Why teams, not countries, play cricket

“Imagine there’s no countries. It isn’t hard to do.” – John Lennon

Telford Vice | Cape Town

A Tongan, a Hongkonger and 11 Pakistanis walk into three different dressing rooms. Which teams do they play for? A clue: neither Tonga, Hong Kong nor Pakistan.

To that list of nationalities add 17 South Africans, eight Indians, seven Englishmen, two each from New Zealand and Australia, one from West Indies and another from Ireland. These are players who were born in countries other than those they were picked to turn out for at the men’s T20 World Cup. They add up to 51 of the 240 — not counting the reserves — who started the tournament on October 17. That’s 21.25%: more than a fifth of the total playing personnel and not far from a quarter.

Some teams are more prone to this phenomenon than others. A dozen of the Netherlands’ 15 are not from there. They include Scott Edwards, a Tongan. Sufyan Mehmood, from Muscat, is Oman’s only homegrown player. The rest of their squad consists of nine Pakistanis and five Indians.

Of the 12 sides who reached the second round, only Afghanistan, Bangladesh, India, South Africa, Sri Lanka and West Indies did so using solely home-born players. So half of the Super 12 squads featured players from elsewhere, including all four who made it to the semi-finals.

Australia’s Josh Inglis drew his first breath in Leeds. England captain Eoin Morgan is a Dubliner, Tom Curran a Capetonian, Chris Jordan a Bajan from Christ Church, and Jason Roy a Durbanite. At least, they used to call those places home. New Zealand harbour two South Africans — Devon Conway of Johannesburg and Glenn Phillips, an East Londoner — Hong Kong-born Mark Chapman, and an Indian, Ish Sodhi, a native of Ludhiana in Punjab. Pakistan? Imad Wasim hails from Swansea in Wales.

Something similar is true of the backrooms. Ten of the original 16 sides have foreign-born head coaches, including all four of those who didn’t make it to the Super 12. Seven South Africans started the tournament in this capacity. Six of them survived the opening round — Ireland’s Graham Ford was the exception.

This will no doubt come as a blow to those who want cricket to function as a blunt instrument of nationalism; war minus the shooting, in George Orwell’s enduring phrase. The other side of this coin is to wonder whether failure to reach the final four has something to do with a lack of diversity: none of the six purebred sides in the Super 12 stage made it to the semis. Or to think about whether, unlike what the nationalists and the marketing people want us to believe, cricketers play for nothing and no-one except their paycheques, the lure of winning, themselves, and each other. In the words of John Lennon, “Imagine there’s no countries. It isn’t hard to do.” The social media abuse meted out to Mohammed Shami during the T20 World Cup makes another of Lennon’s lines pertinent: “And no religion, too.”

In South Africa we know all about people trying to claim cricket for whites. Or for English-speaking whites, as opposed to white Afrikaners. Or to consign football to blacks and rugby to white Afrikaners. Brown South Africans — many of whom’s first language is Afrikaans — are accepted, sometimes grudgingly, as sport’s supreme allrounders. Except that all of the above play all of the above, and have done for centuries. 

Cricket in England is currently trying to confront racism, as the game continues to do in South Africa. Doubtless all societies where cricket is prominent need this kind of catharsis. Where the dividing line is not race it could be religion, class, culture or caste. This shouldn’t be taken to mean the game is a particularly poisoned island of inequality in an otherwise just world. We know the world isn’t just, and that injustice has infected cricket as much as it has everything else.

When you watch the T20 World Cup final in Dubai on Sunday, know that you aren’t watching Australia play New Zealand. That’s too simplistic, and an insult to all involved and the planning and work that has taken them this far. What you will see is 22 fine cricketers drawn from squads that include players from five countries split into two teams who have managed to survive until now. That’s the best reason there can be to call the tournament a World Cup — it is more than the sum of its mapped parts.

Neither the Aussies nor the Kiwis can nationalise that truth, and many won’t try. Because we shouldn’t stoop so low as to conflate cricket with patriotism. What we want is a decent contest. Nothing else matters.

First published by Cricbuzz.

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1st ODI preview: April is the new March

Stern test for Bavuma and Babar as captains.

Telford Vice | Cape Town

APRIL is a time for South Africans to take a last glimpse at the cricket season as it recedes in the mind, trapped in the amber of another spent summer. Winter, as they say, is coming. And with it long months without seeing or hearing bat meet ball, unless it is through a screen in a game played far away.

Not this April. South Africa play Pakistan on Friday in the first of three ODIs, which will be followed by four T20Is. All seven matches will be at Centurion and the Wanderers. The home international season will thus end on April 16.

So what? After a year of Covid-19 draining grounds of spectators and keeping touring teams at home, we are inured to such strangeness. South Africa have played only a half-dozen ODIs since the 2019 World Cup and Pakistan one fewer. If there is an upside, it’s that the cricket tragics among us — the kind who spend more time and energy arguing about who should bat at No. 5 than they do appreciating the privilege that they have cricket to enjoy at all — will be less equipped to pontificate pointlessly.

And interesting cricket it should be. South Africa have played 571 matches at home across the formats. Only 30 of them have been in April. That could make the conditions less overtly South African and more like the benign surfaces prepared in Pakistan for white-ball games. Lockdown regulations mean all the matches are day games, so evening dew will not be a factor.

Temba Bavuma will captain South Africa for the first time, but Babar Azam has led Pakistan in only three ODIs, all against Zimbabwe in Karachi. This, then, will be both captains’ first real test in the format.

Aiden Markram will look to spark a white-ball career that has been damp so far, while Danish Azam seems set for a debut. Even South Africa’s most ardent supporters will be keen to see Shaheen Shah Afridi charging in on the Highveld, a prospect undimmed by the possibility the pitches having gone into hibernation.

Those hoping to watch South Africa’s finest XI in action had better be attentive on Friday and Sunday, when the series moves to Johannesburg. From the third ODI, at Centurion on Wednesday, the home side will be without Quinton de Kock, David Miller, Kagiso Rabada, Lungi Ngidi and Anrich Nortjé — who will all take their leave to play in the Indian Premier League. Pakistan’s squad won’t be affected. That’s something else we can blame on the pandemic: it has had no respect for the playing schedule.

Or maybe that’s unfair. Onlookers were socially distanced and their faces covered when South Africa and New Zealand played the third Test of their 2006 series at the Wanderers. That wasn’t due to any vexing virus, but because the match started on May 5. Even though Joburgers are a tough bunch, not many braved the chilly morning and evenings. And most of those who did were bundled into scarves and hoodies. So we’ve been beyond this point. Sort of.

The word April comes from a Latin verb, aperire, which means “to open”. Open yourself, cricketminded person, to the otherness of cricket when the killjoys say it should be neither seen nor heard. Or take George Orwell’s approach, as captured in the opening line of his novel 1984: “It was a bright cold day in April, and the clocks were striking thirteen.” Either way, nothing is the same as it once was. 

When: April 2, 2021 (10am South Africa time)

Where: Centurion

Team news

South Africa: Aiden Markram is likely to open the batting in his first white-ball international since the 2019 World Cup, while Temba Bavuma will slot in at No. 3 in his first match as South Africa’s captain. Andile Phehlukwayo, who hasn’t played since injuring his back while bowling for the Dolphins on February 19, was passed fit on Thursday but looks unlikely to feature on Friday. 

Possible XI: Quinton de Kock, Aiden Markram, Temba Bavuma, Rassie van der Dussen, Kyle Verreynne, David Miller, Junior Dala, Keshav Maharaj, Beuran Hendricks, Kagiso Rabada, Lungi Ngidi.

Pakistan: Look for allrounder Danish Azam to make his international debut in the middle order. Babar Azam said on Thursday that all his players were good to go, but it seems Hasan Ali could be given more time to regain his match fitness after recovering from Covid. 

Possible XI: Imam-ul-Haq, Fakhar Zaman, Babar Azam, Mohammad Rizwan, Danish Aziz, Asif Ali, Shadab Khan, Faheem Ashraf, Mohammad Hasnain, Shaheen Shah Afridi, Haris Rauf.

What they said     

“From my experience being up here and coaching the Titans, the colder it gets the slower the wickets get. Although in saying that the wicket does look pretty good. There hasn’t been a lot of cricket played on these wickets throughout the season, obviously because of Covid times. So the wickets are probably more fresh than they would be at this time of the season.” — Mark Boucher on the likely conditions as the home season veers into autumn.  

“We’ve talked about responsibility — we’ve spoken about our roles and how to carry the team to 300-350 totals. It’s all planning and we’re working on it. I believe as long as our top four stays in the middle, for say until the 40th over, we can catch up on the strike rates. Sometimes the bowling is too good and you have to give them due respect. But once you get set you can always catch up on your strike-rate. So the longer the top order plays and more we focus on strike rate is important. We have our batsmen in form so you will see the difference in this series.” — Babar Azam talks a good game about aggressive batting.

First published by Cricbuzz.

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Shots fired, but no war at Wanderers

“I am always amazed when I hear people saying that sport creates goodwill between the nations.” – George Orwell

TMG Digital

TELFORD VICE at The Wanderers

“SERIOUS sport,” George Orwell famously observed in an essay written 73 years ago but more searingly true now than ever, “is war minus the shooting.”

Had he been at the Wanderers on Monday, the penultimate day of the fourth Test between South Africa and Australia, he would have considered his opinion confirmed. 

Batting under suitably Orwellian, leaden skies, Dean Elgar resisted all temptation to squeeze the trigger and take a run for 180 of the first 199 balls he faced in an innings that started on Sunday.

That’s 30 overs, the equivalent of an entire session, blocking and leaving. Or marking time and staring out of a trench.  

Elgar spent the remaining 19 of those balls going from nought to 50, which he reached with an artilleric straight six off Mitchell Marsh — but he still made the slowest half-century in the past 13 years of Test cricket.

Faf du Plessis had his troublesome right index finger smashed to a bloody pulp by Pat Cummins, who also delivered a glancing blow to his helmet.

Then Du Plessis lashed a ball from Nathan Lyon that thudded into Peter Handscomb’s shoulder as he cowered, helmeted head in hands, in surrender at short leg. 

After lunch Cummins found the shoulder of Du Plessis’ bat and Handscomb, by then a safer distance away at second slip, dived to secure a fine catch that removed South Africa’s captain for 120 — his first century in 14 trips to the Test crease and only the third time he has not been dismissed in the single figures in his seven completed innings in the series.

Du Plessis trudged off after a tour of duty of  almost four hours, pausing at the boundary to remove his battered, bloodied gloves.

He signed one of them and give it to a youngster, who marvelled at it as if it were a medal.

Du Plessis showed grit to soldier on after Cummins nailed the same finger he broke in February, and his reward was another innings in the style of the epics he made on his debut in Adelaide in November 2012, when he scored 78 and 110 not out to save the match. 

This match should not need saving by the South Africans. Their second innings dragged on like a thousand-mile march because they were concerned with putting as much distance as possible between their wounded and the Australians.

Kagiso Rabada has a stiff lower back, Morne Morkel an abdominal strain, and Vernon Philander — according to team management — “a strapped groin which has been managed throughout the match”.

How do you strap a groin? How do you unstrap it without inflicting cruel and inhuman punishment on some of the unfortunate strapee’s most sensitive skin?

Even if his team hadn’t faced those challenges, it made sense for Du Plessis to continue batting until tea before declaring and leaving the Australians to score 612 to win and level the series.

Simply, because South Africa didn’t need to win the match to win the rubber.

That bulletproof truth went unheard in Australia, where social media was bilious about the South Africans having the audacity to claim the right they had earned to dictate terms.

Aussies, it seemed, don’t take kindly to having the line drawn for them.  

Best they shut up and sort out their cheats before they pronounce on how other teams choose to play the game.

“I am always amazed when I hear people saying that sport creates goodwill between the nations, and that if only the common peoples of the world could meet one another at football or cricket, they would have no inclination to meet on the battlefield,” Orwell wrote all those years ago.

“But the significant thing is not the behaviour of the players but the attitude of the spectators: and, behind the spectators, of the nations who work themselves into furies over these absurd contests, and seriously believe — at any rate for short periods — that running, jumping and kicking a ball are tests of national virtue.”

That they are not, and neither is war.