No Rabada, but Shamsi could loom large in small Bristol

“When the pitches are good and the boundaries are smaller the margin for error becomes a lot smaller.” – Aiden Markram on bandstand grounds like Bristol’s.

Telford Vice / Catania, Sicily

FOR an assortment of reasons, among them his choice to play in the IPL, Kagiso Rabada has missed 10 of South Africa’s 23 matches across the formats this year. Soon that number of absences will rise to a dozen: he has been ruled out of the T20Is against Ireland in Bristol on Wednesday and Friday.

This time injured ankle ligaments have taken Rabada out of the equation. The same problem stopped him from playing in the T20I decider against England in Southampton on Sunday. What with a Test series starting on August 17 and the T20I World Cup looming in Australia in October and November, Rabada and the rest of his cricketminded compatriots will hear the recovery clock ticking loudly.

A CSA release on Tuesday suggested he remained in the frame for the rest of the England tour: “He will continue medical management and rehabilitation and his progress will be closely monitored in preparation for the … Test series.” Some will read hope, rather than conviction, between those lines.

South Africa do not want for quality quicks; Rabada’s replacement on Sunday was Anrich Nortjé. But a player of Rabada’s stature is not simply a source of wickets and, in this case, useful lower order runs. He is the spearhead of the attack and among the team’s better, clearer thinkers. Rabada is a standard bearer for excellence. To lose him is to lose significantly more than a fine fast bowler.

Even so, South Africa should have the beating of a team who have lost their last six T20Is, and who haven’t won any of their half-dozen games in the format against non-associate opponents since September 2021 — when they were 3-2 winners over quasi-minnows Zimbabwe. That series followed the 3-0 thumping, by increasing margins, Ireland endured at home in July at the hands of the South Africans.

Bristol’s cosy boundaries will help even those odds, and perhaps take the edge off the threat posed by Tabraiz Shamsi in the wake of his career-best 5/24 to clinch Sunday’s clash. That followed his haul of 3/27 in Cardiff on Thursday and made him the England series’ highest wicket-taker. He had South Africa’s best economy rate and was second only to Lungi Ngidi in strike rate terms. And that after Shamsi was hit for 49 runs in three wicketless overs in the first match of the rubber on Wednesday — which was played in Bristol, where England won handsomely.

It’s difficult to imagine the Irish inflicting that kind of damage. In their last five T20Is, against India and New Zealand, they have been bowled out for 142 and 91 and only Harry Tector and Andy Balbirnie have scored half-centuries. Craig Young took 17 wickets at an economy rate of 9,05 across those games, so his omission from this series with a groin injury will hurt Ireland.

South Africa have a patchy recent record in T20Is, winning only two of their last five completed games. But they haven’t given themselves over to the kind of crazy cricket played by England, which Ireland seem to have adopted as their method of choice.

All good. Except when it doesn’t work. 

When: August 3, 2022; 7.30pm Local Time

Where: County Ground, Bristol

What to expect: A sprinkling of rain in the morning, but not enough to get in the way of the match. And runs. Short boundaries will do that.

Team news:

Ireland: Craig Young’s withdrawal because of a groin injury could mean South African born and raised Graham Hume will make his debut in the format.

Possible XI: Paul Stirling, Andy Balbirnie (c), Lorcan Tucker, Harry Tector, Gareth Delany, George Dockrell, Curtis Campher, Mark Adair, Barry McCarthy, Graham Hume, Josh Little 

South Africa: Kagiso Rabada’s removal from the equation should prompt the retention of the XI that clinched the series against England on Sunday.   

Possible XI: Quinton de Kock, Reeza Hendricks, Rilee Rossouw, Aiden Markram, David Miller (c), Tristan Stubbs, Andile Phehlukwayo, Keshav Maharaj, Anrich Nortjé, Lungi Ngidi, Tabraiz Shamsi

What they said:

“The brand of cricket we are playing means that sometimes we will be bowled out for a low score, but that’s what you see with pretty much most international teams.” – Harry Tector rationalises Ireland’s run of poor results.

“We are maybe a team who play better cricket on slow pitches and bigger fields, which is strange. You would think that, as a team, you’d be hoping for great pitches and smaller boundaries. But this team has played some of their better cricket in tougher conditions and on bigger outfields. When the pitches are good and the boundaries are smaller the margin for error becomes a lot smaller. It’s something we’re going to try and improve on. We’re going to try and nail that on a smaller field here in Bristol.” – Aiden Markram on South Africa’s cricketing claustrophobia. 

First published by Cricbuzz.

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Much for Ireland, SA to measure

The return of Kevin O’Brien, the dragon who slew St George in the 2011 World Cup, can only inspire the Irish.

Telford Vice | Cape Town

THE firsts are coming thick and fast for Ireland. Before Tuesday they had never beaten South Africa in an ODI. The same opponents will be back at Malahide on Monday for the inaugural T20I between the sides. South Africa won’t want another shock as they fine-tune for the T20I World Cup in the UAE and Oman in October and November.

Both teams will know that the shorter the format the greater the chance of David prevailing over Goliath. They will also know that Andy Balbirnie — who evoked that Biblical image before the drawn ODI series — captains a team that are less like little boys and more like fearless adolescents looking to prove themselves against adults.

So an intriguing contest awaits, not least because much the same cast of characters from the ODIs will be back to drive the drama. The notable exception is Kevin O’Brien, who retired from ODIs last month but remains a big, red-headed factor in the other white-ball format. The return to the dressingroom of the fire-breathing dragon who hammered 113 off 63 balls to slay St George himself — or England, if we must be prosaic — in Bangalore during the 2011 World Cup can only inspire the Irish.

The South Africans have no such Boy’s Own mythology to draw on, but they do have the fresh memory of Janneman Malan and Quinton de Kock scoring 177 and 120 — and sharing 225, their team’s first double century stand in 446 ODIs — at Malahide on Friday to earn a share of the series honours. All of which could make bowling in this match not unlike being a cat on a hot tin roof trying to juggle a set of champagne flutes. Striking during the powerplay isn’t easily done, but it may be the best chance the bowlers have to dictate terms in conditions that become almost unfairly better for batting as the innings wears on.

Ireland haven’t played a T20I since March last year, while South Africa prevailed in the deciding fifth match of their rubber in the format against West Indies in Grenada earlier this month. But the visitors have been on the road — and in the bubble — since the end of May, so mental fatigue could be at play. The emotional toll that the rioting in Gauteng and KwaZulu-Natal in the past week, which has claimed more than 200 lives and affected some of the players personally, will also be a factor.

How much wind has been knocked out of the Irish’s sails by their 70-run defeat on Friday will be something else to try and measure on Monday. The South Africans will be keen to prove to everyone, especially themselves, that what happened on Tuesday was aberration and not a portent for the future.   

Despite all that context, quite what the teams are to take from this series, considering the pitches they will have to come to terms with at the T20I World Cup, is an interesting question. Answers will follow on Monday, and in the last two games at Belfast on Thursday and Saturday.    

When: Monday July 19, 2021. 4pm Local Time  

Where: Malahide, Dublin

What to expect: A clear day, a not entirely flat pitch, a cosy outfield, and a small but enthusiastic crowd.

Team news

Ireland: Aside from Kevin O’Brien, seamers Shane Getkate and Barry McCarthy could be the other new faces compared to the XIs we saw in the ODI series.  

Possible XI: Kevin O’Brien, Paul Stirling, Andy Balbirnie, Harry Tector, George Dockrell, Lorcan Tucker, Simi Singh, Shane Getkate, Barry McCarthy, Josh Little, Craig Young

South Africa: David Miller, who was in the XI that won a decider to claim the series in the Caribbean earlier this month, is in patchy form and could make way for Kyle Verreynne. Lizaad Williams deserves a game, and might get it ahead of Bjorn Fortuin — one of three spinners picked for the fifth T20I in Grenada.

Possible XI: Temba Bavuma, Quinton de Kock, Janneman Malan, Rassie van der Dussen, Kyle Verreynne, Wiaan Mulder, George Linde, Kagiso Rabada, Lungi Ngidi, Tabraiz Shamsi, Lizaad Williams

What they said

“It was a small crowd but they were good and loud. Just to have people there was brilliant because it’s been nearly two years. You nearly forget what it’s like.” — Harry Tector, in an interview with the UK Sunday Times, values the support his team gets from beyond Malahide’s boundaries.

“We play one game here in Dublin and the next two in Belfast, where it’s going to be different. So let’s be flexible and accept the challenge, and use it to our advantage — because Sri Lanka [where South Africa are to play six as yet unscheduled white-ball games before the T20I World Cup] is going to be completely different. The team have welcomed that, because they are hungry to succeed in different conditions.” — Enoch Nkwe, South Africa’s assistant coach, focuses on the big picture. 

First published by Cricbuzz.

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SA don’t bat, don’t bowl, don’t field on Ireland’s super Tuesday

“Short and wide is a never a bowling plan.” – Temba Bavuma

Telford Vice | Cape Town

BY seven wickets, by 42 runs — when they dismissed their opponents inside 31 overs — by 131 runs, by 201 runs and by 206 runs. Those were South Africa’s margins of victory over Ireland in the completed ODIs between the teams. Before, that is, Tuesday’s game at Malahide.

Sunday’s series opener at the same ground didn’t hint at what was to follow: Ireland looked ordinary in reaching 195/4 in 40.2 overs before rain claimed a disjointed match. See you on Tuesday …

If you’re Irish, make that super Tuesday. The home side’s 290/5 was their highest total against South Africa, and marked only the eighth time they have put up as many or more runs against a side from a Test-playing country. Then they bowled out the visitors for 247 to clinch victory by 43 runs — a bigger victory margin, in terms of runs, than they have achieved against all Test-playing teams except Bangladesh and Afghanistan.

Andy Balbirnie’s 102, his seventh century, was his team’s 21st against Test bowling, and their first against South Africa — but his third effort of at least 50 in as many ODIs against the South Africans. Balbirnie promoted himself from No. 3 after William Porterfield — who made 63 on Sunday — became a late withdrawal because of a finger injury.

Ireland’s captain should open more often. He batted through four half-century partnerships, the best of them a rousing stand of 90 off 46 balls shared with 21-year-old Harry Tector — who was hit hard on the grille of his helmet by Anrich Nortjé when he was eight and recovered well enough to hammer 79 off 68 balls. 

South Africa’s bowlers spewed too many balls wide and too many short, and too many of the rest veered towards the batters’ pads. Not the least of the consequences was that Ireland piled up 95 runs in their last 10 overs, which Balbirnie described afterwards as “a big momentum-shifter”. Temba Bavuma concurred: “That was criminal from us.”

What were South Africa’s bowling tactics? “Short and wide is a never a plan,” Bavuma said. “I’d like to give the bowlers the benefit of the doubt, and put it down to [poor] execution. In saying that, it’s been happening all too often. We find ourselves out there in the field trying to defend both sides of the field.

“When it comes to death bowling, we’ve had conversations. I think we’ve exhausted them. Those conversations need to be translated into action. There are guys on the sidelines who have shown the skill. There’s a strong case for those guys to get that opportunity.”

Bavuma took a similarly dim view of his team’s display in the field, where four catches went down: “We didn’t rock up. If you compare their fielding to our fielding, it was chalk and cheese.”

Would a lacklustre performance with the ball catch fire with the bat? It did, but not in the way the South Africans would have wanted. They were well on track at 159/2 in the 33rd over, with Janneman Malan — who had missed South Africa’s previous six white-ball games — batting as if he had never been away. But, in that over, Malan was caught in the deep for 84 to start a terminal spiral of eight wickets crashing for 88 runs.

The game had been won and lost by the time Kagiso Rabada was adjudged run out in the 47th over, but nothing summed up South Africa’s day better. Keshav Maharaj hammered Mark Adair’s waist-high full toss to deep square leg, where Curtis Campher took the catch. Apparently assuming the ball was dead, Rabada stopped running. Campher threw to wicketkeeper Lorcan Tucker, who nudged the bails to earth with Rabada nowhere near. The umpires conferred and, having decided the delivery was a no-ball, said the runout stood because the ball was live when the wicket was broken. Rabada may have had a case because the no-ball was called after the bails came off — and so he couldn’t have known the ball was not dead and that he remained in danger of being run out. Regardless, he should have kept running. “It was a strange bit of cricket; something that I’ve never seen before,” Balbirnie said.

Rabada is a canny, conscientious cricketer. For him to lose the plot so abjectly told the story of a team that had missed their bus from the hotel and gone fishing instead.

“It’s a huge moment,” Balbirnie said. “We haven’t beaten too many of the big teams at home. We showed a lot of fight and played smart cricket. It’s one of my proudest days being involved with the Irish team.”

Of their 60 ODIs at home, of which they have won 26, Ireland’s only other successes over teams from Test-playing countries have been achieved against Bangladesh, Afghanistan and Zimbabwe. By the sound of the 510 spectators allowed into the ground, Tuesday’s triumph was easily the most meaningful Malahide has seen. Now for Ireland’s next trick. “Beating them once-off is great, but that’s why winning the series at the end of the week is so important: to show we’re making strides,” Balbirnie said.

See you on Friday …

First published by Cricbuzz.

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