Delhi disaster casts shadow over South Africa’s World Cup

“We’ve got to win those games, and if we don’t we’ve got to accept the fact that we’ve got to go and qualify for the next World Cup.” – Mark Boucher on South Africa’s remaining Super League matches.

Telford Vice / Cape Town

METRICS to measure South Africa’s abjectly poor performance at the Kotla on Tuesday are not in short supply. Only twice in their 647 men’s ODIs, and just once when they have batted first, have they been bowled out for fewer than their dismal total of 99, and never by a subcontinent side.

Thus never before in South Africa’s 90 matches in the format against India have they been dismissed for so few runs. Only five times have they been shunted out in fewer deliveries than the 27.1 overs that comprised their shocking innings, and never before by India. Never before have India, batting second, won an ODI against South Africa, this time by seven wickets, after batting for only 19.1 overs.

You get the picture. But just out of the frame an even less edifying reality looms — all 14 players in South Africa’s T20 World Cup squad were part of the mess this series became. Seven of them were in Tuesday’s XI and will carry the scars into their future endeavours, starting when South Africa play their first match of the tournament in Hobart on October 24.

The format and the conditions will be different, but how much of what happened in an ODI series that India won 2-1 despite fielding a veritable second-string side — their first XI is already in Australia — and especially in Delhi on Tuesday will the South Africans pack into the darkest corners of their luggage for the trip Down Under? 

“We’ve taken some good lessons and we’ve had some good chats behind closed doors to speak about problems … or not problems but things we can get a lot better at,” Mark Boucher told a press conference. “That will stand us in good stead going to Australia, where conditions are completely different. We’re OK. It’s disappointing to lose, but we have a massive competition around the corner and that’s what we’re gearing ourselves up for. 

“Keeping the guys fresh mentally and physically is going to be vital. Then we’ll get the best results. Australia will suit our fast bowlers a lot better. We need to keep the aggression there. In this last one-day game there wasn’t enough aggression. The surprising thing for me was that India’s attack, in the one-dayers especially, bowled with far more aggression than what we did.” 

Quinton de Kock, Heinrich Klaasen, David Miller and Tabraiz Shamsi came to India from the CPL, and Temba Bavuma, Bjorn Fortuin and Reeza Hendricks from the Namibia Global T20. Wayne Parnell, Rilee Rossouw and Tristan Stubbs saw gametime in The Hundred, and Marco Jansen, Keshav Maharaj, Janneman Malan, Aiden Markram, Lungi Ngidi, Anrich Nortjé, Andile Phehlukwayo and Kagiso Rabada were involved in various aspects of South Africa’s tour to England. That’s the entire squad for the India ODIs. Only Malan is not going to the T20 World Cup. Fortuin and Phehlukwayo will be there as travelling reserves.

Given that workload, Boucher said, something had to give: “With the schedule that we’ve had you can’t expect the players to be up for every single game. That’s when you rely on your technical side and your mental side to pull you through. We’ve been a little bit weak in both those departments. Today especially there were a couple of soft dismissals up front and maybe one or two technical things on a pitch that was uneven in its turn — one turned, one didn’t — and we were found out there.”

The fact that India were able to field a competitive team despite the absence of their stars told its own story of the country’s ability to produce more quality players than any other. “The Indian side we played against were fresh; they were bouncing around,” Boucher said. “Our guys were fatigued.” 

But wait. There’s still more. The series result further complicates South Africa’s difficult route to next year’s ODI World Cup. They have five Super League matches left; three against England in January, two against the Netherlands in March, all at home. West Indies, who have played all of their Super League games, are currently in eighth place with South Africa 11th. Only the top eight will qualify directly for the 2023 World Cup. Three more victories would take South Africa past West Indies in the standings.

Sri Lanka and Ireland, who have six and three matches left, could sneak ahead of the South Africans. It’s difficult to imagine the ninth-placed Irish earning three victories against Bangladesh when they meet in May, even at home — which Ireland would need to do to rise above West Indies — and the Lankans will have their work cut out beating Afghanistan, at home in January, and New Zealand, away in March, in series of three games each. But all Sri Lanka, who are currently in 10th place, need to do to finish ahead of the South Africans is to earn at least one more win than them from their remaining matches. The sides who aren’t in the top eight when they complete their Super League campaigns will fight it out in a qualifier in Zimbabwe in June for the remaining two places in the 10-team 2023 World Cup.

As if all that wasn’t distracting enough, South Africa’s series against England will be staged during the SA20 and the games against the Dutch could coincide with the IPL, which will likely feature some of the South Africans’ best players.  

“That’s not ideal,” Boucher said. “The reason we are in this situation is that we haven’t always had continuity in our one-day team, and there’s been various reasons for that — players leaving to come to the IPL and Covid. The guys will know what’s required against the Netherlands and England. We’ve got to win those games, and if we don’t we’ve got to accept the fact that we’ve got to go and qualify for the next World Cup. We understand the situation we’re in and we’ll have to man up and face it when it comes our way.”

Perhaps the uncertainties inherent to those scenarios cast a shadow over South Africa on Tuesday. It wouldn’t have helped that, with Bavuma and Maharaj sidelined by illness, the visitors went into the match with their third captain in as many games: Miller, who has led them in six T20Is but never before in an ODI. But no captain would have been able to do much about a batting line-up that shambled from one calamity to the next.

Only Malan, Klaasen and Jansen reached double figures in an innings in which the last six wickets crashed for 33 runs in 50 deliveries. Only Klaasen, who scored 34 off 42, faced as many as 30 balls. No partnership was worth more than the 23 shared by Klaasen and Miller.

None of India’s bowlers conceded as many as five runs an over. Kuldeep Yadav’s 4/18 in 25 balls led a spin contingent that comprised half of India’s attack, bowled more than half the overs, and took all but two of the wickets.

The pitch was responsive but far from unfair, and India used the conditions well but not well enough to dominate as utterly as they did. South Africa were at least as complicit in their downfall as their opponents, playing as if they had forgotten most of what they have learnt over the years about coming to terms with spin in subcontinent conditions. They were flatfooted and tentative, and looked as if they would rather have been anywhere else than at the Kotla contesting the deciding match of a series.

Soon, they will be somewhere else: in Australia. At a World Cup. At least they don’t have to qualify.

First published by Cricbuzz.

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De Kock shines through Headingley gloom

“Nee! Nee! Nee! Nee! Nee! Nee!” – Quinton de Kock turns down a single.

Telford Vice / Palermo, Sicily

“THERE is so much to play for,” Nick Knight said on television moments before England took the field, and Janneman Malan and Quinton de Kock walked out to open the batting, at a cloudy Headingley on Sunday. Knight was wrong. There was nothing to play for: no World Cup Super League points, no other ODIs for South Africa until October and for England until November, and thus no real reason to bother building for a future filled with T20Is and Tests.

But that doesn’t matter to players who have spent most of their lives fuelled by competitiveness. Pitch the stumps, toss a coin and watch them flick the switch, whether they’re in a backyard, a gully or on the game’s most storied grounds. And especially when the match will, weather permitting, decide a series.

Certainly, if anyone told De Kock Sunday’s proceedings were irrelevant, he wasn’t listening. England’s bowlers and fielders looked flat — surely a consequence of playing their 10th match in a day more than three weeks — and the pitch was a belter, but De Kock still needed to bring his A game to make the most of those advantages. He did exactly that with stroke selection, timing and placement fixed firmly on the ridiculous side of sublime. 

De Kock missed out on contributing significantly to South Africa’s record high total in ODIs in England — 333/5 — in Chester-le-Street on Tuesday, when Sam Curran bowled him for 19. On Friday, in the throes of the visitors spiralling to their joint lowest total in England — 83 — and being bowled out in the fewest number of deliveries by any opponents anywhere — 124 — he made five before blipping a leading edge to short cover off David Willey. He was first out on Tuesday and, on Friday, the third of four South Africans dismissed with the total refusing to budge from six.

Other players might have taken guard on Sunday trying to blot out thoughts of where their next big innings was coming from, even if they had, as De Kock had, come to England having passed 50 in half of their previous 14 innings in the format and scored centuries in three of them. The deliveries that knocked him over in the first two games — a leg-cutter on Tuesday, an away-swinger on Friday — had zigged off the seam. Would he be overly wary of movement, and not play as freely as he might have, as a consequence?

Malan took first strike, so De Kock would have seen Reece Topley’s opening delivery veer through the air towards the right-hander, who dabbed it to midwicket for a single. The second ball did much the same, curving away from the left-handed De Kock, who drove it into the covers for two. He played the shot with the ease and comfort of someone who never doubted that he would.

It took 19 deliveries for De Kock to register the first boundary of the match, picking an inswinger from Willey off his pads and sending it through midwicket with intent that seemed preordained. Malan hit the next two fours in the space of three balls in the next over, off-driving Topley elegantly and then smacking him over the covers with his bat high and horizontal. Two deliveries later, Malan was out: his driving bat advanced too far ahead of his body, and the ball looped limply to point.

Rassie van der Dussen, a hundred hero in Tuesday’s soaring heat, looked like he had set a course for another pile of runs when he helped De Kock reach 50 off 39 balls — which he did with fours through deep third and cover off Adil Rashid’s first two deliveries of the game. But, with the stand worth 75 off 69, Van der Dussen swept Rashid straight into deep square leg’s hands and was gone for 26.

The closest England had come to removing De Kock was in the ninth over, when Willey’s throw from midwicket missed with the diving South African well short of his ground. Would he be undone by the rain that halted the action in the 21st over, when he was 69? No. Or, as De Kock yelled after the resumption almost two hours later when he was 91 and Aiden Markram wanted a single from a bunt to midwicket off Moeen Ali: “Nee! Nee! Nee! Nee! Nee! Nee!” That’s no, six times, in Afrikaans, if you hadn’t translated it yourself. Three balls later, with De Kock eight short of his century having faced 76 balls, the rain returned to chase the players from the field. Ninety minutes after that, the match was abandoned.

Some will consider De Kock’s marooning a travesty. How could the gods be so heartless as to not grant him the hundred he so deserved? Others will be grateful that they were able to watch one of the finest innings any of us will see; a thing of beauty and sophistication devoid of anything so discordant as bravado or brute force. De Kock has scored 17 ODI centuries but has rarely, if ever, batted as well as he did on Sunday.

At a press conference he was asked whether his retirement from Test cricket in December, an announcement that was met with disbelief wherever cricket is played, allowed him to become a better player? He mulled over the question for a moment, then said: “I don’t think so. I haven’t really thought about it, to be honest. I think I’ve always been a decent white-ball player anyway, so I don’t know if it is that. I haven’t really looked into that.”

That nobody won a match that didn’t matter, except for the purposes of deciding a series that also didn’t matter, was neither here nor there. That De Kock was able to rise above the circumstances and bat as if so much was on the line mattered far more. Sometimes not thinking about all that matters most.

That’s what sets the best apart, whether they’re playing in a backyard, a gully or on the game’s most storied grounds.

First published by Cricbuzz.

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Counting on Quinton, deputising for De Kock

“Hopefully I can keep riding the wave.” – Heinrich Klaasen, who scored 51 and 123 at a strike rate of 145 in this week’s warm-up games.

Telford Vice | Palermo, Sicily

IT isn’t often that a scorecard names anyone, much less Quinton de Kock, at No. 16. Just as rare is Anrich Nortjé, Lizaad Williams, Lungi Ngidi and Marco Jansen being listed to bat ahead of him, and Tabraiz Shamsi one place behind.

It’s also unusual that, when he’s in a South Africa shirt, De Kock isn’t the designated wicketkeeper. Less few and far between, though noteworthy, are matches when he isn’t in the side despite being part of the squad.

But all of the above, whether outlandish, rare or merely unusual, was true of the South Africans’ first two matches of their tour of England this week, both of them white-ball games against the England Lions.

In Taunton on Tuesday, De Kock was No. 16 in the line-up in what amounted to a practice match involving all 17 of the visitors’ players; 11 of them batting and 11 fielding. Kyle Verreynne deputised for him by opening the batting with Janneman Malan and then keeping wicket. In Worcester on Thursday, in a standard 50-over game, De Kock wasn’t in the XI. Malan and Reeza Hendricks opened and Heinrich Klaasen — who had played as a batter only on Tuesday — wore the gloves and pads.

It was all a little odd considering De Kock has been behind the stumps in 243 of his 247 internationals across the formats. And because he’s missed less than a quarter of the matches — 99 of 346 — South Africa have played since he made his debut in a T20I against New Zealand at Kingsmead in December 2021.

Team management attributed De Kock’s absence to a bruised finger and said he had been rested as a precaution. So he is set, niggle permitting, to go into the ODI series that starts in Durham on Tuesday without having picked up a pair of wicketkeeping gloves in anger for more than three weeks and a bat for exactly a month.

That’s not much of a gamble on a player whose game is so grooved and grounded. De Kock will be trusted, justifiably, to resume batting the way he has in his last 15 ODI innings, in which he has scored three centuries and five 50s. But, in his 30th year, having retired from Tests in December and become a father in January, his priorities are shifting. Even though he has committed himself to South Africa’s foreseeable white-ball future, thoughts will turn to what happens when he goes fishing fulltime.

On this week’s evidence, there is no immediate cause for alarm. On Tuesday, Malan stood firm through five partnerships for his 103. Two days later, Klaasen — who had made a 35-ball 51 batting at No. 7 in Taunton — hammered 123 off 85 balls at No. 5. Verreynne is the straightest swap for De Kock as a serious batter who keeps, even though he has opened only twice in his 39 list A innings. But De Kock’s attributes are useful wherever they present themselves, and it can’t hurt to have two other confirmed ’keepers around.

“Hopefully I can keep riding the wave,” Klaasen, whose strike rate in the two games was 145, told a press conference on Thursday. He conceded that his innings in Worcester might have been cut short by a run out — “I think it was out; I need to buy the umpire a beer” — but was grateful for the support given him by Andile Phehlukwayo in his 67, which helped fuel a stand of 149 that flew off 99 deliveries. The partnership started after the visitors had slumped to 167/5 in the 30th over. “He took a lot of pressure off me when I got into an awkward stage of the innings,” Klaasen said. “He told me to just get to my hundred and he will take care of the rest, which he did.”

Klaasen and Phehlukwayo took their team into the 47th over together, and powered them to a total of 360/7. Keshav Maharaj had Will Smeed stumped and bowled Sam Hain in the first over of the Lions’ reply and without a run on the board, and they were dismissed for 253 in 38.2 overs. Things went better for the home side on Tuesday, when Smeed’s 56-ball 90 was one of three efforts of more than 50 in their 321/4, which overhauled the visitors’ 318/6 with 12.5 overs to spare.

The South Africans’ bowling has been less convincing, with no-one claiming more than three wickets across the two games and only Ngidi keeping the damage down to less than a run a ball.

But their compatriots know they can bank on the bowlers to bounce back once they get down to business in Durham on Tuesday. And on De Kock, if he’s passed fit to play, to do what he does almost as impressively as he catches fish.

First published by Cricbuzz. 

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Bewildered, beaten, bumped off World Cup path

“We went to sleep.” – Mark Boucher

Telford Vice | Cape Town

CRICKETMINDED South Africans had reason to celebrate on Tuesday night, when Cyril Ramaphosa, the country’s president, relaxed pandemic restrictions. Just in time for Wednesday’s deciding ODI in Centurion, stadiums could henceforth be filled to half their capacity and alcohol would be permitted. Less than 24 hours later, the party was properly pooped.

Bangladesh thrashed the home side, dismissing them for 154 and taking nine balls more than half their allotment of overs to triumph by nine wickets. Not for nothing are the visitors on top of the World Cup Super League standings, where they have now won 12 out of their 18 matches. The other side of that story is that the South Africans were outplayed in all departments and in their own conditions. Worse, they looked resigned to their fate long before it was sealed.

If you had braved the freeways that surround Centurion, which are some of the unloveliest and busiest of their sorry ilk, to support Temba Bavuma’s team in person, you would have been justified in demanding a refund for your time, money and effort. Good thing, then, that the majority of the crowd were cheering themselves hoarse in the cause of Bangladesh’s famous victory. The time, money and effort they spent on being there was worth it many times over — a small price to pay for the reward of a memory to treasure forever.

South Africa have been dismissed for fewer runs 11 times in the 318 ODIs in which they have batted first. But only thrice have they successfully defended smaller totals, and not since February 2000. They enjoyed a stable start to their innings with Janneman Malan and Quinton de Kock sharing 46 in the first 6.5 overs. But the latter’s dismissal started a slide of all 10 wickets for 108 runs in 30.1 overs. The last five crashed for 47 in 12.3. Only David Miller and Dwaine Pretorius, who put on 24 for the sixth wicket, were able to mount a partnership that was more than half the size of the openers’ effort. 

The Bangladeshis bowled with intelligence on a pitch of variable bounce, mixing their lengths to great effect. But the South Africans batted as if the surface held no terrors, and seemed bewildered when they paid the penalty for loose strokes. The contrast was as stark as it was strange.   

Taskin Ahmed showed on Friday, when he took 3/36, that he was a threat in these conditions. On Wednesday he dialled the danger up a notch or two, tearing into the crease with increasing enthusiasm to claim 5/35. Then Tamim Iqbal and Litton Das sped Bangladesh homeward with a dominating stand of 127 off 125. Tamim’s 82-ball 87 not out will live long as one of the most assured innings yet seen from a foreign player in South Africa.

That the home side had been discombobulated by their shambling batting was plain in the opening over of Bangladesh’s reply. Eight of the nine South Africa wickets had been taken from the Hennops River End. Yet Kagiso Rabada bowled the first over of the second innings from the Pavilion End. Rabada’s fourth delivery might have offered a reason why — Litton slapped the wide, short ball to backward point, where Keshav Maharaj dropped a catch he should have taken. That was the only significant error Bangladesh made on their march to an emphatic win. As Bavuma said in a television interview, “They really showed us how to play with the bat, the ball and in the field. We just weren’t good enough.” Mark Boucher was blunt in the press conference that followed: “We went to sleep.” 

Bangladesh have never known this joy. Of their 28 previous matches in South Africa across the formats before this tour, they had won only one: a 2007 World T20 game against West Indies at the Wanderers. They had rarely been competitive in their nine bilateral series in the country before this rubber. All told, of 71 bilateral series outside of Bangladesh they had won only 10. Just four of those — all against West Indies — had been achieved over heavyweight opponents. And now this. Not only did Bangladesh beat more or less the same personnel who routed India 3-0 in an ODI series in January, they beat them all ends up twice in six days to claim the rubber.

Suddenly, South Africa’s path to the 2023 World Cup looks dangerously cluttered. The top eight sides in the Super League standings will qualify for the tournament, and Bavuma’s side are currently ninth. Their remaining Super League fixtures are three games each against India, England and Australia, and two against the Netherlands. On the evidence of the Bangladesh series, only the points on offer in the Dutch matches can be considered safe.

The Bangladeshis can stop worrying about all that. Their presence at the next World Cup is assured, and deservedly so. You could hear as much in the happy clamour of their supporters, who all but drowned out questions to Bavuma and Boucher from reporters in the open-air pressbox.

Centurion wouldn’t have made money on beer sales to the teetotaller Tigers fans. Here’s hoping having been able to turn off the floodlights early helped even things up.

First published by Cricbuzz.

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Bavuma gets down to business

“You never want to make the work much harder for yourself, and that’s what seems to be happening.” – Kagiso Rabada on South Africa’s unhappy habit of losing series openers.

Telford Vice | Cape Town

TWO South Africa spinners! In an ODI! At the Wanderers! Actually, that’s not as rare as we might think. Including Sunday’s match against Bangladesh, the 38th in the format South Africa have played at this venue, they’ve deployed a pair of slow poisoners 11 times. That’s exactly as often as they haven’t bowled any spin in a Wanderers ODI, and five fewer times than they’ve deployed a lone tweaker.

So what? It’s a way into the unchained algorithm of factors that added layers of narrative to an unusually complex white-ball match; a contest that kept on giving. Events didn’t look like unspooling that interestingly when twitchy, trigger happy Bangladesh, no doubt looking to build on the 314/7 they scored in their triumph in Centurion on Friday, crashed to 34/5 inside 13 fateful overs on a pitch that didn’t often allow what seemed identical deliveries to behave the same way.

By then, Kagiso Rabada had taken 3/15 in six sniping overs, and Lungi Ngidi and Wayne Parnell had also struck in a significantly more successful new-ball burst than South Africa had enjoyed on Friday — when Tamim Iqbal and Litton Das shared 95 in an opening stand that endured into the 22nd over. Could the contrast between Friday and Sunday be ascribed entirely to the starkly different conditions?

“That’s the question I’m still asking myself,” Rabada told a press conference. “I thought we bowled very well in the first 10 overs in the previous game. We just couldn’t get a breakthrough. Generally at the Wanderers there’s a bit more bounce, and the cracks came into play initially. I’d say we got the ball in the right areas, as we did in Centurion, and the Wanderers was good to us.”

Given that kind of start, the visitors would be rattled out for around 100 and South Africa would cruise to a series-levelling win with a match to play and plenty of sunshine left in the day, surely. Too many ODIs are indeed that predictable, particularly when they’re played by men. Happily, Sunday’s wasn’t in that sad category.

The world turned on the fifth ball of the 15th over, when Parnell pulled up with a hamstring injury as he landed from his leap to bowl what would have been the last delivery of his third. Now what, considering South Africa had picked only five recognised bowlers?

Fast forward 33 overs to the start of the 49th, which was delivered by someone who hadn’t been asked to mark out a run up in any of his previous 82 matches for South Africa across the formats. In 398 first-class, list A and senior T20 matches, he had sent down fewer than 100 overs. And with his second ball on Sunday, frontline batter Rassie van der Dussen and his hardly ever spotted off-spin had Shoriful Islam caught on the long-on boundary. Apologies: allrounder Rassie van der Dussen. “He’ll definitely be throwing those remarks around the changeroom, 100%,” Rabada said with a smile. “He’s going to be asking for the ball.” All good, but how did we get here?

Until Parnell limped off, the presence in the XI of Tabraiz Shamsi as well as Keshav Maharaj had been all but moot. With Bangladesh reduced to 47/5 before either had turned their arms over, what was going to be left for them to do? Would they even be required to bowl? But that, of course, was no longer a relevant discussion. 

Temba Bavuma completed Parnell’s over, and on came Shamsi. Bavuma continued with his whippy medium pace, and while South Africa didn’t make further inroads in the 9.1 overs he bowled in tandem with Shamsi before Maharaj relieved his captain, the home side conceded just 32 runs in that time. Box ticked. 

Not quite: three of Parnell’s quota of overs still needed to be allocated. Bavuma’s first spell of 4.1 in which he limited the damage to 16 made him the prime candidate for the task, and there was no surprise when he returned 15 overs later. At least, there was no surprise from the distance of the boundary. “I needed a lot of convincing [to bowl],” Bavuma said in a television interview. “I might have to go see a chiropractor tomorrow.”

Rabada corroborated that: “[Bavuma] does bowl sometimes in the nets, especially when we’re playing Test cricket. But he’s stopped doing that because I think he realises how tough it is, and the next morning he’s got aches and pains which he’s always talking about. He’s actually a surprisingly decent bowler. He did a stellar job.”

Indeed, he did. But Bavuma will see more medics than just a chiro before the deciding match of the series in Centurion on Wednesday. At the end of the second over of his later spell — the last ball he would need to bowl — he injured a finger trying, and failing, to take a hard-hit return catch offered by Afif Hossain. He left the field and returned with his finger heavily strapped, and said he would undergo a scan in the coming days.

Bangladesh recovered to 194/9, thanks to Afif Hossain — who took guard on that precipice of 34/5 — standing firm in stands of 60 and 86 with Mahmudullah and Mehidy Hasan. They were able to do so partly because Maharaj wasn’t able to maintain the pressure that had been built earlier. His return of 0/57 marked only the fifth time in the 20 ODIs in which he has bowled that he has not taken a wicket. It was also his second-most expensive spell of 10 overs.

But, in the context of the match, that was hardly crucial. Rabada removed Afif and Mehidy in the space of three deliveries in the 46th over — his last — to finish with 5/39, his second five-wicket haul in his 82nd ODI bowling innings.

Rabada’s talent, skill and intelligence helped South Africa nail down victory by seven wickets in 37.2 overs. Quinton de Kock’s belligerent 41-ball 62, the opening stand of 86 he shared with Janneman Malan, and the 82 Bavuma put on with Kyle Verreynne — who made a sturdy unbeaten 58 — were also key. It was an impressive performance with bat, ball and, not least, Bavuma’s management of an on-field crisis — which looked set to deepen Ngidi’s status became a concern after he took knocks to the knee and the ankle in the field, noticeably impacting the threat he posed with the ball. But the comeback also came a game too late, and not for the first time.

South Africa have lost the opening match of a completed rubber 11 times in their last 14 series regardless of formats and including last year’s T20 World Cup in the UAE. They have bounced back to win six of those series, while losing six and drawing two. Better beginnings could rewrite that equation

“Resilience is a big thing for us, but you want to start a series well,” Bavuma said. “It’s not ideal having to claw your way back.” Rabada concurred: “It is a concern, because you always want to throw the first punch. It’s something we do talk about, but we keep finding ourselves in this position. You never want to make the work much harder for yourself, and that’s what seems to be happening. We don’t do it on purpose. It’s an area we need to try and figure out.”

If the answer to that question had been easy to find, it would have been by now.

First published by Cricbuzz.

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South Africa sizzle, India melt in Paarl’s kitchen

“I’m critical but stable.” – Janneman Malan after batting in the winelands’ heat.

Telford Vice | Paarl

SPICY steak burgers for lunch. Fancy an egg with that? No problem: we’ll use the edge of a bat to crack one onto the pitch and fry it. Won’t take longer than Temba Bavuma needs to dash a single. Yes, it was that hot in Paarl on Friday. 

As a blazing morning sank into a menacing afternoon, smoke rose beyond the ground from what must have been a bush fire. It disappeared into the blowtorch blue sky like a departing soul. The heat made everyday activities like eating and drinking feel unnatural. You were too scared to blink because your eyelids might melt together, and stay like that. From that you might deduce that thinking boiled the brain to mush.

But the umpires didn’t fall over, the scorers were able to count as unfailingly as ever, and the press did what they always did: not a lot. Even so, as the day reached peak unpleasantness at 39ºC, one among the latter — not of Cricbuzz’ parish — needed rehydration and medical attention, complete with blood and electrocardiogram tests. Happily, a clean bill of health was returned. Even, no doubt to the surprise of some, a heartbeat. There was, however, concern about the ink in the veins.

Despite all that, South Africa and India delivered 98.1 overs of cricket with what looked like their usual vigour. Bowlers charged in and bowled, batters hit and ran, fielders, chased and stopped and turned and threw. How?

“It felt way hotter than two days ago [during the first match of the series, which South Africa won by 31 runs],” Janneman Malan told an online press conference. “It’s always a challenge for the body to field and bat in conditions like these, but that’s what we work for and do conditioning for. I’m glad we could meet that challenge.”

He did that better than most, clipping a cool 91 before he gloved Jasprit Bumrah onto his stumps with South Africa steaming towards victory. Malan batted for more than two-and-a-half hours; longer than anyone else. “Maybe if I batted through I would have felt a sniper bullet in the leg,” he said, referring to the likelihood of cramp setting in. “I’m critical but stable.” 

Too often here in the civilian ranks we are blasé about the extraordinariness of the elite cricketer. Friday in Paarl, a day when pans were surplus to the equipment needed to fry eggs, was a reality check. Elite or not, in the mercifully air-conditioned dressing room after India’s innings, players took ice baths and some were fed what a South Africa team management source called “slowmag slushies”. 

While those went down, maybe some of the conversation would have been around Mark Boucher’s impending disciplinary hearing over allegations of racist conduct. Was there extra motivation to play for the popular but under-fire coach? “Every time we go out and play, we play for the team and everyone in the team and in the country as well,” Malan said. “That’s the responsibility we have. Nothing’s changed from that side. I don’t know how every individual felt, but we did our best to play for the team and the country.” Did the news, which broke on Thursday, hang over the match? “I don’t want to sound ignorant or uninterested, but it’s a big series so we can’t have many distractions in terms of personal mindsets. I just try to focus on the game.”   

Ah, focus. The amount of the stuff required to bat properly against quality bowling is immense at the best of times. On Friday, what with the political and actual weather, it would have been exponentially greater. Errors committed by bowlers, fielders, umpires, scorers and reporters don’t remove those pieces of the puzzle of a cricket match. But get it wrong at the crease and you’re likely to have to spend the rest of the innings stewing in your own frustration. Or, in Friday’s case, in your own juices. No-one is going to accept steepling temperatures as a mitigating factor.

So there should be a different level of appreciation for those who not only were in the middle long enough to make a difference, but to make it look as if they were batting on just another day against just another attack. Criticism of KL Rahul taking 79 balls to score 55 can go somewhere the sun don’t shine like it does in Paarl. Likewise can we all calm down about Virat Kohli’s limp drive to cover to record his 14th duck in 247 ODI innings? And show some respect for players as unlikeminded as Rahul and Rishabh Pant — who made a career-best 85 off 71 — holding it together well enough to share 111. Off 115 balls? Brilliant, all things considered. 

Save some love, too, for Malan’s effort, Quinton de Kock’s 78, and their run-a-ball stand of 132. And, not least, for Aiden Markram. Two balls before he and Rassie van der Dussen overhauled India’s 287/6, with seven wickets standing and 11 deliveries unbowled, Markram was at the non-striker’s end.

As Bhuvneshwar Kumar walked back to his mark, Markram, who has endured a torrid time against the Indians, scoring 76 runs in six innings in the Test series and four on Wednesday, sank to his haunches. By then he had been in the furnace for an hour; long enough to face 40 balls and score 36, and long enough to feel as if that was more than enough.

Van der Dussen defended the last delivery of that over. Back on strike with one to get to win the match and clinch the series with a game to spare, Markram mustered his resolve to face Shreyas Iyer. A punch to mid-off yielded a scamper for an ambitious single. And a dive, because a direct hit might have caused problems. Scampering! Diving! In this heat! For no good reason considering David Miller was padded up with Andile Phehlukwayo to come! Who did Markram think he was?!

A professional. A proud and dedicated professional. And neither fried nor scrambled.

First published by Cricbuzz. 

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Double tons for Zondo, Malan

Warriors, Lions, KZN Inland celebrate victory

Telford Vice | Cape Town

KHAYA Zondo has proven his point where it can never be taken away from him: on the field. In recent weeks his name has become code for being a victim of racial wrongdoing at the Social Justice and Nation-Building (SJN) hearings. On Saturday Zondo gave the game another reason to remember him by completing an undefeated 203 for the Dolphins in their division one match against Western Province at Newlands.

It was one of two double hundreds in the opening round of first-class fixtures, along with Janneman Malan’s 200 not out for Boland against the Knights in Bloemfontein. 

On July 22, Zondo gave testimony at the SJN in which he alleged race-based skulduggery in his omission from South Africa’s XI for the deciding ODI of a series in India in October 2015. Zondo was picked to replace David Miller, who had scored 52 runs in four innings, three of them completed, in the rubber. But Zondo did not play.

South Africa’s then captain, AB de Villiers, insisted Miller be retained because of his experience. The selector on tour, Hussein Manack, acquiesced. So Zondo was removed from the side. He might have kept his place after JP Duminy was ruled out through injury, but that prompted the inclusion of Dean Elgar — who had arrived in India to play in the Test series that was to follow — as a left-handed batter who could bowl spin.

Quinton de Kock, Faf du Plessis and De Villiers scored centuries in a total of 438/4. Miller came to the crease when Du Plessis retired hurt with cramp at the end of the 44th over. He made 22 not out off 12 balls. Elgar took guard with five balls left in the innings and scored five not out. He did not bowl in India’s collapse to 224 all out in 36 overs, sealing what remains South Africa’s only success in five bilateral ODI series in that country. 

The episode struck a nerve in South Africa, where black and brown players wrote to CSA complaining of being sent on tour to make up the transformation numbers in the squad and not being given the game time they deserved. Zondo has since played five ODIs, all in 2018, but believes the affair has stunted his career.

“It feels like things are constantly being done and it all feels like it stems from 2015,” he told the SJN. “I can’t even get into the South Africa A side. How? They complain about not having black batsmen. I’m a black batsman who scored two centuries [last] season, but they can’t seem to involve me. No other black batsman scored a century this year. My question is, what is it about me that they have such a big issue?

“The performances are not enough. Maybe it’s because I’m not tall enough. There are all sorts of reasons that are put. Things keep being done, over and over and over. It’s almost like they want to say, when my career is over, ‘See he only played five games [for South Africa]; he was never good enough.’”

On Saturday, the second day of the Newlands match, he showed he remains good enough, scoring 174 of his runs in the 68.4 overs the Dolphins faced before declaring. Zondo scored his 13th first-class century in his 205th innings. He marked reaching his maiden double ton by taking a knee — another nod, it will be seen, to 2015 and all that.

Zondo’s feat was the 54th double century seen in senior first-class cricket in South Africa since the advent of the franchise era in 2004/05. The system was restructured before the start of the 2021/22 season, when 15 provincially affiliated teams replaced the six franchises. The 55th double century followed on Monday, courtesy of Malan.

The Dolphins declared their first innings closed at 489/8 on Saturday, and slow left-armer Bryce Parson took 5/82 to help dismiss WP 220 runs behind. The follow-on was enforced, and the home side were 190/7 when rain ended the match.

The Titans beat the Warriors by one wicket in a first division clash in Centurion, where fast bowler Glenton Stuurman took 5/34 in the home side’s first innings of 134. Opener Edward Moore scored 110 in the visitors’ reply of 258. Sibonelo Makhanya and Jordan Hermann shared a century stand in the Titans’ second dig of 359, which left the Warriors a target of 236. Lesiba Ngoepe and Marco Jansen scored half-centuries and No. 9 Tiaan van Vuuren hit 32 not out off 34 balls. Van Vuuren and No. 11 Mthiwekhaya Nabe posted a stand 24 for the last wicket to seal victory.

At the Wanderers, the Lions beat North West by an innings and 72 runs in another division one game. The visitors were bundled out for 159 with Duanne Olivier and Lutho Sipamla sharing seven wickets. Ryan Rickleton’s 159 anchored the Lions reply of 408. North West crashed to 177 all out in 43.4 overs in their second innings. This time Olivier and Malusi Siboto split seven wickets. Olivier claimed match figures of 7/109.

Also in the first division, the Knights and Boland drew in Bloemfontein in a match that was robbed of its entire first day by rain. Pite van Biljon’s 137 bolstered the home side’s first innings of 320. Malan was 139 not out overnight, but it seemed his sturdy batting might be in vain when Boland shambled to 230/7. Enter No. 9 Ferisco Adams to score 127 and put on 260 with the double centurion, which resulted in a declaration at 520/9. The Knights were 143/2 when hands were shaken on the draw.

In two second division matches, KwaZulu-Natal Inland beat Easterns by an innings and 109 runs in Pietermaritzburg and Limpopo and Border drew in Polokwane. Luke Schlemmer scored 153 in the home side’s first innings of 440/6 declared and Easterns were dismissed for 107 in reply. They followed on, and off-spinner Michael Erlank took 5/67 as they were dismissed for 224. In Polokwane, Marco Marais made 146 in Border’s first innings of 392. Left-arm wrist spinner Thomas Kaber took 6/75 in Limpopo’s reply of 192. Border declared at 190/3 to set Limpopo 391 to win. They were 377/8 when stumps were drawn. The latter match was not first-class because it involved Limpopo, who have not been awarded that status.

First published by Cricbuzz.

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Domestic bliss or bother in 2021/22

15 into nine? Where be Dragons? Will Boland be WP’s noisy neighbours?

Telford Vice | Cape Town

DON’T look now, cricketminded South Africans, but the domestic season is upon us. You weren’t planning on looking? More’s the pity. Because the summer of 2021/22 could spark the change the game in this country so desperately needs. Or not.

For the past 17 seasons South Africa’s major competitions have been contested by six franchise teams, which were cobbled together from the 11 provincial unions that had previously represented the highest domestic level. Cricket will go back to the future on Friday with a T20 knockout tournament that will involve 15 provincial teams and the national under-19 side.

This season’s first-class and one-day competitions will feature the 15 provincial sides — split into two divisions — while the resurrected Mzansi Super League (MSL) will be restricted to the eight teams in the top division: Boland, Eastern Province, Free State, Gauteng, KwaZulu-Natal (KZN) Coastal, North West, Northerns and Western Province (WP). The second division will comprise Border, Easterns, KZN Inland, Limpopo, Mpumalanga, Northern Cape and South Western Districts (SWD). With the exceptions of Boland and North West, the top tier mirrors the bigger partners in the franchises that have been dissolved — things have, largely, stayed the same. And they will do for two seasons: the promotion and relegation component of the new structure won’t come into effect until after the 2023/24 campaign. 

But, this being South Africa, it’s not as simple as that. For one thing, 11 of the 21 second-division four-day matches will not be recognised as first-class. These games involve Limpopo or Mpumalanga, who have each played only eight matches at that level and none since 2006/07. For another thing, the country has, in geopolitical terms, nine provinces. How do we get from nine provinces to 15 provincial teams? By cramming the provinces with more than one team. The Western Cape is home to WP, Boland and SWD; Gauteng to Gauteng, Northerns and Easterns; KZN to the Coastal and Inland sides, and the Eastern Cape to Eastern Province (EP) and Border. Only Free State, Limpopo, Mpumalanga, Northern Cape and North West — the least populated provinces — have one team each.

That’s not the end of the complications. Some of those sides have opted to keep the names of the franchises of which they used to be part. Gauteng will play as the Lions, Northerns as the Titans, KZN Coastal as the Dolphins, Free State as the Knights and EP as the Warriors.

Other teams have invented new monikers. Boland would prefer to be known as the Rocks, Border as the Iinyathi, Easterns as the Storm, KZN Inland as the Tuskers, Limpopo as the Impalas, Northern Cape as the Heat, North West as the Dragons, and Mpumalanga as the Rhinos.

Only SWD and WP will be dear old SWD and WP — the former because a competition that the provincial board ran in the community to come up with a snappy name didn’t yield the desired result, and the latter chiefly because the feeling at Newlands is that WP is a strong enough identity. Indeed, some among the suits believe the Cobras brand, which the union was part of, detracted from what is represented by WP.

It’s a decent argument, and it asks an important question: the public didn’t warm to the teams created for the franchise era, so why do some unions want to retain the mostly uneasy memory of entities that no longer exist? And why have most of the other unions dreamt up other fake names when cricket has proved to itself that loyalty cannot be conjured by marketing departments? Didn’t those guilty of both these blunders get the memo that the franchises failed, not least because they represented nothing and no-one beyond logos? Little wonder ever fewer cricketminded South Africans notice when the domestic season comes around.  

Even so, some of the new branding makes sense. The Rocks echo the success that the Boland-based Paarl Rocks earned by winning the 2019 MSL; Iinyathi is the isiXhosa word for buffalo, a well-known emblem in the Border region; spectacular electrical storms are common in summer in Benoni, Easterns’ home; and it is indeed oppressively hot in Kimberley, where Northern Cape play.

But why not call yourself what you are, if only to avoid confusing your supporters? Those keeping tabs on KZN Inland, Limpopo, Mpumalanga and North West would be forgiven for skipping straight past reports and scorecards of matches played by the Tuskers, Impalas, Rhinos and Dragons. You could remedy the situation, but only by spending a lot of marketing money that smaller unions — and all of those immediately above are small — don’t have. 

For all that, there is reason to be hopeful that cricket in South Africa is on the verge of an age of repair and improvement after years of neglect and damage. Weird names aside, the teams will represent real regions and their people. There will be more opportunities for players to catch the national selectors’ eyes, even if the focus stays firmly on the first division. More matches, in every format, will be broadcast on television, albeit not on the free-to-air service. Viewers will have the option of commentary in isiXhosa, the first language of many more South Africans — and therefore of many more South African cricketers — than those whose mother tongue is English or Afrikaans. Stand by, isiXhosa speakers, for the delight of the views of Makhaya Ntini, Mfuneko Ngam and Monde Zondeki unfiltered through English. 

There will be concern that the changes haven’t been enough to retain the services of Hashim Amla and Vernon Philander, who were to have played for WP. Philander will be Pakistan’s bowling coach for the T20 World Cup while Amla, who played for Surrey this winter, hasn’t announced plans for the summer. 

But there will also be keen interest in whether erstwhile minnows Boland become WP’s noisy neighbours under new coach Adrian Birrell, especially with Kolpak returnees Stiaan van Zyl, Hardus Viljoen and Kyle Abbott on their books and Janneman and Pieter Malan having signed on.

North West have done well to secure the services of Dwaine Pretorius and Heino Kuhn, and the spotlight will be on another Kolpak couple, Duanne Olivier and Simon Harmer, at Gauteng and Northerns.

No-one can say whether the restructure will have the desired outcome of a healthier domestic system and thus a stronger international set-up. But, for the first time in 18 seasons, cricket in South Africa will look itself in the eye and see who and what it really is. That is a precious commodity without which no real progress can be made. Without reality, dreams can’t come true.

First published by Cricbuzz.

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Crunch time in Colombo

Sri Lanka have won six of their last 26 ODI series. South Africa have won 17 of 23 – including five that went to the wire.

Telford Vice | Cape Town

SRI Lanka will try to scratch a seven-year itch in the third ODI against South Africa at the R. Premadasa Stadium in Colombo on Tuesday. The visitors will hope to go to the happy place they’ve been to five times during those seven years.

You have to rewind to August 2014 to find the last series in the format that Sri Lanka clinched by winning a deciding last match. That’s more than seven years ago, and since then they’ve won only six of their 26 ODI rubbers all told. Most of their losses in that time have been comprehensive or something like it: only against Zimbabwe in June and July 2017 and against India in December that year did the rubber go down to the wire, and of course the Lankans lost both times.

The month before Sri Lanka’s 2014 success over Pakistan, South Africa earned a 2-1 win on the Asian island having taken a 1-1 scoreline into the third match, in Hambantota — the first of five ODI rubbers they have won from then by prevailing in a decider. Among them is a home series against England in February 2016, when South Africa lost the first two games before reeling off a hattrick of victories. After that trip to Sri Lanka in 2014, they have won 17 of their 23 rubbers, and lost just twice when the issue has been in the balance in the last match — against Bangladesh in July 2015 and Pakistan in April this year.

And here we are, on the cusp of another decider. Avishka Fernando’s 118 powered the Lankans to victory on Thursday. On Saturday Janneman Malan’s 121 and Tabraiz Shamsi’s 5/49 helped the South Africans level matters. If momentum really is a thing in sport — and we could talk about that for too long without reaching a conclusion — it has to be with the visitors.

Not only did they win with the series on the line, they did so without their captain, Temba Bavuma, who had his thumb broken by a throw from the field at a crucial stage of the first match. Also, they have lived to fight on Tuesday despite the absence from their ranks of Quinton de Kock, David Miller and Lungi Ngidi. Now for their next trick: can they win without Kagiso Rabada?

Only three times in the 79 ODIs in which he has bowled, and not since October 2016, has Rabada been more expensive than he was on Thursday, when he took 2/66 in nine overs. He bowled too short too often and paid the price. Two days later he proved he had learnt his lesson by claiming 2/16 from six overs — or 4.67 runs cheaper to the over than in the first game. But in the process he turned an ankle and is in doubt for Tuesday.

It would be a cruel blow to a team now without four central figures to lose a fifth. News from the South Africa camp on Monday was that Rabada was “progressing well” and that he would “do a final fitness test before the match”.

If he doesn’t make it we could find out whether Anrich Nortjé has also had a rethink about bowling too short on Thursday, when he went wicketless for 69 in 10 overs — his second-most expensive analysis in his dozen bowling innings. South Africa have Junior Dala, Beuran Hendricks and Lizaad Williams in their squad, but only Nortjé has Rabada-level gas.

Sri Lanka will want to find a way to put more pressure on South Africa’s batters, particularly in the graveyard shift in the middle of the innings. From overs 10 to 40 they have claimed only four wickets in the two matches. The visitors have struck 10 times during those overs.

The home side will also want more stability at the crease, having been reduced to 4/61 inside 15 overs on Saturday. Bhanuka Rajapaksa looks likely to be made a scapegoat for this problem, having faced six balls and scored no runs in the series. Take your pick between Dinesh Chandimal and Kamindu Mendis to fill the vacancy. Chandimal, a stalwart of 149 ODIs, surely has the edge over Mendis, who hasn’t managed to get into double figures in any of his three innings.

Push is about to come to shove in the series. Both teams know what that feels like. One of them, it seems, is more comfortable than the other under that kind of pressure. But the Sri Lankans won’t have forgotten how they won on Thursday. Another day, another game.

When: Tuesday September 7, 2021. 2.30pm Local Time  

Where: R. Premadasa Stadium, Colombo

What to expect: Similar conditions to the first two games, which were also played there — a touch of turn but nothing untoward on a slow but solid surface. And lots of running between the wickets because of the big boundaries. Also, morning rain, which should clear up by gametime.

Team news

Sri Lanka: The struggling Bhanuka Rajapaksa should be replaced by Dinesh Chandimal or Kamindu Mendis.

Possible XI: Avishka Fernando, Minod Bhanuka, Dinesh Chandimal, Dhananjaya de Silva, Charith Asalanka, Dasun Shanaka, Wanindu Hasaranga, Chamika Karunaratne, Akila Dananjaya, Dushmantha Chameera, Praveen Jayawickrama

South Africa: First prize would be for Kagiso Rabada to be declared fit. If he isn’t, Anrich Nortjé would be the best replacement. 

Possible XI: Aiden Markram, Janneman Malan, Reeza Hendricks, Rassie van der Dussen, Heinrich Klaasen, Wiaan Mulder, George Linde, Andile Phehlukwayo, Keshav Maharaj, Kagiso Rabada, Tabraiz Shamsi

What they said

“I coached Mark Boucher, and I know Mark Boucher was big on sweep, sweep, sweep. That’s how he played. Whether it be a conventional sweep, a lap or a reverse sweep, their guys have played it very well.” — Mickey Arthur on why South Africa have prospered against Sri Lanka’s spinners. 

“It’s a mindset. Even in the first game they played well but we leaked [runs] with the ball. The guys are playing well and contributing. We’d love to play our best game here and come out on top.” — Reeza Hendricks hopes South Africa bring Saturday’s performance to the ground on Tuesday, not Thursday’s.

First published by Cricbuzz.

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Hope grows wings for SA

“We don’t want to have a one-in-a-thousand kind of day. We want to have targets that we can hit.” – Janneman Malan

Telford Vice | Cape Town

DEATH came to Colombo on Saturday. It settled silently on the outfield at the R. Premadasa Stadium and lay there unnoticed until the 37th over of the second ODI, when the gloved hands of a member of the groundstaff carried it away with dignified gentleness.

What made the bird choose that spot of Sri Lanka’s lush earth to breathe its last? Maybe it didn’t have the strength to keep flying. Perhaps it had hoped to make a last meal of the myriad madly swarming insects that made the broadcast of the match look as if it had pixelated. Might it have been an aficionado of the game looking for a beloved place to die?

If so, and assuming it was a Sri Lankan supporter, there was mercy in it meeting its demise when it did. That way, it did not have to see Janneman Malan bat through five partnerships — sharing 96 off 112 with Reeza Hendricks and 86 off 54 with Heinrich Klaasen — to complete his third century in eight ODI innings, a polished and poised 121. It didn’t have to cringe at the Lankans’ fielding falling apart in the last 10 overs of South Africa’s innings, which yielded 97 runs. Or wince at Dushmantha Chameera, who started the last over on a hat-trick, promptly suffering a no-ball, a four cracked through extra cover by format debutant George Linde, and a wide. Neither did our dearly departed feathered friend have to countenance the Lankans losing their top order to a near rampant Kagiso Rabada and Wiaan Mulder inside six overs of their reply.

With that went the home side’s hopes of reaching the target of 284 in the 47 overs both innings were originally reduced to by rain. Instead, after the weather revised the equation further to 265 off 41, they shambled to 197 all out in 36.4 to set up a series decider at the same venue on Tuesday. Charith Asalanka’s 69-ball 77, his second career-best in as many innings following his 72 on Thursday, was Sri Lanka’s only response of note that came before the result was assured.

South Africa showed exponential improvement, particularly with the ball, from the performance they delivered in the first ODI. Rabada, in particular, re-invented himself from two days ago. Gone was the huffer and puffer who insisted on bowling too short for his team’s own good. In his place was the intelligent rapier South Africans have long known Rabada to be: jagging the ball off a good length, bullying batters with his bouncer, and keeping them guessing about what would come next. Worryingly for South Africa he left the field late in the match with a sprained ankle. “He will be assessed overnight and an update will be provided in due course,” was the word from the dressing room. Tabraiz Shamsi, too, needed to redeem himself after bowling with more emotion than execution on Thursday. He did by taking 3/28 in his first five overs of a haul of 5/49 — not only his best effort in the format but the best by a South African in Sri Lanka.

Of course, the attack needed runs to bowl at. Malan collected his runs inexorably with crisp strokes all around the wicket. Indeed, his own body proved the greater threat to his continued presence at the crease than the bowlers. Having heaved the 130th ball he faced to midwicket, he collapsed on the pitch with cramp. Malan ran 65 singles, four twos and two threes. That’s extreme in humidity intense enough to make the sweat dripping off his chin easily visible. Unsurprisingly, Kyle Verreynne did Malan’s fielding for him. “All credit to my partners who kept me going in the middle,” a resurrected Malan said in his post-match interview. Hendricks, playing his first ODI in almost 17 months, looked like he had never been away and made 51. Klaasen did what Klaasen does: hit the ball like blazes. His 43 flew off 27 balls.

Importantly, South Africa’s batters seem to have prompted a rethink by their opponents, as articulated by Dasun Shanaka: “Our death bowling has improved a lot but I think, in the coming games, I might use fast bowlers more.”

Once a decent pile of runs was in the book, clever captaincy was required for the visitors to keep the advantage. Keshav Maharaj, standing in for Temba Bavuma, who broke his thumb on Thursday, answered that call and more. Maharaj was intensely invested in maintaining his team’s dominance, and in controlling the narrative of the match. He made canny bowling changes, used his referrals cannily, and looked every inch a leader.

“Hope”, Emily Dickinson wrote 160 years ago, “is the thing with feathers.” It’s doubtful anyone who was on the field on Saturday reads 19th century American poetry. But they know hope when they see it. And feathers. Is it that difficult to put them together in the imagination?

Not for Malan, who told an online press conference: “We have realistic goals and expectations. We don’t want to have a one-in-a-thousand kind of day. We want to have targets that we can hit, and if we can hit them we have a good chance of winning the game.”

That’s prosaic rather than poetic, but it’s not for the birds.

First published by Cricbuzz.

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