country in terms of having elite coaches”.

He wants to be able to consult with specially appointed eyes and ears “so that when we are on tour and we have a couple of injuries and I want to know who is the next best fast bowler in the country, I have a person I can go to”.

“At the moment, if I ask that question, I will be asking it to the selectors,” Gibson said. “The selectors are doing a great job but the selectors are not coaches. Sometimes you want a coach.”

Langeveldt confirmed that “Ottis has asked me to stay in the system, but let’s see if they’ve got the funds”.

Indeed, how much money CSA will have to pay on a new level of coaches after spending more than half their cash reserves on the aborted T20 Global League is a fair question.

Langeveldt is worth keeping, not least because South Africa’s bowlers have armed themselves with new tricks since his appointment after the 2015 World Cup.

“That was our biggest department in which we were lacking,” Langeveldt said of the core competencies of his charges when he stepped into the dugout.

“We worked hard on that and now you have a guy like Andile [Phehlukwayo] bowling back-of-the-hand slower balls.

“The skill levels and the death bowling, the last few years, have been outstanding.”

Langeveldt was careful to add that the credit for much of that effort and progress belonged to the bowlers themselves, but his role must be recognised.

He has been part of memorable successes like South Africa’s one-day series win over England in February 2016, when they lost twice before reeling off a hattrick of victories, the 5-0 thumping of Australia in September last year in another ODI rubber, and a test series triumph in Australia in November 2016.

But he was also there for South Africa’s dismal Champions Trophy in England in June, when they failed to reach the knockout rounds, and England’s 3-1 win in the tests that followed.

“There’ve been ups and downs, but mostly ups,” Langeveldt said.