Newlands pitch the tip of WP’s iceberg of problems

“It wasn’t great; both the cricket and the wicket.” – Shukri Conrad

Telford Vice / Newlands

TO gain a better understanding of what happened at Newlands on Wednesday and Thursday you need to look below the surface. Not at it. That said, much of the focus on the shortest of all the 2,522 men’s Tests yet played will indeed centre on the pitch — a 22-yard long lottery ticket offering no certainty except the impossibility of judging how high, or not, the next delivery would climb after bouncing.

The match was over five minutes short of an hour after lunch on the second day. So, in not quite four-and-a-half sessions. Or in seven overs longer than it would take an ODI to go the full distance. The game was put out of its misery in 642 deliveries, beating by 14 balls the MCG match between Australia and South Africa in February 1932 as the shortest Test. South Africa lost then, too. But by an innings. Not that they would consider their seven-wicket loss to India any less a hiding. If anything, this was even more of a thrashing. And of more than simply a cricket team.

Newlands, you might have noticed, is the darling ground of the game in this country. Visitors approach it from all parts of the game’s world with the kind of veneration others reserve for their first sight of the Taj Mahal. The mountain! The Oaks! The atmosphere! The lush greenery! The sunshine that seeps on into the evening hours! The sight, smell, sound, taste and feel of the African summer at its most voluptuous! The fairest pitch in all the land! Not.  

“I don’t know what people want me to say — whether it was a rubbish wicket or not,” Shukri Conrad said. “But you only need to look at the scores, a one-and-a-half day Test match, and the way they chased a little target of 79.”

South Africa won the toss and were bowled out for 55, the lowest total recorded against India in their 574 Tests and the home side’s lowest in the 390 matches they have played since that game in Melbourne almost 92 years ago. In their reply of 153, India became the first Test team to lose their last six wickets for no runs. Fuelled by Aiden Markram’s 106, South Africa’s second innings — in which no-one else made more than a dozen runs — reached 176. Mohammed Siraj took 6/15 in the first innings and Jasprit Bumrah claimed 6/61 in the second.  

“It’s a sad state when you need more luck than skill to survive in a Test match,” Conrad said. “All the ethics and values of Test cricket go out the window. This was just a slugfest, a slogathon. That’s taking nothing away from India; they were superb. But you ain’t going to win too many Test matches scoring 50-odd. You’ve got to own it, and we own it. It wasn’t great; both the cricket and the wicket.

“Often the surfaces you play on make you doubt your technique and how you approach the game. That’s where I felt the game was from the first couple of overs of the match. I was chatting to Rahul Dravid this morning, and … we want to get away from the phrase that there’s a ball with your name on it. But, on this pitch, we felt there was. That makes you play in a certain way, and that’s why we batted the way we did.

“I had so much pleasure in announcing Stubbo [Tristan Stubbs] was debuting, and then I apologised to him after the game for giving him a debut on a pitch like this. It’s not going to get any more difficult than this. When you go to the subcontinent, where it spins, you know what you’re in for. So you prepare accordingly. That’s all us as coaches and players want. This was nowhere near that.

“This has come as a shock to the system, but I’m not going to lay the blame entirely on the doorstep of our playing XI, or the make-up of our team or our tactics. It’s been a combination of a red-hot India who were desperate to come back [after losing the first Test by an innings in Centurion], and the conditions.

“We lose a lot of batsmanship because of T20 cricket. Batters like to feel bat on ball nowadays. I was chatting to Rahul Dravid this morning, and … we want to get away from the phrase that there’s a ball with your name on it. But, on this pitch, we felt there was. That makes you play in a certain way, and that’s why we batted the way we did.”

The pitch was the first Test surface prepared by curator Braam Mong. Some will say it should be last. Was Conrad among them? “I know Braam. He’s a good guy. Sometimes good guys do bad things. Or get things wrong. This doesn’t turn Braam into a rubbish groundsman, just like 55 all out doesn’t turn us into a rubbish cricket team — a few days ago we thrashed them.

“I’m sure there will be a lot of learnings for Braam. I’ll go across there at some stage and wish him well going forward, and see what his thoughts are. It’s easy to rubbish certain things, but you’ve got to feel for groundsmen. Just like cricketers and coaches, who have to take it on the chin, my message to Braam would be to take it on the chin and move forward.”

Might the message for Conrad be that he needs to take a greater say in the preparation of the surfaces South Africa play on at home? “I don’t want to be doctoring pitches. We’ve got young batters who need to learn their trade and find their way in international cricket. Playing on pitches like this doesn’t do that for them. I never have and never will prescribe to groundsmen, because they’ve also got jobs to do.”

Mong was a visible, hands-on presence throughout the match, and was hard at work for hours after Thursday’s early finish preparing the pitch for Newlands’ first game in the second edition of the SA20 on January 16. But, unlike most people in his profession, especially at iconic venues, he isn’t permanently attached to the ground. He owns a turf management company that has clients throughout Cape Town. Tending to Newlands is among his many duties.

This is not to cast aspersions on Mong or his ability. Instead, it tells us something about Newlands and the Western Province Cricket Association (WPCA) that is supposed to run the ground in a manner befitting its status, real and imagined. Look around the place, especially where the television cameras don’t shine, and you will see peeling paint, weeds the size of small trees growing in cracks in the concrete, and waste bins fallen from their wall mounts. Food and drink options for spectators are limited, as are the chances of finding a clean seat to sit on. Seen through a screen, Newlands radiates beauty. Up close and in parts, it is shabby.

That’s hardly surprising given the factionalism that has fractured the WPCA along racial, religious and cultural lines. Couple that with the kind of exceptionalism that led West Indies cricket to believe the good times of the 1980s and 90s would never end, and it’s not difficult to see why the WPCA is failing as the custodian of the game in the province.

The board is being kept afloat by a bailout from CSA that will amount to more than a million dollars, which won’t go far in taking the edge off the monthly bill of USD134,000 the WPCA pay to service the debt created by major redevelopments at Newlands. The WPCA’s chief executive, Michael Canterbury, has been booked off since September with an undisclosed illness. In his place, as a consiglieri of sorts, CSA have parachuted in Corrie van Zyl, whose skill and integrity as an administrator was confirmed in October 2019 when he was suspended. The CSA of those awful days, when Van Zyl was acting director of cricket, was presided over by Chris Nenzani and run by Thabang Moroe; bad apples both. The deservedly respected Van Zyl arrived at Newlands a few short weeks ago with a brief to make sure the Test and the SA20 matches went off as smoothly as possible.

Nothing was smooth about the Test pitch. Was it the manifestation of Newlands’ and the WPCA’s many problems; a symptom of the systemic sepsis? Conrad, who was born in über-local Lansdowne and is as Cape Town as Capetonians get, who guided teams from here to senior national titles across the formats when he coached them from 2005/06 to 2009/10, a man of cricket from top to toe, is the perfect person of whom to ask that question.

“I think I’m best placed to talk about the cricket surface, but I’m certainly not best placed to chat about whatever else is going on here,” Conrad said. “I worked here many years ago, and I moved on. I’m not in a position to discuss the goings on between the walls here.”

Shukri Conrad does not often shoulder-arms to questions. He will have to forgive us for thinking the real answer to that one lurks below the surface.

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Over up for Eksteen at CSA

Spinner turned suit bounced out of his job.

TELFORD VICE | Cape Town

CRICKET South Africa (CSA) said on Sunday they had sacked Clive Eksteen, their head of sales and sponsor relations. In October Eksteen was among the first of what became, by December, seven suspended senior staff members.

A release said “a lengthy disciplinary process” ended with the presiding officer finding Eksteen, a left-arm spinner who played seven Tests and six ODIs between November 1991 and February 2000, “guilty of transgressions of a serious nature and his relationship and employment with CSA has therefore been summarily terminated (summary dismissal) with immediate effect”.

On October 30 CSA said they had suspended Eksteen, then interim director of cricket Corrie van Zyl and chief operating officer Naasei Appiah after the organisation had “recently become aware of an unfortunate situation involving players and player contracts, through player intermediary the South African Cricketers Association (SACA) in which speculation and indeed allegations of dereliction were levelled against CSA, following alleged non-payment of player fees, stemming from the Mzansi Super League (MSL) arrangement, in 2018”.

That followed SACA lodging a formal dispute against CSA because they had failed to pay the players the agreed amount of USD160,000, at the prevailing exchange rate, for the use of their commercial rights during the previous year’s MSL. The bill was settled only 10 days before the start of the 2019 edition of the tournament.

SACA smelled a rat. “We are very surprised that Naasei Appiah, Corrie van Zyl and Clive Eksteen have been suspended in relation to allegations surrounding CSA’s non-compliance with the 2018 MSL commercial agreement,” then chief executive Tony Irish was quoted as saying in a release on October 31. “SACA didn’t deal with Appiah on this issue and in its dealings with Van Zyl and Eksteen over many months they both expressed a strong desire to resolve the payment issue, but it eventually became clear that higher approval to do so was necessary.”

That approval, SACA’s release suggested, was in the purview of chief executive Thabang Moroe: “We think it’s highly unlikely that [Moroe] would not have been aware of this ongoing issue. He was undoubtedly aware of payment obligations as he had signed the agreement.”

CSA’s release the day before had quoted Moroe as saying: “CSA wants to reassure all cricket fans and all cricket stakeholders that our organisation and indeed our staff adhere to the highest ethical standards in all our dealings and that consistency and accountability remains uppermost in all our processes and procedures. It is our expectation that all our staff members, including third-party stakeholders who are associated with the CSA brand should protect the reputation of CSA and the sport of cricket at all times.”

On December 6 CSA said Moroe himself had been put on “precautionary suspension with pay … on allegations of misconduct, pending further investigations”. That followed “reports received by the social and ethics committee and the audit and risk committee of the board related to possible failure of controls in the organisation” and prompted “a forensic audit of critical aspects of the business and the conduct of management related to such aspects [that] shall be conducted by an independent forensic team”.

Van Zyl has since returned to work under director of cricket Graeme Smith and Appiah is appealing a guilty verdict. But, more than six months after he was suspended, Moroe’s fate remains undecided. Sunday’s release promised progress: “CSA assures all stakeholders that the rest of the outstanding disciplinary cases will also be concluded soon, so that the situation around these matters can soon be stabilised.”

Veterans of South African cricket’s struggles with CSA won’t believe that until they see it.

First published by Cricbuzz.

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Don’t lie back and think of India

If you come away from India not overwhelmed, you’re doing it wrong. Or, like Christopher Columbus, you got lost and ended up somewhere else.  

TELFORD VICE in Cape Town

AFTER everything conjured about India by outsiders, from EM Forster to Elizabeth Gilbert to Steven Spielberg to Danny Boyle, in millions of words and images slung around the world in the course of hundreds of years, it took Donald Trump only a few syllables to stoop to a hitherto unplumbed low. How difficult can it be for anyone to pronounce the names of Sachin Tendulkar and Virat Kohli something like properly? Surely not as hard as calling them “Soochin Tendulkerrr and Virot Kohleee”, as Trump did at Motera Stadium in Ahmedabad last month. Civilians might be forgiven, but not the orangutang who has access to the nuclear codes. And to the best dialogue coaching money can buy. 

Name-mangling is far from an exclusively American sport. While Trump would no doubt argue to the contrary like a two-year-old, he is not the greatest world champion name-mangler of them all ever. Here in Africa, for instance, white tongues distort black names and black tongues distort white names with equal impunity. As South Africans, we understand that we don’t understand each other at all well at cultural and human levels. And that anyone who says they do is a liar trying to be elected to political office.  

So why do we, along with all other non-Indians, keep trying to understand India and Indians? We’ve been attempting to make sense of the place and its people since Megasthenes, a Greek serving as an ambassador in the court of Syria’s Seleucus Nikator, popped over to the subcontinent to visit emperor Chandragupta Maurya more than 2,300 years ago. Of course, Megasthenes wrote a book about his visit: Indica. And so an obsession was born that has begat A Passage to India, Eat, Pray, Love, Indiana Jones and the Temple of Doom and Slumdog Millionaire, among many others of lesser and greater merit. Find a cricketminded non-Asian who says they like Bollywood movies and they probably mean they’ve seen Lagaan. They enjoyed it, but what’s with all those songs? You would be shocked, gentle Indian reader, to learn how many people not of your kin do not know yoga emerged in the Indus-Sarasvati civilisation in northern India some 5,000 years ago. What? You mean it’s not from California? Or Cape Town?   

India is too big, too complex and too established on its own special journey to make sense to those of us not from there. It is not too other: that’s the easy, flawed way out taken by Western anthropology through the ages. There is much about India that anyone from anywhere will recognise as part of the global human experience — good food is good food, regardless of where it comes from. But India is too much. Of everything. If you come away from the country not overwhelmed, every time you visit, you’re doing it wrong. Or, like Christopher Columbus, you got lost and ended up somewhere else instead.  

“Welcome to pittsville.” – Jacques Kallis at the end of his first tour to India.

Whether Mark Boucher and Jacques Kallis have seen Lagaan doesn’t matter. We can be sure we won’t find them in a yoga studio anytime soon and that, like the rest of us, they don’t understand India. But, unlike most of us, they do understand how to win there. Both were part of the side that claimed South Africa’s first series victory of any kind in India, in February and March 2000 when Hansie Cronjé’s team won in Mumbai and Bengaluru. Those were Tendulkar’s last Tests as India’s captain, and the exposure of Cronjé’s dramatic fall from grace into the hell of matchfixing began not long afterwards. But Boucher still lists his 27 not out at Wankhede Stadium, where he took guard on a turning pitch with South Africa six down needing 35 to win and the great Anil Kumble having already claimed four, as his most memorable performance in 467 matches as an international. Boucher’s method was, surely, madness: he bristled with attacking intent and reeled off six boundaries, four of them pulled or swept off the debuting Murali Kartik. The bloke at the other end took a different approach: he batted for more than three hours and faced 129 balls — easily the weightiest stay of the innings in both terms — for his unbeaten 36. He was Kallis. Beaten in three days, India had little hope of unscrambling their minds before the second Test started five days later. This time they lost by an innings with Kallis’ 95 among South Africa’s five half-centuries and Nicky Bojé taking match figures of 7/93. India saved some face by winning three of the first four games of the subsequent ODI series, which they claimed with a match to spare.

The country left its mark on its visitors, as was apparent from the comments attributed to them in a parting shot billed as a “postcard from India” and that can still be found online. Cronjé: “Different!” Bojé: “Unbelievable, smashing, lovely, beautiful, tremendous, an experience to behold.” Shaun Pollock: “Thank you India! Alanis Morissette was right!” Pieter Strydom: “I never thought people could be so fanatical about cricket.” Gary Kirsten: “I’m looking forward to getting home. The travel has been over-the-top. No Delhi belly and not a single club sandwich. I did not get on the golf course but the fact that we had such a brilliant manager [Goolam Rajah] made the tour. And winning the Test series was a major achievement.” Neil McKenzie: “It’s hot, put the A/C on!” Henry Williams: “My first [tour of India] and hopefully not my last.” Thanks to his involvement in the Cronjé scandal it was his last tour anywhere. Mornantau Hayward: “It was a pleasure.” Steve Elworthy: “I’m glad it’s taken me 35 years to get here; definitely my top holiday destination!” Dale Benkenstein: “It’s great to be back in the fold.” Boucher: “Hurricane Hindu.” Lance Klusener: “’n toe bek is ’n heel bek [A shut mouth is an unbroken mouth]. I thank you for your conscientiality [sic], baby.” Kallis: “Welcome to pittsville.” Herschelle Gibbs: “If ever there was a need to experiment.” Derek Crookes: “I have not got sick on this tour. Believe me, this is quite an achievement!” Rajah: “This is my swansong!” Not quite: Rajah served as South Africa’s manager until November 2011. Graham Ford: “A great learning experience. You’ve got to pick the right team at the right time — horses for courses.” Corrie Van Zyl: “I’m definitely sending my wife here for a holiday.” Craig Smith, the physiotherapist: “A good walk spoiled by such exuberant hospitality.”

Clearly, at least some of those opinions have been revised or at least muted. Who among us knew, in 2000, that India would soon be the epicentre of world cricket, and with it the world’s players’ prime paymaster? Any cricketminded non-Asian who claims they saw the IPL coming the early 2000s has a future in politics. Boucher and Kallis played 120 IPL and Champions League T20 games in India, along with 41 more matches for South Africa on subsequent tours there. And there they are again, now as South Africa’s coach and batting consultant. At least, Boucher is there. Kallis became a father on Wednesday and, consequently, has stayed home.

How hard will Boucher lean on the legend of his 27 not out to try and extract the best from his team as they look to add success in the three ODIs they are scheduled to play over the next six days to their 3-0 triumph over Australia? Ordinarily, beating even the Aussies in an arbitrary ODI rubber wouldn’t count for much. But, in the wake of South Africa losing eight of their first dozen completed matches at home this summer, their supporters are hoping hard that they have reached a turning point.

Much has changed about the cricketing relationship between South Africa and India in the 20 years since Kallis and Boucher forged an understanding about how to win in that country. Of the 16 players in Boucher’s current squad only Janneman Malan has not played at a significant level in India before. In 2000, exactly half of the 18 South Africans who featured in the Test and ODI series had not been part of previous tours to India. Then the IPL remained unthought. Now this series is a warm-up for the 2020 edition, if it happens. Ah yes: in 2000 there was no Coronavirus. Twenty years ago India wasn’t yet the global travel and communications leader it has since become, facts that no doubt influenced the more unkind views the players expressed then. That’s not to excuse them. We didn’t understand India then and we don’t now. And it’s not to say that because the South Africans of 2000 worked out how to win there that the knowledge has been retained by succeeding teams: the two white-ball series of 2015 are their only other successful rubbers there. For this series to go their way will need a script like Lagaan. Without the songs.

First published by Cricbuzz.

Is Nkwe still SA’s coach? Depends who you ask …

“The article contains deliberate inaccuracies.” – CSA spokesperson Thamie Mthembu weaves a tangled web.

TELFORD VICE in Cape Town

IT’S a rare day when sense prevails in South African cricket, but that seemed to be the case on Thursday when AFP reported that Enoch Nkwe and his support staff had been retained for the men’s Test series against England.

Amid all the uncertainty that besets the game — who, for instance, will pick the squad for that rubber what with no selectors appointed? — at least the players know who their coach is.

Nkwe’s team didn’t get much right in crashing 3-0 to India last month, but it wouldn’t be fair to dump the interim team director on the strength of a poor display by a side who were still smarting from their shambolic World Cup campaign — in which he played no part.  

But the nugget of surety of Nkwe’s retention, modest though it was, lasted only as long as it took to try and confirm the story with Cricket South Africa (CSA) spokesperson Thamie Mthembu.

“The article contains deliberate inaccuracies,” Mthembu told TMG Digital.

Did that mean Nkwe and his assistants had been confirmed as the people in possession for the England series? Or not?

“CSA will issue a statement in relation to all matters pertaining to the forthcoming England tour,” Mthembu said. “We will advise you once the statement is issued.”

AFP had quoted Mthembu as saying, “There is no way we will go into an important series against England without having our ducks in a row.”

The conversation seems to have veered towards CSA having not appointed a director of cricket, as they have said they wanted to have done by now.

“What we do not want to do is to hurry and make an appointment and then be criticised if we do not appoint the right person,” Mthembu was quoted as saying.

“Enoch Nkwe and all the other members of his team remain in place, all except Corrie van Zyl.”

Van Zyl was the interim director of cricket until he was suspended last month — along with sponsorship and sales manager Clive Eksteen and chief operating officer Naasei Appiah.

“When you suspend someone of a high level lawyers become involved and it has to be a thorough process.”

All good, except that AFP reported that Mthembu had “confirmed that Nkwe remained in charge of the national team”, but did not quote him as saying so.

That’s not to cast doubt on the respected agency’s story, not least because in recent weeks CSA’s communication with the press has deteriorated into ambiguity, obfuscation and unhelpfulness.

Getting straight answers to straight questions has become as difficult as pulling teeth. From a duck. Underwater. Using tweezers.

Instead of being answered, reporters have been asked why they are asking particular questions, told they are refusing to engage when they ask their questions — and don’t get answers — more than once, and accused of being part of an “unfairly coordinated attack” on CSA.

But, in this case, the vague, bumptious and often illogically defensive Mthembu may have a point.

Perhaps he was trying to say that, right now, Nkwe and his crew are still in their roles — that CSA wouldn’t be so careless as to leave their vital positions vacant with the home summer looming.

Maybe Mthembu was also trying to say that, while the buck stopped with Nkwe currently, that could change before the England rubber.

That scenario was put to Mthembu. He did not respond.

So, who knows. With CSA these days, there are exponentially more questions than answers.

And what answers there are often don’t make sense.

First published by Business Day.

How will SA pick their squad to play England?

A hattrick of headaches: No positives from the India series, no help from first-class cricket, and no selectors.

TELFORD VICE in Cape Town

IT’S no surprise that none of the players who were in South Africa’s men’s Test squad in India last month are among the leading runscorers in the franchise first-class competition.

The internationals were in the subcontinent for the first three rounds of the four-dayers, and most of them did not play in the fourth round.

So the top Test batter in domestic terms this season is Heinrich Klaasen, who is 44th on the list of runscorers.

The leading bowler, on the same score, is George Linde, who is sixth among the wicket-takers.

Not that the national selectors take their cues from first-class cricket. South Africa’s internationals don’t play nearly enough at that level to make this a factor in picking a Test squad.  

But the India series was a catastrophe of historic proportions — not since 1935 have South Africa lost consecutive Tests by an innings — and only one more round of four-day cricket is scheduled before the series against England starts on December 26.

So the selectors have little to go on for a plan to halt the slide.

Ah. About that: there are no selectors. The panel was disbanded in the wake of South Africa’s World Cup meltdown.

That means the relevant suit at Cricket South Africa (CSA) will have their work cut out choosing a squad that could turn things around.

Right. Except that, until late last month, the relevant suit was interim director of cricket Corrie van Zyl — who has been suspended.

Might Enoch Nkwe do the needful, considering he was South Africa’s interim team director in India, with Faf du Plessis?

Problem: Nkwe was appointed for that tour only, and as yet there has been no clarity on whether he will be replaced or continue in the role. 

Might the job of assembling the squad to play one of the most important series in South Africa’s history fall to CSA chief executive Thabang Moroe?

Asked who might select the squad, a CSA spokesperson said: “CSA has capably qualified personnel to handle all tasks related to the selection of all our squads.

“We are comfortable that this will be handled in line with international cricket best practices.

“The chief executive officer does not select the squad.”

But we still don’t know who does. What we do know is that until December 19 — when the Cobras and Knights clash in Paarl, the Dolphins play the Warriors at Kingsmead, and the Lions and the Titans have a go at the Wanderers — cricketminded South Africans will have to glean what they can about the state of the game on the field from the Mzansi Super League (MSL).

That’s a hopelessly imperfect exercise given the differences in format and standard, but it can’t hurt that Temba Bavuma, Quinton de Kock and Dean Elgar are among the top 10 runscorers.

Neither that Anrich Nortjé and Kagiso Rabada are two of the leading 10 wicket-takers, with Linde 12th in the batting charts and joint fifth among the bowlers.

But it is less than edifying that Du Plessis, Keshav Maharaj, Lungi Ngidi, and Vernon Philander are all outside the top 20 in their respective disciplines.

Then again, Du Plessis has had only two innings while Maharaj and Philander have bowled just four overs and Ngidi a mere three.

“If you look at the MSL, a lot of guys are coming through and they’re playing really well,” Dale Steyn of the Cape Town Blitz told reporters at Kingsmead on Sunday after the match against the Durban Heat.

“Today’s a prime example of a young man I’ve never heard of stepping up and nearly scoring a hundred.”

Steyn was talking about Wihan Lubbe, who hit 15 of his 42-ball 83 off the six deliveries he faced from the Test stalwart — who had the satisfaction of dismissing him.

But Lubbe is probably not among the answers to the questions South Africa face heading into the England series.

There are often more questions than answers when a squad needs to be chosen.

Thing is, this time, who is going to ask them, nevermind answer them?

First published by TMG Digital.

CSA fail to lure Smith for top job

“I have not developed the necessary confidence that I would be given the level of freedom and support to initiate the required changes.” – Graeme Smith reveals why he no longer wants to be CSA’s director of cricket.

TELFORD VICE at Newlands

HOPES that cricket in the country could soon turn a corner were dashed on Thursday when Graeme Smith withdrew his bid to join Cricket South Africa’s (CSA) staff.

TMG Digital learnt at the weekend that the former South Africa captain had, on Friday, been interviewed for the new position of director of cricket.

But, six days later, Smith said he had “unfortunately withdrawn my interest for the role”.

“I would love to have taken on the role,” Smith wrote on at least one of his social media accounts.

“However, despite my obvious desire to make a difference during the long and, at times, frustrating process over the last 10 or so weeks of discussions, I have not developed the necessary confidence that I would be given the level of freedom and support to initiate the required changes.”

That amounts to a lack of belief, by Smith, that CSA would allow him to do the job as he sees fit — hardly a surprise considering the unhealthily large amount of authority at the organisation that is in the hands of controversial chief executive Thabang Moroe.

But, for almost a week, cricketminded South Africans were able to believe that someone who knows what they’re doing would be part of the game’s higher echelons of decision-making.

Smith is inexperienced as an administrator, but the respect he earned by captaining South Africa 284 times in his 345 matches for them would have gone a long way in assuring the public, senior players, sponsors and broadcasters that cricket had acquired some desperately needed competence.

Instead, it’s back to the doldrums of wondering how the Test team are going to recover from their 3-0 hiding in India in October in time to give a decent account of themselves in the home series against England, which starts in Centurion on December 26.

The prospect of that happening isn’t being done any favours by the fact that, rather than working on their game in first-class matches, the country’s best players are busy with the Mzansi Super League.

Not that Smith would have been able to do anything about that, nor put out the two legal fires — involving the South African Cricketers’ Association and the Western Province Cricket Association — CSA are currently fighting, nor quickly find a way to stop them haemorrhaging financially.

But his presence in CSA’s increasingly uncertain corridors would have represented the promise that the light at the end of the tunnel was good news. Now it again looks like an oncoming train.

“My passion for our nation’s cricketing fortunes remains steadfast and I give my heartfelt best wishes to whomever does take the role on,” Smith wrote.

“I will continue to support the teams and give my advice and guidance whenever I can.”

Others interviewed for the job were interim director of cricket Corrie van Zyl — despite the fact that he is currently suspended — former selector Hussein Manack and, reportedly, former franchise coach Dave Nosworthy.

First published by TMG Digital.

MSL whimpers to life, but Smith stands up to be counted

Graeme Smith reshaped the national team in his own tough, competitive image to win 163 of his 284 matches as captain.

TELFORD VICE in Cape Town

FOR Graeme Smith’s first trick as director of cricket, he needs to get more bums on seats at Mzansi Super League (MSL) games.

Only 4 840 turned at the 34 000-capacity Wanderers on Friday for the tournament opener between the Jozi Stars and the Cape Town Blitz.

Multiples of the missing 29 160 had better things to do than watch too much flaccid bowling and not enough of the kind of batting that earned Janneman Malan a 59-ball 99.

Neither will this lacklustre spectacle stop us from changing the channel, even on free-to-air television.

Smith’s next challenge will be to do something about Durban, where the competition’s second game was washed out on Saturday — a fate suffered by so many matches at Kingsmead.

Then he could get on with returning the SA men’s team to a reasonable facsimile of what they were for much of his tenure as captain.

Of course, Smith first needs to land the job. Along with Corrie van Zyl and Hussein Manack, he was interviewed on Friday by Cricket SA (CSA) chief executive Thabang Moroe and four board members. At stake is the newly created position of director of cricket.

Van Zyl — suspended last month in an apparent stitch up — has been CSA’s general manager since 2009. Hussain was a national selector from 2012 until the panel was disbanded in the wake of South Africa’s awful 2019 World Cup.

None of which competes with Smith reshaping the national team in his own tough, competitive image to win 163 of his 284 matches as captain.

He was appointed, at 22, after another shambolic World Cup, in 2003. He retired in March 2014 as captain of the No. 1 Test team.

SA cricket needs a winner. Smith wins. 

First published by the Sunday Times.

Graeme Smith ready to suit up for SA cricket

Corrie van Zyl and Hussein Manack have solid credentials for the position, but Graeme Smith is the obvious frontrunner, not least because he is the standard bearer for a more successful era.

TELFORD VICE in Cape Town

GRAEME Smith is in the running to become Cricket South Africa’s (CSA) first permanently appointed director of cricket.

Putting the former South Africa men’s captain in the position would help quell doubts about the quality of administrative leadership in a turbulent time for the game in South Africa. 

Smith confirmed on Saturday that he was interviewed for the position on Friday.

TMG Digital has learnt that Corrie van Zyl, CSA’s interim director of cricket when he was suspended last month, and Hussein Manack, a national selector until the panel was dissolved in terms of the restructure prompted by the disappointing men’s World Cup campaign in July, were also interviewed.

Smith played 345 games for South Africa across all formats, and captained them 284 times.

He presided over 163 wins, 89 losses, 27 draws and a tie.

Smith’s 109 Tests as captain, one at the helm of an ICC XI, is a world record.

He was appointed at 22 in the aftermath of the 2003 World Cup, when South Africa crashed out in the first round at home.

Smith relinquished the one-day reins after the 2011 World Cup, by which time he was no longer the T20 skipper.

But he continued to lead South Africa’s Test team until March 2014 — when he announced his retirement during the third and last match of a series against Australia, a month after his 33rd birthday.

Many felt he called it quits too soon, and he has subsequently stayed in the game as a commentator.

In August 2014 he was named tournament director for CSA’s T20 competition, followed a month later by an appointment to a corporate social responsibility position by financial services company Momentum, a CSA sponsor.

Both Van Zyl and Manack likely had their playing careers stunted by apartheid.

Most of Van Zyl’s career coincided with South Africa’s isolation, and his international experience was limited to two ODIs on the tour to West Indies in April 1992.

A fast bowling allrounder, Van Zyl took 349 wickets at 23.38 and scored a century and 10 half-centuries in his 104 first-class matches.

He coached South Africa from January 2010 to March 2011 and was appointed CSA’s general manager in May 2009.

Manack, who is of Indian heritage, was prohibited from playing for South Africa by apartheid, but was listed as a non-playing “development” member of the squad that went to India in November 1991 to play three ODIs — the national team’s first engagement after 22 years of isolation.     

Manack, a highly regarded allrounder in the non-racial structures, was given no other opportunities to play at the highest level.

He played 52 first-class matches, scoring three centuries and 11 half-centuries and averaging 27.79.

A commentator of 16 years standing, he became a national selector in 2012.

Van Zyl and Manack have solid credentials for the position, but Smith is the obvious frontrunner, not least because he is the standard bearer for a more successful era.

South Africa established a brand of tough, competitive cricket under his leadership that saw them rise to the No. 1 Test ranking in July 2012 — where they stayed for the rest of his career.

Having suffered their worst Test series defeat in 83 years in India last month, which came in the wake of their worst performance at a World Cup, and all that in the shadow of multiple challenges on the administrative front — not least court battles with the players and a provincial affiliate — South Africa are in dire need of the good news that is Smith’s interest in the position.

TMG Digital has learnt that the panel that interviewed the three candidates comprised CSA chief executive Thabang Moroe and board members Jack Madiseng, Tebogo Siko, Dawn Makhobo and Shirley Zinn.

None of them played first-class cricket, some through no fault of their own.

It is understood they will make a decision in the next two weeks.

First published by TMG Digital.

SA cricket fiddling with MSL while Test team burns

“I’m sure there are people in much higher positions than myself, at Proteas level and CSA level, who know exactly how they are going to go about improving the situation.” – Ashwell Prince keeps the faith.

TELFORD VICE in Cape Town

WITH South Africa’s men’s Test team at their lowest point and a series against England starting in just more than seven weeks, the responsible approach would be to divert all efforts into putting out the fire.

Instead, South Africa’s players will fiddle with the Mzansi Super League (MSL) for more than five weeks of that precious time.

Ashwell Prince, who placed a higher price on his wicket than most, and who consequently must have been more frustrated than most at South Africa’s flaccid batting in India last month, might have been able to help fix the problem if his Cobras were out there every week playing first-class cricket.

But that opportunity will be wasted because Prince will coach the Cape Town Blitz in the MSL, which starts on Friday.

“I don’t want to make comments about the Proteas and Test cricket at the moment,” Prince told a press conference in Cape Town on Monday. “I think we’re all here for the exciting second edition of the MSL.

“I’m sure there are people in much higher positions than myself, at Proteas level and CSA [Cricket South Africa] level, who know exactly how they are going to go about improving the situation.

“But at the moment I want to focus on the Blitz. We’ve got an exciting team with some exciting players, and we want to go out and enjoy that, and entertain.”

Except that figures who “know exactly how they are going to go about improving the situation” are thin on the ground.

Enoch Nkwe’s appointment as South Africa’s team director is interim — he was in place for the India tour only — and last week CSA suspended director of cricket Corrie van Zyl, another interim appointee, and sponsorship and sales head Clive Eksteen, the only members of their staff who have international playing experience.

Reality will resume after the MSL ends on December 16 — three days before the start of the only remaining round of franchise first-class games before the England series.

Not that there’s certainty that all or even most of the Test players will be in action in those games.

Only half of the 12 fit players who, in India, presided over South Africa’s worst performance in a series in 83 years turned out for their franchises in last week’s first-class matches.

Given all that, cricketminded South Africans will be desperate for a silver lining.

The closest their going to get to that is Hashim Amla’s appointment as the Blitz’ batting consultant, which was announced on Monday.

Like Prince, who faced 100 or more balls in 28 of his 104 Test innings and more than 200 in a dozen of them, suffered only one first-baller — six innings before he retired — and was dismissed in fewer than 10 deliveries just 12 times, Amla valued his wicket greatly.

He was there for at least 100 balls in 61 of 215 trips to the crease, had just 20 innings of fewer than 10 deliveries, and was also out first ball only once — in the first innings of his last Test, when an inswinger from Sri Lanka’s Vishwa Fernando nailed his middle stump.

Contrast that with the facts that 20 of the 60 wickets South Africa lost in India went down in fewer than 10 balls, that only nine times did a player face more than 100 deliveries in the series and only once more than 200 — Dean Elgar’s 160 in the first Test in Visakhapatnam came off 287 balls — and it isn’t difficult to see why Amla’s insight could be important.

That will, hopefully, be the case even though T20 batting is hardly about occupying the crease.

“There’s been a lot of comments lately in the media lately about the lack of our former national players’ involvement in the game,” Prince said when asked about Amla’s involvement.

“I approached him and he was very open to the idea. I don’t think he’s charging us a penny for his services, which is very rare these days.

“To have him share some of his knowledge and ideas would be invaluable.”

What might Blitz captain Quinton de Kock, who shared 125 partnerships with Amla for South Africa across all formats — 13 of them century stands — have learnt from cricket’s calmest player?

“Yoh! There’s a lot he’s taught me,” De Kock said. “I’ve made a lot of mistakes in my career, and he’s been the one guy to be there — backing me and helping me.

“‘Hash’ will know what to do. He will see how he can get the best out of them, whether it’s from a mental or a technical point of view, or just hitting more balls.

“He’s really good at one-on-ones; individual chats rather than in team spaces.”

Warriors coach Robin Peterson thinks so, too. That’s why he enlisted Amla’s help for his team’s first-class match against the Cobras at Newlands last week.

“His manner and the way he talks about batting, he’d be the perfect guy to get the knowledge across,” Peterson said.

Here’s hoping Amla’s wisdom sticks somewhere in the minds of De Kock, Vernon Philander, Anrich Nortjé and George Linde, the Test players in the Blitz squad.

But there’s a catch. Amla will join the side only on November 25.

What’s he doing until then? Playing in something less relevant than even the MSL: the Abu Dhabi T10 League.

Suddenly, that lining is not so silver.

First published by TMG Digital.

Crises? What crises? CSA refuse to agree to external probes

“There is no need for CSA to have any kind of independent investigation into its financial situation.” – Cricket South Africa

TELFORD VICE in Cape Town

CRICKET South Africa (CSA) have rejected calls from the game’s most important sector to launch independent investigations into some of the crises that have hit the organisation.

Instead, with the start of the second edition of their flagship tournament, the Mzansi Super League (MSL), just a week away CSA are trying to project a picture of normality — only to sow seeds of doubt.

Twice in one CSA release on Thursday night the phrase “no need … [for an] independent investigation” appeared, and on Friday morning another statement was headlined: “[MSL] set to kick off as scheduled”.

The latter featured the intriguing sentence: “To dispel any uncertainty, a schedule of the opening matches is included.”

Until then there has been no question that the competition, though it is without a headline sponsor and CSA had to resort to the broke and broken SABC to get it on television, would go ahead as planned.

CSA did not immediately respond when asked, in light of Friday’s release, to confirm that the MSL would proceed. 

Not that, in any sensible reading of CSA’s dire situation, it should.

Facing estimated losses of between R654-million and R1-billion by the end of the 2022 rights cycle, embroiled in two court battles, shot through with interim appointees, and struggling to secure sponsors, CSA lurched further into chaos this week when they suspended three senior staff members.

Unsurprisingly, the South African Cricketers’ Association (SACA) have said CSA should be held up to the light — and not by the suits themselves.

The players’ alarm, which they sounded in a release on Thursday, was triggered by Tuesday’s news that CSA had suspended interim director of cricket Corrie van Zyl, sponsor and sales boss Clive Eksteen and chief operating officer Naasei Appiah.

That action was taken, CSA said on Wednesday, over their failure to pay the R2.4-million that was owed SACA for the use of the cricketers’ commercial rights during last year’s MSL.

SACA said they were surprised by the move because they hadn’t dealt with Appiah on the issue, and that Van Zyl and Eksteen had been working with them to resolve the problem.

Rather, SACA said, the buck stopped with CSA chief executive Thabang Moroe, who had signed the commercial rights contract.

A source close to the saga says Van Zyl and Eksteen have been careful to adhere to the correct procedure on the payment matter, and that they did not have the reasons for their suspension explained to them.

It needed SACA to lodge a formal dispute to get their money, which arrived after they forced a settlement that provided for payment within three days.

SACA’s release listed multiple claims of CSA’s violations of the legally binding memorandum of understanding between the organisations, one of which — over a proposed restructure of the domestic system that could cost 70 players their jobs — has ended up in the high court.

But CSA don’t seem to see the importance of coming clean, by way of externally conducted probes, with the players, the public and other existing and potential stakeholders.

“As the MSL issue has been settled to the satisfaction of both parties there is no need for the independent investigation that [SACA chief executive Tony Irish] has suggested,” CSA said in Thursday’s release, which came almost eight hours after SACA’s statement.

“Furthermore, there is no need for CSA to have any kind of independent investigation into its financial situation.”

Bizarrely, the release concluded with “ … it must be stressed that CSA has never released the identity of the staff members currently under precautionary suspension and has no intention of doing so”.

Earth to CSA: everybody interested already knows who they are, not least because a whistleblower told TMG Digital, who confirmed the facts with Van Zyl.

First published by TMG Digital.