Kolpak Kyle returns as admirable Abbott: ready to give back to SA, but not to play for Proteas

“As much as South Africans want to see Kolpak go, a lot of the English supporters didn’t want to see us there. We almost felt we were outsiders there, and I suppose we were outsiders here in South Africa.” – Kyle Abbott

Telford Vice | Cape Town

“What were you intending? My fishing or the way I look after Christmas? What were you trying to get at there? I’m going with the fishing. Thank you.” Kyle Abbott was joking. Wednesday’s news that he had signed for the Titans for the rest of the 2020/21 season was written up as the franchise having “landed a big fish” — not least because Abbott said he had been “sitting pretty comfortable in Durban [his hometown] doing my fishing” before the deal was sealed. On Thursday, when he gave his first press conference as a Titans player, he had the chance to ask reporters, clearly in fun, questions of his own.

The tenor was starkly different to Abbott’s last presser in South Africa, in January 2017, when he tried to explain why he had chosen to end his international career by signing a four-year Kolpak contract with Hampshire. He was 29. Despite competing for a place in the XI with Dale Steyn, Vernon Philander, Morné Morkel and Kagiso Rabada, he had played in 20 of South Africa’s 36 matches across the formats in the previous year, including half of their 10 Tests. Abbott’s decision sparked anger in South Africa. Unlike others who had exercised this option, he was in the prime in his career and he was being given the opportunities he had earned. What more did the man want? “It’s four years of security and playing cricket is an incredibly insecure environment for anyone,” he said then.

Had being left out of the side, for transformation reasons, for the 2015 World Cup semi-final despite the fact that he was South Africa’s leading bowler in the tournament been a factor? “Ever since I played professional cricket in South Africa there has always been a quota system,” Abbott said. “I have never used it as an excuse and I won’t use it as an excuse now. If you want to buy me some groceries in the next 10 years you are more than welcome to. I need to pay bills. I need to buy groceries. Are you going to buy my groceries?”

It didn’t help that, five days earlier — and five months after he had, unbeknown to his South Africa teammates, signed with Hampshire — Abbott had told another press conference: “The team’s in a great space and so am I. It’s exciting to see what’s going to come. There’s only 90 or so of us who have played Test cricket [for South Africa since readmission] so I count myself incredibly lucky to be able to do it. It’s the place where you want to play your cricket. When Faf [du Plessis] welcomed Theunis de Bruyn into the squad he said, ‘This is where you’re going to be playing your cricket; it doesn’t get any better than this.’ And he’s absolutely right. We’re enjoying our cricket at the moment because we’ve got that attitude of, ‘This is the place, this is where we want to play, this is the place we want to perform and really be tested’.”

Four years on, Abbott has put many more miles on the clock of lived experience. “People don’t realise that it was never an easy decision for any of us, having spoken to a lot of the Kolpaks,” he said on Thursday. “Even life over there is not as easy as people may think, from being away from home for six months to catching quite a lot of flak from people in the crowd. As much as South Africans want to see Kolpak go, a lot of the English supporters didn’t want to see us there. So there’s a lot things we had to navigate. We almost felt we were the outsiders there, and I suppose we were the outsiders here in South Africa.

“But it’s our jobs. I do understand where people are coming from. It’s an emotional thing. It’s a patriotic thing. I get that. It’s stuff that’s on our minds and that we take into consideration. But, for myself definitely, it was purely a career decision. I don’t regret anything.”

Abbott has taken 250 wickets for Hampshire in 90 matches in all formats. In 43 first-class games, he has claimed 183 at 18.78. He was county championship’s third-highest wicket-taker in 2017, joint seventh in 2018, and second in 2019. His haul of 17/86 against Somerset at Southampton in September 2019 were the best figures in global first-class cricket in more than 64 years. Unsurprisingly, Hampshire are keeping Abbott on their books as an overseas professional for at least another two years.

On Thursday he said county cricket had made him a better player than he had been when he abandoned his international career: “I’ve grown a hell of a lot there as a bowler, and probably as a person because I’ve been thrust responsibility. I was the go-to man in most situations and most games. The strength of the overseas players and the other Kolpaks you played against in most teams [made] the brand of cricket incredibly strong.”

In 2004/05, South Africa’s highest level of domestic cricket shrank from 11 to six teams. But CSA’s recent decision to restructure the model means 15 sides split into two divisions — with provision for promotion and relegation — are due to take the field in 2021/22, costing 76 players their contracts. But Abbott approved because the move would reshape the domestic game into something like England’s: “I’ve said for ages that the first-class system in the UK has to among the strongest, if not the strongest, in the world. The amount of teams that are competing every week for something can only strengthen cricket. In division one, the top four or five are competing for the trophy and the bottom guys are competing to avoid relegation. You might only have two or three teams out of it and not playing for much. To have that strength and competitiveness, especially in first-class cricket, is excellent.

“It’s been a long time coming that CSA needed to do something like this and put more value on results. In a normal season here, once you get a couple of rained-out games, especially in first-class cricket, and then maybe a draw, you’re out of [the running] and there’s no way you can get back.

“Now, those remaining games are going to be huge because no-one wants to be relegated. I’ve been on the brink of it in 2017. It went down to the last hour of the last day of 14 first-class games. It’s a horrible feeling knowing that you could go down and play in division two the following year.

“It’s long overdue for South Africa considering the amount of facilities that we have, from Buffalo Park [in East London] to up here in Potch; places that can host good first-class cricket.”

The Kolpak era ended on December 31, when the United Kingdom left the European Union, blocking a drain of talent from South Africa. How did Abbott feel about the hand that has fed him since 2017 being slapped away? “That’s definitely closed a door for a lot of guys, especially guys who have played a Test or so [for South Africa] and then 12 months down the line they don’t see a future anymore. That … can only be good for South African cricket — to keep the players here and to keep the system strong.”

And, he said, he wanted to do his bit in that cause: “Going into next season with more franchises opening, the more experience and the less watered down the system is, the better. We want to see South African cricket in a stronger position. That was one of my reasons for coming back and to play. I feel like I still owe a lot to South African cricket. Even if it is just here with the Titans.

“I’ve already got stuck in. Thando Ntini and I have had some great chats at practice in the last couple of days. I’m pretty happy and I’m excited to impart some of that knowledge back into the system and hopefully see South African cricket stay strong.”    

Did he harbour ambitions to use his acquired expertise to return to South Africa’s dressingroom? “It’s not in my immediate view. I’ve had a very tough 2020 not playing cricket [because of Covid-19 international travel restrictions]. So I just need to get back to the where I was 15 or 18 months ago. My objective is to get to playing professionally and back to the level I was at, which is proving to be quite difficult at the moment, I must admit. Although the body’s had enough rest, it’s been difficult getting a competitive edge back.” 

But that didn’t mean he wasn’t interested in his former teammates, and he thinks they’re on the up after an indifferent period: “South Africa and the Proteas are always close to me heart and I’ve always got an eye on what’s happening here. As onlookers we don’t know what’s going on inside the environment. But I’ve chatted to guys in the last couple of days, and asking how the national team’s going, and it seems like everyone in that environment is incredibly happy. They seem to think it’s in a very healthy position, which is great news.”

Abbott’s competitive cricket last year amounted to five overs bowled in two matches for the Jaffna Stallions of the Lanka Premier League in November and December. Lockdown at home in South Africa, he said, had taken its toll mentally and physically: “For the first couple of months I was quite happy. In my career spanning 12 years it was the first forced long break. I was enjoying the time off and not feeling guilty that I wasn’t playing anywhere or I wasn’t training or bowling.

“But when they started kicking off in the UK I started to itch. I missed it, more so from a changeroom perspective. My mates there in Hampshire, I missed spending times with them after games. These are the guys you live with, day in and day out.

“I found myself at stages incredibly unmotivated. I would sit for two or three days and think, ‘Why must I gym? Why must I run? There’s nothing coming up. I can’t see an end.’ I think a lot of professional sportsmen went through that at the time. To break away from that and from my home and come up here to the Titans was the change that I needed to try and get back to where I was nearly 18 months ago.”

Abbott’s downtime ends on Saturday, when he turns out for the Titans against the Dolphins — his former franchise — in a one-day game in Potchefstroom. If he does well enough to be summoned to a press conference, he can expect a full house of reporters. Not many players are as worth listening to, because so few say what they think so directly. Respect, Mr Abbott. And welcome back.

First published by Cricbuzz.

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Markram’s Hants stint will worry South Africans

“He’s certainly a player that we’ve kept a close eye on for the last couple of years.” – Giles White, Hampshire’s director of cricket

TMG Digital

TELFORD VICE in London

THE news that Aiden Markram has signed for Hampshire will shock cricketminded South Africans, but it’s not what it looks like.

Unlike Kyle Abbott and Rilee Rossouw, who turned their backs on international cricket by taking up Kolpak contracts to play for the same county, Markram is going as a temporary overseas professional and will thus soon be back in a South Africa shirt.

Even so, what’s between the lines won’t make for reassuring reading for South Africa supporters still sore about Duanne Olivier’s Kolpak defection to Yorkshire last month. 

“[Markram] will arrive in time for the start of the county championship curtain-raiser against Essex [in Southampton on April 5], and will feature in both domestic red-ball and white-ball competitions until early May,” Hampshire said on their website on Friday.

So he remains in the mix for South Africa fr the World Cup in England, which starts on May 30, and will have first-hand experience of the prevailing conditions to boot.

“He’s certainly a player that we’ve kept a close eye on for the last couple of years and he’s had a great start to his international career in that time — he’s one of the best young talents in the world at this stage in terms of top order batsmen,” the site quoted Hampshire’s director of cricket, Giles White, as saying.

Markram has indeed made his own way, scoring four centuries and six 50s in his 31 Test innings. But his good fortune could be construed as the upshot of Sri Lanka becoming the first Asian team to claim a Test series in South Africa, which they did by winning at Kingsmead and St George’s Park in February.

Dimuth Karunaratne, who led the Lankans to their famous victory having arrived in South Africa unheralded as Dinesh Chandimal’s replacement as captain, was to have been Hampshire’s overseas pro.

Now Sri Lanka’s suits consider him much too vital to the national cause to disappear for a stint of county cricket, particularly so close to the World Cup.

There’s no need then, for South Africans to fall into the same kind of funk that followed the announcement of Olivier’s decision.

But there will be pangs of anxiety. Clearly, Hampshire are in the market for Kolpak players. And it will ring alarm bells

that they have “kept a close eye on” Markram “for the last couple of years”.

So they might well previously have tried to reel him in using a Kolpak lure, and there’s nothing to stop them doing so again — which would seem to be easier now that Markram will be in their dressingroom for several weeks, at least.

“[Markram’s] availability following this period will then be determined by his involvement in South Africa’s World Cup campaign, with the opportunity for Karunaratne to return in his place should the Sri Lankan captain’s playing commitments allow,” the website said.

It also won’t help that Markram has good memories of Southampton, where he scored 102 not out for South Africa A in a first-class game in 2017.

“[Southampton] and its facilities are brilliant and I have always wanted to go back after touring there with South Africa A, so I am grateful for the opportunity,” Markram was quoted as saying.

In less fraught times, that would be seen as a harmless platitude. But these are particularly fraught times, and this space will be closely watched.

Steyn out for two weeks, and that’s good news

TMG Digital

TELFORD VICE in Cape Town

THESE days Dale Steyn being ruled out for two weeks amounts to good news.

That was the fast bowler’s fate after he did a groin playing for Hampshire against Nottinghamshire in Southampton on Monday.

South Africa team management said on Wednesday that scans had “revealed a grade one strain to the right groin”.

Steyn would be out for “an estimated 10 to 14-day recovery period starting from when the injury occurred”.

He is “hoping to be ready for Hampshire’s match versus Worcester on September 4”.

Two weeks is nothing for a player who has, in not quite two years, broken his bowling shoulder twice and violently removed a ligament from his heel.

The news means Steyn remains on track to be part of South Africa’s coming commitments, which start with three one-day internationals and three T20s against Zimbabwe in September and October.

A stellar performer at international level for the best part of 14 years, there is no need for Steyn to prove his abilities.

But, with the World Cup in England looming in May and June and having been omitted for the one-day series in Sri Lanka in July and August, Steyn will be keen to remind the selectors what he can do.

There is also the small matter of him having joined Shaun Pollock atop the list of South Africa’s Test wicket-takers.

All being well, scalp No. 422 should come against Pakistan in December and January.

Steyn takes five, proves fitness

TMG Digital

TELFORD VICE in Lisbon

DALE Steyn’s 5/66 for Hampshire in Yorkshire’s first innings in a county championship match in Southampton has grabbed its deserved share of headlines.

Steyn started his haul in his third over by clean bowling Cheteshwar Pujara with a superb delivery that pitched on middle and straightened viciously to uproot the India star’s off and middle stumps.

Pujara also fell to Steyn, for a fourth-ball duck, in the one-day semi-final in Southampton last Monday. 

But the more important fact, for South Africans, was that Steyn came through 29 overs in the first innings of the championship match and bowled another 21 in the second dig.

His economy rates — 2.27 and 2.23 — offered further evidence that he is getting back to his best ahead of South Africa’s Test series in Sri Lanka next month. 

Steyn, who needs three more wickets to surpass Shaun Pollock as South Africa’s leading Test bowler, has spent much of the past 18 months sidelined by shoulder and heel injuries.

There’s more good news for Saffers keeping an eye on Steyn from afar in that he will be rested for Hampshire’s match against Lancashire at Old Trafford, which started on Monday.

But only to keep him fresh for the one-day final against Kent at Lord’s on Saturday.

More overs for Steyn in England, but not in Sri Lanka

“We’re not closing the door on anyone in terms of white-ball cricket, but for now Dale’s focus needs to be on the red-ball game.” – Linda Zondi, selection convenor

TMG Digital

TELFORD VICE in Lisbon

IT’S usually cause for concern when a South Africa fast bowler’s workload gets bigger, but not when the quick in question is Dale Steyn.

That said, the apparent likelihood that he will not play in South Africa’s one-day series in Sri Lanka in August will surprise those counting down the days to the World Cup in England next year.

Steyn has missed 24 of South Africa’s last 29 Tests in a tale of woe that started in December 2015 when he suffered the first of two broken shoulders, which was followed by a heel injury.

Now back to health and playing for Hampshire, Steyn could do with as much game-time as he can get ahead of South Africa’s Test series in Sri Lana next month.

So it bodes well that he came through the decent test of bowling 26 overs in a championship match at the weekend, which Surrey won by an innings.

“Unfortunately we got rolled, so I wasn’t required for a second innings,” Steyn told TMG Digital from Southampton.

“But I would have been fine had they opted not to make us follow on.

“I would have had to bowl again that day but that would have been no problem — my body’s fine, everything’s good and I trained again on Wednesday.”

Steyn’s deal with Hampshire, as originally announced, was for two championship games. But he said he would clock up a few more overs on the county circuit to ensure his readiness for the Test series.

“I’ve got a semi-final on Monday in the one-day competition, and then next Wednesday there’s another championship game starting [against Yorkshire at Southampton],” Steyn said.

“Then we’ve got a day off and then another championship game. That takes us into the last week of June — just before we leave for Sri Lanka. So I’m guessing I won’t play that four-day game.”

But, if Hampshire get through their semi, he could feature in the one-day final at Lord’s on June 30.

“Once the Test matches are over in Sri Lanka I come back to finish off the season here,” Steyn said.

That would mean he is not in the mix for the five one-day internationals that come after the Tests.

Asked on Thursday if Steyn was unavailable for those games, selection convenor Linda Zondi said, “We want to see where he is with the red ball. We’re not closing the door on anyone in terms of white-ball cricket, but for now Dale’s focus needs to be on the red-ball game.

“He probably knows himself that he still has work to do with the white ball.”

Zondi said the ODI squad would be announced “some time next week”.

There are 350 days from Thursday to May 30 next year, when South Africa play England at The Oval in the opening match of the World Cup.

Nevermind days, Steyn no doubt knows exactly how many hours and minutes will tick by before that match.

He also knows, as do we, that when he isn’t breaking down with freak injuries he is one of the fittest, best conditioned players around.

A World Cup without a healthy Dale Steyn? Which is already a World Cup without the retired AB de Villiers and Morné Morkel?

Now that would be cause for concern.