Conway goes a long way to find a place he can trust

“He looked at me with those steely eyes of his and he said, ‘I want to play cricket for South Africa and I want to get good marks.’” – Devon Conway’s high school coach, Adrian Norris.

Telford Vice | Cape Town

A superbly fit, overtly competitive, ultimately ordinary off-spinner leaves Pietermaritzburg for Nottingham and becomes Kevin Pietersen. An unflashy allrounder goes from Johannesburg to Wellington and turns into Grant Elliott. They are among a slew of examples where those came from: South Africa. Devon Conway added his name to the list this week.

Conway’s 200 at Lord’s made him the 111th man to reach a century on Test debut and the 12th from South Africa. Sort of. Andrew Hudson, Jacques Rudolph, Alviro Petersen, Faf du Plessis, Stiaan van Zyl and Stephen Cook know the feeling of making a hundred in their first Test. So do Kepler Wessels and Keaton Jennings.

But Wessels’ 162 at the Gabba in November 1982 was scored from under a not exactly baggy green helmet, while Jennings made his 112 at Wankhede in December 2016 wearing three lions rampant. As did Andrew Strauss for his 112 against New Zealand in May 2004 at Lord’s, Matt Prior for his unbeaten 126 against West Indies in May 2007 also at Lord’s, and Jonathan Trott for his 119 against Australia at the Oval in August 2009.

Conway’s headgear is black and emblazoned with a silver fern. At his high school, St John’s College in Johannesburg, it didn’t matter much on Wednesday that he does not don the protea badge. “We watched bits and pieces [on television] between classes,” Adrian Norris, the master in charge of cricket and a major influence on the player Conway has become, told Cricbuzz on Thursday. “He got to 30, and then we had load-shedding for three hours. So we kept track online from 30 until he was about 105, when we were able to watch again.”

Norris’ words help explain why Conway moved from Joburg to Wellington in August 2017. South Africa’s poorly maintained infrastructure means there isn’t enough electricity to keep all of the country’s lights on all of the time. So, sporadically since January 2008 and sometimes for days and weeks on end, scheduled rolling blackouts share the darkness. Sometimes your lights are off while your friends’ kilometres away are on. Sometimes it’s the other way around. You know when you will be able to cook dinner by consulting an app — several are readily available — on your smartphone.

Load-shedding has become emblematic of a South Africa that is failing to meet the expectations of a nation that, by defeating apartheid at the ballot box in April 1994, thought its worst days were behind it. Twenty-seven years on, we know our trust was misplaced.

“Devon was always the type of person who wanted trust,” Norris said. “We made sure we looked after him — we would get him something to eat, because sometimes he would skip the boarding school breakfast — and then he produced the goods and scored hundreds. He’s a very loyal person. It’s difficult to get into his trust, but once you’re in there you will be for life. He’ll do anything for you.”

Maybe Conway couldn’t trust South Africa enough to want to continue to make a life and a career there. Aged 26, he sold his home, his car and much of the rest of his material possessions and, with his partner, headed for New Zealand.

He had had a solid junior career — he made two half-centuries for Gauteng’s under-13 side, a hundred for the under-15s, and two centuries and a double ton for the under-19s. He scored 13 centuries in provincial first-class cricket. But at the higher franchise level, where he played only 21 matches in more than six years, Conway never reached three figures in 36 innings. So how big a role did cricket play in his decision?

It’s a worn trope that South Africa chases away some of its best and brightest in the cause of trying to make its national teams look more like the nation they represent. Did Conway feel hard done by because he is white? “Absolutely not,” Norris said. “In all our conversations we’ve had, he has never brought that up. He and his partner just wanted a different life experience, and that’s what they’ve got.”

Norris spoke of an apartment near the Wanderers, paid for by Gauteng cricket, that housed some of the province’s most promising players. Conway was among them. “In that flat lived five or six black African guys who were his mates. At times he would get picked ahead of them, and at times one of them would get picked ahead of him. I think he would have said, ‘These are my mates. How can I say I’m not getting picked because of the colour of my skin? They’re getting picked because they’re good enough.’”

A less often acknowledged aspect of the race dynamic is that, were it not for South Africa’s efforts to equalise opportunities across the game, world cricket would likely never have heard of Makhaya Ntini, Hashim Amla, Vernon Philander or Kagiso Rabada. Their talent and skill was undoubted and they worked hard for the success they earned. But talent, skill and hard work aren’t enough in a society more cruelly skewed in favour of the affluent than any other. The affluent are disproportionately white.

All but one of the South Africans who have won Test caps playing for other countries have come from relatively affluent whiteness. They, or their families, have had access to means to change their realities. Those means have been purposefully denied others. At 26, Conway owned property and a car and other stuff worth buying. Millions of his comparatively less well-off compatriots, almost all of them black and brown, their prospects for a decent life stolen from them by substandard education, low level jobs — if they have work at all — and life in a tin shack — if they are not surviving on the street — have nothing to sell and no hope of starting over somewhere else. That is by design, not accident. The single exception proves the rule: Basil D’Oliveira had to rescue himself, with John Arlott’s assistance, from just such an existence to show the world how well he could play cricket. The world outside South Africa, that is.

Even so, Conway is not a cookie-cutter example of privilege — he needed a bursary to gain entry to one of the country’s most elite schools. “I remember that interview,” Norris said. “I asked him why he wanted to come to St John’s, and he looked at me with those steely eyes of his and he said, ‘I want to play cricket for South Africa and I want to get good marks.’”

Did it sadden Norris that New Zealand, not South Africa, is reaping the benefits of the first half of that ambition? “Kids who come through our hands, we obviously want them to represent their country of birth. But the reality of the situation is that he is representing himself and challenging himself at the highest possible level. The world has become so small. Sportsmen will go overseas because that’s where the money is.”

Umpteen cricketminded reactionaries have been spewing ill-considered race politics on social media since about the time the power went out at St John’s on Wednesday. That professional sport in South Africa is too small and impoverished to contain all the talent the country produces is not a truth often aired there. Conway himself was in the same dormitory at St John’s boarding facility as Scott Spedding, who captained the first XV and went on to play 23 Tests for France, and Kenyan-born Brit Chris Froome, the four-time Tour de France champion.

“We’ve got a kid at St John’s now who’s just been signed by [top French rugby club] La Rochelle,” Norris said. “And he’s black African. The professional systems overseas are just so much more established. There’s money there. You can go and play [rugby] in the third league in France and you can do very well [financially]. You can play [cricket] for a second-tier county in England and do pretty well for six or seven months of the year.”

Conway has raised himself above and beyond that level, but Norris said he hadn’t forgotten what mattered: “He’s very humble and calm. He never got too hard on himself at school, or too excited. He’s very balanced. Sometimes I’ll send him a message, and it comes back with, ‘Thank you, Sir.’ The ups and downs of cricket over the years have been his classroom. He’s taken all those lessons on board and he’s now producing the goods.”

Not that Norris was trying to hog Conway’s limelight: “It’s madness to claim an individual.” He listed Jimmy Cook, Graham Ford, Grant Morgan as instrumental in moulding the new toast of New Zealand — the seventh man to score a double century on Test debut and the first debutant foreign opener to get to three figures on England’s seaming pitches.

Norris also made a case for schools like St John’s no longer existing chiefly to prop up privilege, even if from outside their tall walls it can look like that is still their mission: “We’re here to expose kids to different aspects of life and to turn them into good human beings.”

By the look and sound of him these past two days, and quite apart from his brilliant batting, Conway would seem to have added his name to that list, too.

First published by Cricbuzz.

Processing…
Success! You're on the list.

How to score big runs in Sri Lanka? Depends …

TMG Digital

TEFORD VICE in Lisbon

EIGHT batsmen have scored Test centuries for South Africa in Sri Lanka, and their names comprise as varied a list of the dogged and the dashing as can be compiled.

From Dean Elgar to Daryll Cullinan, Jonty Rhodes to Jacques Rudolph, Hashim Amla to Lance Klusener, and Hansie Cronje to JP Duminy — they’ve all been there, done that, and raised a bat to claim their applause.

Good luck plotting a pattern through that lot, a task only made more difficult by the fact that no-one besides Rhodes and Elgar has faced fewer than 200 balls in their centurion efforts: Rhodes 107 for his 101 not out in Moratuwa in August 1993, Elgar 187 for his 103 in Galle in July 2014.

Elgar? He of the chronic, and often much needed, stodgy approach?

Yes, that Elgar, who never faced more than 26 deliveries between boundaries in that innings, went from 40 to 50 in four deliveries — one hit for six, another for four — and reached his ton with a straight six.

The master-blasting Klusener? He spent 219 balls on his 118 not out in Kandy in July 2000.

Amla needed 382 deliveries to make an undefeated 139 in Colombo in 2014 — the most faced by a South African in a Test innings on the Asian island, but also his team’s highest score there.

Only Cullinan has twice reached a hundred for South Africa in Sri Lanka: 102 in Colombo in 1993 and 114 not out in Galle in 2000.

All of which means there is no surefire formula for how to score big in Sri Lanka, where pitches tend to offer fast bowlers even less than in India and the heat and humidity tends to be more sapping than anywhere else in the game.

The most successful non-subcontinental batsmen in Sri Lanka are Alastair Cook, Stephen Fleming and Brian Lara, who have scored three, two and five centuries.

The only point of connection between them is that all three bat left-handed, but they do offer hope for those unfamiliar with the conditions.

Cook has scored more runs in Sri Lanka than Virender Sehwag or Mohammad Azharuddin did, albeit from more innings, while Fleming had more than Azhar Ali, and Lara was ahead of Sourav Ganguly and Misbah-ul-Haq — and Fleming and Lara had fewer trips to the crease than their rivals.  

South Africa could do with a few additions to their Sri Lanka batting honour role in the series of two Tests which starts in Galle on July 12.

Like all teams, Faf du Plessis’ side is a combination of the dashing and the dogged. But the balance would seem to tilted towards the latter, what with Du Plessis, Amla, Elgar and Temba Bavuma likely to share a line-up with the more attacking Aiden Markram and Quinton de Kock.

Fine players, all. Which matters more than anything — in Sri Lanka as much as anywhere else.

Seam will still rule spin for SA in Sri Lanka

TMG Digital

TELFORD VICE in Cape Town

NO spinner has topped the averages or led the wicket-takers in any of the five Test series South Africa have played in Sri Lanka.

But, with South Africa’s fast bowling stocks having taken a hit with Morné Morkel’s retirement and injuries to Kagiso Rabada and Dale Steyn, the slow poisoners might have to shoulder more than their share of the burden when the teams tangle for the sixth time on the Asian island’s slow surfaces in July.

Keshav Maharaj, that means you. The left-armer has played 20 Tests in South Africa, Australia, England, New Zealand and Zimbabwe among his 103 first-class matches.

But only one of those games has been on the subcontinent: Maharaj took 2/13 and 2/79 in a total of 46.3 overs for South Africa A against their India counterparts in Kerala in August 2015.

So the two Tests South Africa will play in Sri Lanka in July loom as both the biggest challenge and the biggest opportunity of his career so far.

If Maharaj brings to the task the calm head and resolute application he has shown to date, he will do what is asked of him and more.

But the rest of Faf du Plessis’ attack remains a work in progress, work that will have to completed in less than three months.

Rabada may make it back from his three-month lay-off with a stress fracture of the lower back in time to play in the series.

Shoulder and heel problems have taken Steyn out of 24 of the 29 Tests South Africa have played since December 2015, and he has been hurt in three of five he has played.

He will hope to prove his fitness in the one-day game and first-class match he is currently set to play — he could yet feature in more — for Hampshire in June.   

Who’s left? South Africa could do worse for a leader of the attack than Vernon Philander, and Lungi Ngidi and Chris Morris are also frontline options.

The cupboard is thus far from bare, which is no bad thing considering the equation of seam and spin South Africa have tried to balance in Sri Lanka in their 25 years of touring there. 

Nicky Boje came the closest to besting South Africa’s quicks there in 2004, when he matched Shaun Pollock’s series haul of 10 wickets.

Thing is, Boje’s average for the rubber was 41.9, or not in the same postal code as Pollock’s 19.4.

Even so, Boje is South Africa’s most successful bowler in Sri Lanka with 25 scalps, but that stands on the shoulders of the fact that he is also the team’s most capped player there. 

Their highest wicket-taker for South Africa in a single series in Sri Lanka is Brett Schultz, who claimed 20 — twice as many as Boje’s best effort — in their first rubber there in August and September 1993.

All that connects Boje and Schultz is that both bowled using their left arms.

Boje was a finger spinner blessed with a tidy action that helped him focus on being a master miser rather than a torrid turner.

Schultz came roaring in to unleash his thunderbolts from an action ragged enough to do him as much damage as the ball could do the batsman.

Boje aside, the other South Africa bowlers who have taken Test wickets going somewhere slowly in Sri Lanka are JP Duminy, Pat Symcox, Paul Adams, Imran Tahir, Daryll Cullinan and Jacques Rudolph.

Make of that varying list what you will, but know that spinners have taken less than a quarter — 23.6% — of all the wickets South Africa have claimed there.

Know, then, that seam rules spin for South Africa, even in Sri Lanka.

Even Maharaj, clever oke that he is, knows that.