Rossouw rocks as SA roll Bangladesh …

… but Bavuma still blue. 

Telford Vice / Sydney Cricket Ground

THE bespectacled fella in the Virat Kohli shirt who caught the six that Rilee Rossouw heaved over square leg into the Bill O’Reilly Stand to take South Africa past 100 in their T20 World Cup match against Bangladesh at the SCG on Thursday didn’t do the obviously urgent.

Instead of throwing the ball more or less back from whence it came with something like haste he looked at his prize for a long moment. Maybe he was asking himself: “What would Virat do?” Then he hurried a few paces along a row of seats, picked up a phone and snapped a selfie. Only after that apparently essential act did he do the needful.

As if that wasn’t a neon enough sign of changing times, immediately Tristan Stubbs came to the crease in the 15th over he reverse swept Afif Hossain for four as matter-of-factly as if he was checking his social media feeds. If the kids are hitting first-ball fours like that after an hour spent sitting in the dugout, they’ll be alright.

At 29, Soumya Sakar isn’t quite a kid. But he flicked the first ball he faced over square leg for six nevertheless. And the second. That those full, legside deliveries were served up by Kagiso Rabada, who bowled Soumya and had him caught at second slip for nine and three the only other time the players have clashed — in a Test in Bloemfontein in October 2017 — spoke volumes for the Bangladeshi’s skill and confidence.

Sadly, Stubbs lasted only seven balls and Soumya just six. Rossouw, a more old-fashioned thumper of a batter, stuck around for 56 to make his second century in as many T20I innings and his highest score — 109 — to power South Africa to 205/5, their highest T20I total against Bangladesh. 

All of 163 of those runs flew off the bats of Quinton de Kock and Rossouw, the third-highest stand for South Africa in their 162 T20Is. They faced a touch more than 70% of the innings together and scored almost 80% of the runs. Rossouw showed a level of belligerence at Bangladesh’s largely flaccid bowling that made even De Kock’s 38-ball 63 look pedestrian.

The largely Bangladesh-supporting crowd started the match by applauding dot balls. By the time Rossouw dabbed a single to short midwicket to nab the strike at the end of the 15th over, there might have been a smattering applause for that, too. At least, if you follow the fans’ logic, it wasn’t another four or six.

When Rossouw reached three figures, in the 17th with a single past point off Shakib Al Hasan, he screamed and wielded his bat like a broadsword and sank to both knees on the outfield and, perhaps, prayed and raised a fist. When he was back on his feet he pointed his bat, with purpose, his green blood pumping hard, at the dugout. Was he ever really a Kolpak player? Was he ever away? Has he finally learnt to spell Russell Domingo’s name?

That done, Rossouw eased the next ball he faced many metres over long-on for his eighth six. Soon he was rapping his gloved hand against his bat in time to the music coming from the stadium loudspeakers. After he blipped a catch to cover off Shakib 10 balls from the end of the innings, he allowed himself a long and celebratory walk away from the 90 minutes of freedom he had experienced in the middle. He was a picture of excited contentment, if such a thing is possible.

The contest was effectively decided at the innings break. Bangladesh’s required runrate, 10.3 at the start of their reply, climbed past two runs a ball after eight overs and reached 20 after 14, by which time they had slumped to 85/8 on their way to being dismissed, rudely, for 101. Anrich Nortjé and Tabraiz Shamsi claimed a combined haul of 7/30, and Nortjé’s 4/10 is his career-best.

South Africa’s unalloyed triumph took the edge off the unsatisfying end to their match against Zimbabwe in Hobart on Tuesday, which was washed out on the cusp of victory. But one among them did not depart the SCG entirely satisfied.

Temba Bavuma left the first ball of the match — bowled by Taskin Ahmed — squeezed two through point, pulled flatly to mid-on for no run, blocked the next delivery, inside edged the one after that past his stumps, and feathered the last ball of the over and was caught behind. The Bangladeshis’ appeal was still in the air as Bavuma’s chin sunk into his chest. He tucked his bat under his arm and, without looking at anyone, including the umpire, walked.

As long as South Africa keep winning, and assuming he doesn’t bat his way back into form soon, Bavuma will be able to keep a lid on his disappointment. He can thank Rossouw, Nortjé and Shamsi for helping him do so this time. But, when he turns out the light in his hotel room on Thursday, the dread will be there in the dark waiting for him.

First published by Cricbuzz.

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All aboard Rilee Rossouw’s roller coaster

“I’m a very passionate man and getting across the line meant a lot to me.” – Rilee Rossouw

Telford Vice / Sydney Cricket Ground

NOT long ago Rilee Rossouw didn’t have a ticket to board the roller coaster that cricket had become for him. Now he’s at the controls, keeping things on track for ever higher highs. Like he did at the SCG on Thursday, when he scored a career-best 109 off 56 balls to power South Africa to an emphatic win over Bangladesh in the T20 World Cup.

That followed the 100 not out he made in a T20I against India in Indore on October 4, his previous international innings. The only other player to score two consecutive centuries in T20Is is Gustav McKeon, who made 109 and 101 in the space of three days for France against Switzerland and Norway in the T20 World Cup Sub Regional Europe Qualifier in Finland in July. Rossouw’s feat is a somewhat bigger deal.

The stand of 163 he shared with Quinton de Kock on Thursday was the centrepiece of his team’s total of 205/5. The shellshocked Bangladeshis crashed to 101 all out with Anrich Nortjé and Tabraiz Shamsi taking seven wickets between them.

On reaching his century, Rossouw swung his bat wildly and let loose a yawp of uncut feelings. Then he thumped the badge on his chest using his bat. Then he sank to both knees on the outfield, held up a hand, and appeared to say a prayer. Clearly, the innings carried great emotional significance for him.

“I’m a very passionate man and getting across the line meant a lot to me,” Rossouw told a press conference. “It meant a lot to my family back home. It’s been a good rollercoaster ride just to play for South Africa again. It’s been amazing.”

It seemed Rossouw’s international career was over when he signed a Kolpak contract with Hampshire in January 2017. That meant he could play county cricket as a local rather than among a limited number of overseas professionals, but also that he could not play for South Africa. The Kolpak door shut when the United Kingdom left the European Union at the end of 2020. But another door opened. Or reopened: international cricket was back on the radar for players like Rossouw. His career for South Africa, which stalled in October 2016 after 51 white-ball games, has lengthened by eight matches this year.

“When you give up your right to play for your country you expect that that is your last chance,” Rossouw said. “Every moment that you play for your country you’ve got to cherish. I’m super proud, not just for me but for my family back home. It’s been a great journey. It’s been a long journey, but it’s not finished yet hopefully.”

Rossouw has had 52 white-ball innings at all levels in the past 12 months. Besides his two centuries he has passed 50 13 times, which includes seven scores of more than 70 and two in the 90s. In his second appearance back in a South Africa shirt, a T20I against England in Cardiff in July, he made an unbeaten 96.

Had he expected to return to the international game? “Not at all. Sometimes things go your way, and this year has been an unbelievable roller coaster ride for me. I’m so proud to be sitting here. I never thought I would be in a million years.”

Shamsi, who took 3/20 on Thursday, watched Rossouw’s innings unfold with special interest: “I’m quite close to Rilee, and he’s somebody who enjoys the big time. Some people go into their shell. Others enjoy being out there and seeing the crowd and the big stadiums and the people. He’s one of those guys who thrives on that kind of stuff, and we can see that. It’s a World Cup, it’s a big occasion and that pumps him up. We’re just happy we don’t have to bowl to him in games.

“You and I don’t know what he’s going through at home. We’re all away from our kids and our families. To be able to perform, of course emotion will come out. We’re all doing things for other people. It’s not just for ourselves. You guys are working for someone, we’re working for someone. It’s nice to see that emotion and care.”

Rossouw scored more than half his runs — 58 — off the four spinners Bangladesh deployed. Time was when South Africans and success against slow bowling were dots that weren’t easily connected. Rossouw has bucked that trend by becoming a well-travelled T20 professional for hire. Consequently he has played more T20s — 119 — on more grounds — 21 — in the slow, turning conditions of Asia and the United Arab Emirates, including in the IPL, the PSL and the BPL, than in any other part of the world. In South Africa, for instance, he has played only 74 T20s on 11 grounds.  

“It’s something in which I’ve definitely improved, because I’ve played a lot of cricket in the subcontinent,” he said of his prowess against spin. “I feel more comfortable now than what I used to in my twenties. 

“The more you play against it, the more comfortable you get. That’s the case with everything you do in life — the more you do it the more you get used to it. And handling the different pressure situations; being in the subcontinent when the pitches are turning. You’ve got to expose yourself to that type of environment and I’ve been fortunate enough, in the last six or seven years of my career, to be in that position. It’s made me a better player.”

But the key to his overall game was simplicity: “It doesn’t matter what stage you’re playing on — at the World Cup or back home. Just try and see the little white ball and hit the little white ball. It doesn’t matter who’s running in. Obviously some people have made names for themselves in cricket and you’ve got to take that into consideration. But at the end of the day someone’s bowling the ball to you and you’ve got to hit it.”

The SCG has been kind to Rossouw at international level. He scored 51 here on his first visit, an ODI against Australia in November 2014, and 61 when he returned to play a World Cup match in February 2015. The world remembers that game because of AB de Villiers’ 66-ball undefeated 162, but he and Rossouw shared a stand of 134 of which De Villiers scored 68 and Rossouw 60, each off 38 balls.

“I won’t forget that game,” Rossouw said with a smile. “I still think I’m taking credit for AB’s knock because I got him into such a great mind space. So I’m patting myself on the back there. No-one knows that, so keep it like that, please.” 

Sydney will get another look at him in the BBL in December and January — this time as a local player: “I am very excited to play for the Sydney Thunder, but I have not thought that far ahead. I’m just trying to focus on the here and now and stay in the moment. So take this World Cup as it comes, first. Then it’s T10 [in Abu Dhabi in November and December], and then only Big Bash.”

Having scored South Africa’s first century in a T20 World Cup and only the 10th overall, and become just the second player to score centuries in two straight T20I innings, Rossouw’s roller coaster has a way to go. For now, that way is up. And only up.

First published by Cricbuzz.

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Simon Harmer then, now and tomorrow

“It’s still ingrained in a lot of cricket cultures that spinners almost shouldn’t bowl; that it’s a fast bowler’s game.” – Simon Harmer, recovering fast bowler.

Telford Vice /Old Trafford

SOMETHING about Simon Harmer seems off. He’s at the other end of a video call, looking like he always does. But also not. For one thing, he isn’t wearing sunglasses. For another, he’s in an Essex shirt. For still another, it’s mid-April. Or more than two months before South Africa’s squad for the Test series in England is announced.

Harmer is talking from a hotel room in Birmingham after a training session the day before the start of a match against Warwickshire. He should, therefore, be in an Essex shirt. But that’s what’s wrong with this picture: it’s not a South Africa shirt.

How quickly the subliminal narrative changes. Since Harmer played the first of his 185 matches for Essex, in April 2017, he has appeared for South Africa only three times, including the Old Trafford Test. Thus we should regard him as an Essex player exponentially more than as a South Africa player. But, emotionally, for many South Africans, that is impossible.

Especially not in the wake of his successful return to the international arena in the Test series against Bangladesh in March and April. Keshav Maharaj was the headline hero with 16 wickets in the two matches, but Harmer was only three off that pace. No other South Africa bowler took more than four.

Less measurably, more viscerally, Harmer’s bristling presence evokes Allan Donald, Dale Steyn, or Kagiso Rabada. Aggression sparks from his serrated blond fringe as he darts for the crease, where he bursts into a whirl of electric urgency. He bowls as if he might hurt someone, not just dismiss them. He couldn’t be more South African if he tried. Or, in another sense, less. Who does the off-spinner think he is impersonating a fast bowler in a country that brims with some of the best speed merchants?

“I grew up as a fast bowler,” Harmer told Cricbuzz. “I idolised the South African quicks — Allan Donald, Shaun Pollock, Dale Steyn, Jacques Kallis. Only when I got to halfway through high school, when I was about 15, did I realise I was never going to bowl express pace. My batting was keeping me in teams, but I felt like I could add more. That’s when the experiment with bowling spin started.”

So, he’s a recovering fast bowler. That helps explain his attitude on the field. But there’s more to his sustained success than that: “When you go to a net session you’ll always see a fast bowler bowling spin and you’ll see a spin bowler bowling fast. You always want what you don’t have. But coaches realised there was something there: I could turn the ball. With fast bowlers, you can either bowl fast or you can’t. It’s very similar — you can’t teach a spinner to turn the ball. They’ve either got it or they don’t. You can teach control, but not putting revs on the ball. That foundation of fast bowling helped me so much with my spin bowling in terms of my positions at the crease, etcetera. It was the right progression rather than bowling spin from when I was young.”

His former life in the game has informed other aspects of how he plays, including unusually intense bowling mechanics for a spinner: “I need to get energy onto the ball, and in order to do that I need to generate momentum to the crease. If I’m too slow, I feel like I’m relying too much on my action at the crease. If I’ve got some momentum going to the crease — which maybe stems from my fast-bowling days — I feel like it allows me to think about what I’m trying to do with the ball, versus thinking about what my left arm’s doing or where my head’s going.”

The allround package is an attacking off-spinner; a modern rarity, especially outside Asia. In South Africa, in particular, spinners of any sort haven’t often been deployed as wicket-takers. They’re tasked with keeping it tight if they even get a bowl in the first innings, and if they’re lucky and the pitch deteriorates they’ll see more action later in the match. But most of the responsibility for dismissing the opposition still rests with seam bowlers. At least, that’s how it used to be.

For the past five seasons, the most successful bowler in South Africa’s first-class competition has been a spinner. Twice, that spinner has been Harmer. Once, Maharaj. Slow bowlers have occupied four places among the top five wicket-takers twice, and three times also twice. The equation is skewed by the fact that South Africa’s quality quicks don’t play much domestic first-class cricket. Rabada, for instance, featured in only two such games in the country during the same five seasons. But it is also true that confidence in the threat posed by spin is growing.

Harmer has done his bit to make that happen — especially in South Africa but also in England, where he took 308 wickets at 20.19 in 64 first-class matches for Essex from 2017 to 2021. Harmer was the leading wicket-taker in the first division of the county championship twice in those five years, and finished out of the top five only once. So far this year, he is the leading spinner in the competition with 46 wickets from nine matches. 

Why was attacking off-spin having its moment? “The cricketing world has evolved a lot from where it was maybe 15, 20 years ago, and orthodox spinners have come a long way as well. Graeme Swann did it to an extent in his international career and if you look at what Nathan Lyon’s done, there’s a strong case to make to say spin is becoming very important in how teams are made up. In terms of balancing attack versus control, teams and bowling coaches are starting to realise that having an attacking spin option in your XI brings a dynamic that people are enjoying and is helping teams to be successful.”

No-one appeared in more Tests for England, bowled more overs or took more wickets than Swann, who took 255 wickets in 60 matches, when he was in their XI — and often in an attack that included James Anderson and Stuart Broad. Something similar is true of Lyon, who is still at it after 110 Tests in which he has taken 438 wickets. That’s 160 more than second-placed Mitchell Starc, who has played 41 fewer Tests and bowled 2,446.3 fewer overs than Lyon.

But the battle for spin remains a long way from won in countries like South Africa, despite the evidence of recent seasons. “It’s still ingrained in a lot of cricket cultures that spinners almost shouldn’t bowl; that it’s a fast bowler’s game,” Harmer said. If you’re not an off-spinner, nevermind not an attacking off-spinner, you may be puzzled. Aren’t offies the second-class citizens of cricket, begging for a bowl in the queue behind the quicks, the wrist spinners and the left-arm orthodoxes? Aren’t they always waiting for a left-hander to arrive so they can finally turn the ball away from the bat?

Good luck telling Harmer that: “I feel a lot more in the game against right-handers than I do bowling to left-handers. Yes, the ball is turning away [from left-handers] but there’s a lot more I feel I can do with the ball in the air to a right-hander, and bring fielders catching around the bat into the game, than you can necessarily do with left-handers.”

That squares with the fact that, in Harmer’s first seven Tests, 18 of his wickets have been those of left-handers and 15 of right-handers. He’s taken most of them wearing sunglasses, a quirk he knows doesn’t sit well everywhere in the game. And which has become more than an affectation.

“I know it can come across as arrogant. But growing up and seeing my idols wearing Oakley sunglasses, all I ever wanted was a pair of Oakley sunglasses. Then guys like Graeme Swann, Johan Botha and Shane Warne started bowling in sunglasses. That’s probably where it stems from. I feel so uncomfortable now when I don’t have them on. They’ve become almost like a safety net. I feel like the batters can see where my eyes are going.

“I almost feel a bit insecure when I don’t have my sunglasses on. I feel a lot more comfortable in my own skin [wearing sunglasses]. As I’ve got older, probably because I play with sunglasses, my eyes have become more sensitive. So I probably rely on them more than I did at the start of my career. But the root of it was seeing all these guys who I idolised growing up wearing sunglasses.”

Harmer wouldn’t be asked to explain his thing for shades, and everything else about his career, if it wasn’t for Essex. Too much has been made of Harmer’s decision to go Kolpak with them in 2016, not least because he didn’t do himself any favours in justifying his move. Lost in that often spiteful conversation is the fact that English cricket has the resources and the focus to get the best out of players like no other arm of the global cricket industry.

That’s been true since Tony Greig left the Eastern Cape in the early 1970s as a distinctly ordinary allrounder and was transformed, by Sussex, into a daring, dashing captain who retired with a Test batting average of 40.43. Then came Allan Lamb, Chris and Robin Smith, and Kevin Pietersen. They were followed by Matt Prior and Jonathan Trott. None of them would likely have reached the heights they did had they remained loyal to South African cricket — not because they’re white but because the game in their country simply isn’t developed enough to find, nevermind keep, enough of its better players.

It used to be that apartheid-induced isolation prompted privileged players to look to England. Then Kolpak opened a door that was shut at the end of 2020, which would have come as a relief for CSA. The shoddy way cricket was being run in the country and the impact of the pandemic on the economy far beyond cricket have further shrunk the game in South Africa. If a clearer and more viable route to England existed, doubtless South Africans would be lining up to take it. 

“The English game, because of the funding, is comprised basically of international teams who operate at domestic level,” Harmer said. “At Essex, who I don’t think are up there with the highest-earning counties, it’s a 6,500-seater ground. But you have two physios at home games, you have a batting coach, bowling coach, head coach. You’ve got sports psychologists who come in for a certain number of days per year, you’ve got strength and conditioning people. It’s so much more professional.

“Coming into an environment like that made me realise I needed to raise my standards. Because I could see how these guys operated. It helped me rediscover what made me successful — be hardworking, find ways to get better and evolve as a cricketer. It all comes together in county cricket.

“There’s so much bad press going around about county cricket and how it’s causing English cricket to be this, that and the next thing. But from an outsider’s perspective and as a professional cricketer, they don’t know how good what they have here is. I fell in love with cricket again because of my time at Essex. It’s a lot deeper than just walking into a professional environment; it motivated me to want to be better and contribute more.”

Take a bow, county cricket and especially Essex, for giving back to South Africa a player who, at 33, is as close as he is going to get to complete. So close that he and Maharaj, who since his debut in November 2016 has taken more wickets for South Africa than everyone except Rabada, are mentioned in the same breath. Harmer doesn’t consider that a rivalry, a view backed by the frequent sight of him and Maharaj in close conversation as they walk across the training ground together.       

“There’s been chat around me versus him, but what about me and Keshav; not me versus Keshav? He’s done unbelievably well in international cricket. I don’t think anybody can question that. South Africa have traditionally gone in with a fast-bowling allrounder, and I think the discussion is now starting about a spin-bowling allrounder. It’s a hell of an opportunity.

“There is competition in terms of both of us pushing one another to be better. I don’t think I’m ever going to take ‘Kesh’s spot in the team. But I hope the way we train together and bowl together in games is naturally pushing one another to be better. You want to win Test matches, so there isn’t an element of me wanting to out-perform Keshav.

“Cricket is a performance-based sport, and there are going to be days when I do well and days when I do badly. I wouldn’t say there’s competition against one another, but it creates competition in our training that we’re always pushing one another to find ways to be better.”

Harmer probably didn’t think, when he said that, that South Africa would have shambled to 76/5 by the time he took guard at Old Trafford on Thursday. Or that Dean Elgar would be banking on him and Maharaj keeping the visitors in the game. That’s if the contest is alive come the fourth innings.

If it is, it could be a game made for an attacking off-spinner.

First published by Cricbuzz.

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Changes for Elgar’s team, but assets, resources, options still key

“I want the responsibility. I’m sure someone else would have said the easier option is to be the stand-in captain. But I’m not that way inclined.” – Dean Elgar

Telford Vice / Catania, Sicily

WORDS flow freely from Dean Elgar, and his stream of consciousness was typically strong during a press conference on Monday ahead of South Africa’s Test series in England. But three words bubbled up more often than most: assets, resources and options.

Here’s Elgar on Ryan Rickleton, who scored two centuries, a 95 and three half-centuries in eight first-class innings for Northamptonshire in June and July: “The way he’s played has been a massive confidence booster for him, and the way we view him now is as a stronger candidate to hold a position in the side. He’s done everything the right way; he’s put the numbers on the board. He’s another asset for us as a squad.”

And on Anrich Nortjé, South Africa’s leading wicket-taker in the ODI series against England last month: “The way he bowled in the white-ball games and the way he’s bowled in the nets is big for us. He brings a whole different kind of pace to the table. In the UK if you have those kind of assets you need to use them in the best way you see fit.”

Rickleton and Nortjé will be prominent in the selection conversation going into the first Test at Lord’s, which starts next Wednesday. Even more so because other key assets, resources and options have been or could be removed from the equation.

Since the start of 2021 no South Africa batter has had a higher Test average than Temba Bavuma and only Elgar has scored more runs. During the same period no bowler has taken more wickets for the team in the format than Kagiso Rabada, and among the seamers only Lungi Ngidi’s average is lower. But Bavuma will miss the series because of an elbow injury and Rabada is in doubt with damaged ankle ligaments.

“Workload is the biggest concern — whether he can carry himself throughout a Test match, with the intensity and the volume of overs in a day’s play,” Elgar said about Rabada’s chances of playing at Lord’s. “For now he’s doing all the right things.”

Here he is on filling Bavuma’s berth: “We have three guys who are up for that option in Aiden Markram, Rassie van der Dussen and Khaya Zondo. The good thing is we do have resources.” And assets, of course.

It’s a whole new ballgame for Elgar compared to the last time he captained a Test team in England. Lord’s was also the venue where, in July 2017, he stood in for Faf du Plessis, who was on paternity leave. England won Elgar’s first match in charge by 211 runs with a day to spare, and when Du Plessis returned Elgar happily handed back the leadership — at a press conference both attended, Elgar peeled off an imaginary armband and, with a wry smile, offered it to Du Plessis, who didn’t struggle to get the joke. “There’s a lot of things in captaincy you don’t see as a player,” Elgar said at the time. “He’s laughing ’cause he knows it’s true.”

Now all of those things, seen and unseen, are on Elgar’s shoulders. The buck has stopped with him since he was appointed Test captain in March last year. Did he prefer being able to shrug off the challenges that came with the job, as he was able to do in 2017? Or would he rather be in the position permanently, and thus have more say in the direction the team takes?

“Being the appointed captain is possibly easier,” Elgar said on Monday. “You’ve got more control and you can arrange things accordingly. You can almost give the players more time, more love, going into a match. I want the responsibility. I’d like to think what we’ve created over the last year, and what I’ve learnt over the last year of captaining in international cricket, has given me a lot more resources going into this series. I’m sure someone else would have said the easier option, and the route they would choose, is to be the stand-in captain. But I’m not that way inclined.” So far, so good: as a permanent captain Elgar has presided over three victories and only one loss in five series.

Another change from 2017 is that Elgar will have all of South Africa’s fit assets, resources and options available to him. The Kolpak era ended in December 2020, and with it went the counties’ power to ban some of the foreigners on their books from playing international cricket. That’s why South Africa’s squad includes former Kolpakians Duanne Olivier and Simon Harmer. “It would be stupid not to use them,” Elgar said. “Even if they don’t play they’re great for the changeroom from an information point of view.”

A more recent difference is that this will be South Africa’s first away Test series since the lifting of most Covid-19 restrictions. Elgar welcomed the more relaxed environment: “It’s about putting the guys in a better mental space and allowing them the freedom and responsibility to be a human being. It’s great to be able to walk around in the streets without a mask. It’s like going back to civilisation and being human again.”

Elgar will want change in another area, what with South Africa having lost the first Test three times in their last five series. “I’ve made the guys aware that starting slowly against tough opposition away from home is clearly not the game plan,” Elgar said. “Playing catch-up is not easy in Test cricket. We might get away with that at home, where we know the conditions a lot better. But when you’re touring you can’t start slowly.” Even more reason to make the best use of those assets, resources and options.

First published by Cricbuzz.

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Slow stuff seals fast finish

“If you want to win games you’ve got to put your ego aside and do what’s best for the side.” – Dean Elgar on demoting himself from the slip cordon.

Telford Vice | Kingsmead

SOMEONE joked on Sunday evening that Bangladesh would struggle to make it to lunch at Kingsmead on Monday. He was met with scoffing and eye rolls. Yes, South Africa had reduced the visitors to 11/3 in search of a mythical target of 274 to win the first Test. But seven wickets in a session? Let’s not get ahead of ourselves.

Turns out the joker was indeed wrong — South Africa needed less than half-a-session to seal victory. The match was over 55 minutes into the fifth day’s play, with Bangladesh losing 7/42 in the 13 overs they faced. Even South Africa’s media manager was wrong-footed by the rampant surge to success, greeting the virtually assembled reporters at the press conference that followed with a cheerful, “Good afternoon!” It was 11.53am.

The Bangladeshis’ total of 53 was their lowest in South Africa and the lowest recorded by any team at Kingsmead. Deservedly so. Their batting was wretched. There was much to admire about the way they took the one-day series by the scruff of the neck, clinching it emphatically in a deciding match. But this was an abjectly poor performance. They looked less like players who had grown up on a steady diet of spin bowling on turning pitches, and more like the South Africa sides who flailed and flapped and floundered in the subcontinent in the 1990s.

Which is not take anything away from the bowlers. Both of them. The match marked the first time in South Africa’s 451 Tests that they have dismissed their opponents using only two bowlers in an innings. And the first time spinners have taken all 10 wickets in an innings for South Africa since Hugh Tayfield claimed 7/23 and Tufty Mann 3/31 against Australia in January 1950, also at Kingsmead.

Now, as then, those bowlers were an off-spinner and a left-armer: Simon Harmer and Keshav Maharaj. Harmer had 4/41 after 19 overs in the first innings, and finished with 4/104. Maharaj toiled for 37 overs in that innings but went wicketless for 65. In the second innings, Maharaj claimed 5/14 with his first 35 deliveries on his way to a haul of 7/32. Harmer took 3/21 to complete match figures of 7/136. It’s tempting to let those startling numbers shimmer on the screen uncluttered by comment, but that wouldn’t do Harmer and Maharaj justice.

Harmer, who played his first Test since November 2015, has returned from the Kolpak wilderness a vastly improved cricketer. His unbeaten 38 in the first innings was a significant contribution and easily his highest score at this level. His bowling was a delightful contradiction in terms: whoever heard of attacking off-spin? And yet there he was, bristling to take the game to all who faced him. Doubtless he will keep in a special place in his memory the delivery that turned and bounced and nailed the top of Najmal Hossain Shanto’s off-stump in the first innings.

Maharaj had only good things to say about his fellow slow poisoner: “He’s good to have in the changeroom, he’s lots of fun, he’s got good ideas, and he’s matured a lot as a cricketer. You can see that in the way that he’s bowling. It’s world class in terms of his shape on the ball, his trajectories, his lines, his lengths. And also the way he thinks about things on the field, which is quite remarkable and an asset to this team.”

How did Maharaj feel about the first innings, when he worked as hard as Harmer but had no success? “I’ve played a lot of cricket at Kingsmead and I know you’re not going to take wickets all the time,” Maharaj said. “I was in a good space in terms of the way the ball was coming out. It does get frustrating not being rewarded, but having a world-class performer at the other end is good.”

His reward was waiting in the second innings. Only Vernon Philander, twice, Jacques Kallis and Tayfield have claimed a Test five-for for South Africa in fewer deliveries. Any thoughts Bangladesh might have entertained about winning, drawing, or even not disappearing in a clatter of wickets vanished in the fifth over of the innings, when Maharaj cleanbowled first-innings centurion Mahmudul Joy Hasan and trapped Mominul Haque in front four balls apart. To remove Yasir Ali, he produced a jewel that cut a curve through the air towards the batter before pitching and then spat away to fell off stump. The shock of that ball was compounded by the facts that it gave Maharaj figures of 5/14 and that, because of it, Bangladesh were suddenly 26/6.

That made Dean Elgar happy: “The style of captaincy I’m trying to expose our players to, and get them familiar with how I want to play, is about positive, ruthless cricket; making bold decisions and taking players out of their comfort zones. That’s my gut feel. It’s not influenced by the coaching staff. They allow me to do me during game time.”

Then he said something, about his decision to stick to spin in the second innings, that jarred with the accepted South African way of cricket: “I could have bowled a seamer, but I wanted the guys to be ruthless.” A South Africa captain preferring spin over seam to get the job done? Against Asian opponents? At home? Woulda thunk it?

There was more of Elgar’s idea of leadership to be gleaned during Bangladesh’s first innings on the third morning, after he dropped a straightforward slip catch that Litton Das had offered off Lizaad Williams. Elgar summarily consigned himself to mid-off and installed Keegan Petersen at slip. “If you want to win games you’ve got to put your ego aside and do what’s best for the side,” Elgar said.

The result was South Africa’s first win in their last five Tests on Kingsmead’s slower, turning pitches, and only their second in their 10 most recent Durban Tests. It is the first time Elgar has celebrated victory in his five Tests here. He was also on the losing side at Kingsmead in March last year, when the Dolphins beat the Titans by an innings in the first-class final. Elgar top scored with 16 in the Titans’ first innings — of 53, exactly the same sorriness Bangladesh capitulated for on Monday. “I’ve caught quite a few hidings at Kingsmead,” Elgar noted with a smile.

Much has been made of the defection of South Africa’s first-choice pace attack to the IPL, but how much would they have been called on to do considering the conditions and the way the match unfolded? “If we were on the Highveld playing one spinner would have been the only option, but you’re playing in Durban,” Elgar said. “How awesome was it to see two spinners bowling in tandem, and have the ball on a string and dominate the opposition? It was something we’ve always wanted to see. It was great to see both of them compete at such a high level. Most batting line-ups would have had a tough task against both of them. Even if the IPL guys were available, Keshav and ‘Harmy’ would have bowled most of our overs. The skill and intensity they brought was amazing to witness.”

That’s not to suggest Elgar isn’t a real South African: “It’s not the style of cricket we’re used to or want to play. But it shows a lot of character with regards to adapting to being put in situations or conditions that you’re not familiar with. We have the resources to adapt. We still want to play the Highveld kind of cricket, where you’re playing three seamers and a world-class spinner, where fast bowling is our prime source of attack.”

Elgar had plenty of praise for Harmer and Maharaj, but the latter — whose home ground is Kingsmead — would be forgiven for feeling a little bleak at his captain’s outright preference for pitches that lean towards the quicks. “I love playing at Kingsmead,” Maharaj said. “Our record here is not great, so I was happy that I could help change that mindset and make everyone want to come and play more cricket at Kingsmead.

“I know it’s not the traditional South African pitch you would play a subcontinental team on, but it’s good to see that we have the adaptability to cross the line in most instances.”

Harmer and Maharaj are likely to get another chance to prove their point in the second Test, which starts on Thursday at St George’s Park, where the pitch is similar to Kingsmead’s. Elgar is unlikely to change his mind even if the spinners take all 20 wickets, but there’s no harm in trying.

First published by Cricbuzz.

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When Harmer met Bavuma

“There is a feeling of vindication after coming back.” – Simon Harmer

Telford Vice | Kingsmead

BEFORE you spare a thought for Temba Bavuma and his third trip into the 90s with only one century to show for his efforts, and that after 84 Test innings, consider Simon Harmer’s long walk back to freedom.

Bavuma delivered another masterclass at Kingsmead on Friday in how to steady a shaky innings. When he took guard in the 10th over after lunch on Thursday, South Africa had lost Dean Elgar and Sarel Erwee five deliveries apart. When he was bowled off his pads for 93 in the eighth over before lunch on Friday by a ripping turner from Mehidy Hasan, the home side were 298/7.

Bavuma batted for almost five hours and shared half-century stands with Kyle Verreynne and Keshav Maharaj. He was the difference between a mediocre total and South Africa’s 367. Just nine times in the 45 Tests at this ground has the first innings of the match been bigger.

Bavuma’s performance was cause for celebration, if not relief, for South Africans. Only cricket’s warped logic mislabels his innings a “tragedy” because he didn’t score seven more runs. And, among South Africa’s players, only Bavuma labours under this kind of unfair scrutiny because he hasn’t made more centuries. It’s a lazy, knee-jerk argument because citing the number of times he has nursed a swooning innings to respectability is less straightforward than counting hundreds, and thus rarely highlighted.

So the bean counters will be interested to know that 2,278 days have passed since Bavuma last scored a Test century. What might they make of the fact that, by stumps on Thursday, 2,316 days had gone by since Harmer last took a Test wicket? 

In that time, Harmer featured in 86 first-class matches in which he bowled more than 20,000 deliveries and took 426 wickets for Essex, the Warriors and the Titans. But none for South Africa. Because, owing to the Kolpak status he took in 2016, he could not play for them.

He was a major factor in the county championship titles Essex won in 2017 and 2019, and captained them to triumph in the 2019 T20 Blast. A year earlier, he had helped the Jozi Stars’ win the Mzansi Super League. This summer, his 44 wickets at 19.29 made him the leading wicket-taker in the first-class competition for the champion Titans. Harmer was already a good bowler when he went to England. He has returned significantly closer to the finished article; a man in full.

He was picked in the squad for two Tests in New Zealand in February, but knew he had little chance of playing. His chance came at Kingsmead, and he took it. Harmer claimed all the wickets as Bangladesh shambled to 98/4 in reply at stumps on the second day — still 269 runs behind. 

“Essex gave me the platform to find myself again,” Harmer told a press conference. I’d gone there on the back of being dropped from the South African team and the A side, and not knowing if I was going to get another franchise contract. I had a lot of self-doubt, and Essex gave me the opportunity to rediscover what made me successful; learning to be a matchwinner for them and getting comfortable with that role. The more I did it the more I started to believe. That has added a lot to my game, knowing that I can win games as an orthodox off-spinner.”

Not only did Harmer bowl like a winner for his haul of 4/42, he also batted like one in his career-best 38 not out in which he shared stands of 34 and 35 with Lizaad Williams and Duanne Olivier. “I don’t think I could have scripted a better day,” Harmer said. Would he have preferred a half-century or a five-wicket haul? “My bowling puts bread on the table, so I think a five-for.”

The now concluded Kolpak era was a lightning rod for controversy, chiefly about the reasons for South Africa’s player drain. Less often acknowledged is that county cricket has the resources to allow players to reach their potential, which in many cases is beyond the impoverished South African domestic game. After days like Harmer had on Friday, South Africa and their supporters should be grateful for Kolpak. Had Harmer felt as if he had shut up the detractors who said he was only interested in making money?

“There was a lot of media about how lucrative playing county cricket is,” he said. “For me, it was about opportunity. I was only playing one format for the Warriors when I left. I went [to Essex] and played all three formats. I was painted with the same brush as [other Kolpak players], which is fine. But currency is wickets and performances and winning games of cricket and trophies. And that’s all I put my blinkers on and tried to achieve. There is a feeling of vindication after coming back.

“There’s also still questions: am I good enough to play international cricket? I’ve done it for Essex, I’ve come back to the Titans and taken wickets there. Am I still good enough for international cricket? Four wickets doesn’t mean I am. But putting in a performance, just for my own self-belief, has been good.”

That performance unspooled under Durban’s grey skies and Kingsmead’s glowing floodlights, which was why 40 of the 49 overs the Bangladeshis faced were bowled by Harmer, Maharaj and Elgar. No seamer was given the ball after the 10th over.

Those aren’t the only unusual truths for a Test match in South Africa. Another is that Bavuma and Harmer have taken different routes to Kingsmead, paths that in a different reality may never have crossed. That they are both here, both in the thick of things, and both contributing to the cause, is a thing to treasure. 

First published by Cricbuzz.

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Christmas comes twice for Simon Harmer

“It’s about working hard and supporting the guys who will be playing, and adding value where I can – music in the changeroom, throwing balls, pushing guys to be better.” – Simon Harmer

Telford Vice | Cape Town

LIKE everyone, Simon Harmer has made mistakes. Calling yourself “the best off-spinner in the world” can only prompt eye-rolling and unflattering allusions to Right Said Fred’s “I’m Too Sexy (For My Shirt)”. Likewise, lamenting the “lack of opportunity” and “zero security” in a society unfairly skewed to give you more than your share of opportunity and security doesn’t go down without lumps.

But, considering what Harmer said in media files released by CSA on Monday, you have to hope he has absorbed the lessons of the realities that led to those errors: “Looking back, if you could impart knowledge onto younger players, or my younger self, it would probably be about self-awareness and understanding how certain things work; things that you can control and things that you can’t control. It’s been a process but I’m a better person for it and I wouldn’t change it for anything.”

Another learning was never to stop learning: “My dream was to play for South Africa, and once I’d achieved that I didn’t reassess — you’ve now achieved this goal. What’s next? So one thing I’ve done over the last few years is to make sure I’ve got goals every year. Some of them might be out of reach, but they’re things I aspire to each year and that’s helped me a lot.

“It’s also about realising that cricket isn’t the be-all and end-all. There’s a lot more to life. When I made my [Test] debut [against West Indies at Newlands in January 2015] I put so much pressure on myself to perform and to be that person. I was worrying so much about what everybody else thought of me — was I good enough? Now I’m a lot more comfortable in my own skin. I understand what I’m good at and what I’m not so good at; things that I can work on.”

Harmer is putting that into practice by studying towards a law degree — his next assignment is due on Thursday — in his quarantine hotel room in Christchurch, where he is part of the South Africa squad who will play two Tests against New Zealand, starting on February 17. Why law?

“I got myself into trouble when I was about 18 months out of school. I was kind of floating around and didn’t know what I wanted to do. My brother’s a doctor specialising in radiology. He’s always been a really good student. I’ve always been the black sheep — always enjoyed my sport, never wanted to be in my room doing homework. My mom was a tennis coach. So I always wanted to be outside playing tennis on the tennis court or cricket on the tennis court. I didn’t know what I wanted to do in terms of studying, and I got myself into trouble with the law. I found out through that that it’s quite an interesting field.

“I’ve always understood that I’ve got my time in the sun in terms of my cricket career, and one day that’s going to come to an end and the sun’s going to set. The corporate world is something I want to move into. I don’t necessarily want to be involved with cricket. I want to break away and have a different identity and do something different.” What legal avenue might he pursue? “Tax law is super interesting. There’s always loopholes and no-one knows the exact definitions and rules.”

An off-spinner with ambitions to become a tax lawyer sounds like a caricature of someone who is planning to fade into beige middle age deep in middle class mediocrity. But what was that about a prickly brush with the law? Harmer didn’t elaborate on the nature of the “trouble” and wasn’t asked to do so. Efforts to find out proved fruitless, except for the detail that the incident happened in his hometown of Pretoria before he moved to the Eastern Cape in 2009 to take up a bursary at Nelson Mandela University, where he began his first-class career in November that year.

Not quite 10 years after that, Harmer was quoted shooting from the lip smugly and unhappily, as in paragraph one above. That was almost three years after Essex announced he had signed a one-year Kolpak deal with the county. He blazed a trail of blond ambition in England, taking 72 wickets at 19.19 in 2017 to help newly-promoted Essex claim their first county championship since 1992. A year later, with his contract extended, his 57 wickets at 21.77 wasn’t enough to earn another title. But the 83 he claimed — the most by any bowler in both divisions that year — at 18.28 powered Essex to triumph in 2019.

Two days before that success was confirmed, Harmer captained Essex to their first T20 Blast trophy. And lead he did, taking 4/19 in the semi-final and 3/16 in the final. He hammered Worcestershire’s Wayne Parnell for consecutive boundaries to clinch the decider, and was named player-of-the-match in both games.

Not bad for an off-spinner who, having taken 20 wickets in five Tests, all of them in 2015, found himself frozen out of South Africa’s Test and even A sides. That Dane Piedt and Keshav Maharaj, the spinners who cracked the nod ahead of Harmer, are both brown became fodder for the fable that white players like Harmer aren’t treated fairly because of South Africa’s racially-based selection policies.

That Piedt earned his elevation for a Test in Harare in August 2014 by taking 55 wickets at 18.52 in the 2013/14 franchise season, when Harmer claimed 40 at 35.72, isn’t often acknowledged. Harmer would have had a better argument about being overlooked in favour of Maharaj for the series in Australia in November 2016. In 2015/16, Maharaj bowled 409 overs for the Dolphins to take 36 at 32.00. Harmer had 31 at 22.41, and in 282 overs: just more than two-thirds’ Maharaj’s total. But Piedt, who took 39 at 22.33 in 261 overs that season, was also not in the squad.

As for the widespread bleating about CSA’s target of at least six black and brown players, a minimum of three of them black, in every South Africa XI, that leaves five places uncategorised. So whites, who make up less than 10% of South Africa’s population and have access to the best facilities and coaching, are able to compete untrammelled for almost half the number of spots in the national team. Thus they have been gifted close to 40% more berths than they represent demographically. In a country where exponentially more black and brown people play and follow cricket than whites, that is overly generous affirmative action.

But numbers don’t play and follow cricket. People do. And all of them, at least some of the time, let wrongheaded ideas cloud their thinking. Kolpak allowed some of those ideas to fester and swell. Like the anger and resentment that dogged players who followed that path because it precluded them from playing international cricket. That was unfair, because the stipulation was made not by the players but by the counties. So shout at Essex, not Harmer. Yes, he agreed to play under those terms. Why not? This is about professionalism, not patriotism.  

Besides, Kolpak did much for the careers of players like Harmer. Who’s to say he would have become the fine cricketer he is, and the more mature man he has grown into, were it not for the superior and better resourced coaching and support structures available to him in England? Conversely, would Alastair Cook have become Alastair Cook had he been born in and remained in South Africa? South Africa and England compete as equals at international level, but England’s cricket industry towers over South Africa’s in every sense.

At the end of 2020 the Kolpak door banged shut and was locked, and the key was thrown away. If Harmer, Duanne Olivier, Kyle Abbott and the like wanted to keep playing cricket for a living, they had to return to the scene of their uncertainty to confront their own fragility. Or hope to land a contract as an overseas professional, as Harmer has done. Parnell, Olivier and Harmer have since been picked for South Africa.

“One thing I’ve come to realise getting older as a cricketer is that things change and happen very quickly,” Harmer said. “One day you could be sitting extremely frustrated and not knowing where you are, and very quickly you could be back into a professional or an international environment.”

But not necessarily play in that environment. Harmer is the leading wicket-taker in domestic first-class cricket in South Africa this season, with 35 at 19.45 in six matches. Even so, he knows he is in Christchurch because George Linde is preparing for his wedding and Prenelan Subrayen has a groin injury. He also knows he is unlikely to be chosen over Maharaj.  

“This opportunity has arisen because things have happened, but that’s how sport works,” Harmer said. “I’m under no illusion as to why I’m here and how I got the opportunity. But I am here now. I’ve got to try and show people what I’m about, what my brand is about. It’s been a long time since I was involved in the set-up and I think I’ve matured a lot. I understand what I need to do and how I need to go about it.

“Hagley Oval is probably the greenest, quickest, bounciest wicket in New Zealand. So the chances of us playing two spinners are very low. ‘Kesh’ has done extremely well in his international career so far. I’m always going to be a supporting act to him. For this tour, it’s about working hard and supporting the guys who will be playing, and adding value where I can — music in the changeroom, throwing balls, pushing guys to be better.”

Mistakes he has made, lessons he has learnt, and growth he has had. But Harmer cannot be accused of doing an Olivier — who had his original Test cap put in a glass frame after he thought his international career was over when he went Kolpak for Yorkshire in February 2019. Only to be selected for the series against India in December and January. He had to be presented with a new cap.

Where is Harmer’s cap? “It’s in my bag, here in the room. I’ve got all my caps that I’ve played in right through age-group cricket. My brother and I have this pact that, one day, if everything goes according to plan, we’ll have a beach house. And the bar in that beach house is where all the memorabilia will go. All my South African stuff is in the bag that I was given when I made my debut. I wasn’t sure it would see the light of day again. Fortunately it has. It was sitting in Kenton-on-Sea [in the Eastern Cape]. I got my mother-in-law to post it up to me in Pretoria, and it’s made the trip over to New Zealand.”

If that isn’t enough to convince you that Harmer didn’t throw away his South Africaness when he went to play for Essex, or betray anyone or anything, or blaspheme against an unwritten code of how players should conduct themselves, he also said: “I don’t know whether every cricketer feels this way, but there’s something special about getting your new kit for the season; whether it’s for your domestic team or county team or, like this, getting an international call-up. Things have changed since I last played. Now you get your name and number on the back of your shirt.

“That cliché about feeling like a kid at Christmas, that’s exactly how it is. You’re opening up this bag, you don’t know what’s going to be in it, you see all this kit — your playing shirts, the warm-up kit. The South African badge is on it. It’s a really special and exciting time to get that kit and pack it all into a bag and get ready for an overseas trip.”

And so we leave the kid who hated being stuck inside now alone in a room and marooned under several layers of quarantine regulations, finishing a university assignment due on his 33rd birthday. How will the South Africans smuggle a cake into a stifling space where, Harmer said, “pre-ordered meals arrive in a brown bag”? How will Harmer light 33 candles indoors in health-and-safety obsessed New Zealand, where there seem to be more smoke detectors than sheep?

Happily, questions like those are not of the dire sort Harmer has likely pondered in recent years. And to which, it seems, he has found satisfying enough answers. Or at least earned the chance to show he has fixed his mistakes and to remind us of those made against him.
Welcome back, young man. Merry Christmas for the other day and happy birthday for Thursday. Please stay out of trouble.

First published by Cricbuzz.

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Shattering Kolpak’s glass ceiling

“I’m going to ask if I can get a new one … if I play.” – Duanne Oliver needs a Test cap.

Telford Vice | Cape Town

IN case of emergency, break glass. So best Duanne Olivier keeps a hammer handy. The crisis is set to arrive on Sunday, when he is likely to be named in South Africa’s XI for the first Test against India in Centurion. 

That would be good news for a team denied their ace, Anrich Nortjé, by a hip injury. As well as for Dean Elgar, who will take charge of a home rubber for the first time. And for the cricketminded South Africans who are not indulging in petty politics by obsessing over Olivier’s former Kolpak status. But for Olivier himself selection would present a problem.

His one and only Test cap — which he was given when he made his debut against Sri Lanka at the Wanderers in January 2017 — should have been in the luggage he packed to join the squad on Saturday. Instead it’s behind glass in a frame.

And why not. When Olivier’s three-year deal with Yorkshire was announced in February 2019, after he had taken 48 wickets at 19.25 in 10 Tests, he would have had good reason to think he had no further use for his cap. That he had it framed is the best answer to the social media miseries whining that he did not cherish playing for the national team. Clearly, he did — enough to proudly display his prize on a wall.

Almost three years on, during which the Kolpak era has ended and Olivier has returned to the fold, his carefully curated pride could put him in a predicament. Part of the lore of Test cricket is that players are presented with one one cap, which is why those who have long careers end up wearing ragged relics. Caps are not meant to last a hundred or more matches, as all could see from the dilapidated specimen that Steve Waugh sported long before he played the last of his 168 Tests.   

What to do? Olivier wouldn’t be allowed to leave the bubble, do the needful, clean up the mess, and return in time for Sunday’s start. Maybe someone in his household could do the smashing and grabbing for him and deliver the goods? There has to be a simpler, better, faster solution …

“I’m going to ask if I can get a new one,” he said in media material released by CSA on Friday. Traditionalists, of which cricket is cursed with far too many, would balk at that. Who did the man think he was demanding a new cap?! Not for the first time, the joke would be on them.

The one player, one cap philosophy isn’t at all venerable. It started as recently as the 1990s, when it was promoted by Mark Taylor to forge unity. Waugh succeeded Taylor as Australia’s captain, and took the notion to new heights. Or depths, depending on your sartorial sensibilities.        

The truth is players used to be suppled with a new cap for every series. For all their mythologising about the Baggy Green, Australians haven’t always treated it like a holy artefact. Bill Ponsford would paint his garden fence in a Test cap, all the better to keep his hair clean. For the same reason, Bill Lawry, cricket’s most famous pigeon fancier, wore it when he cleaned his birds’ enclosures. Theoretically, Ian Chappell should have 19 Baggy Greens. That’s how many Test series he played in. In fact, he has none: he didn’t keep a single one.

You would go a long way to find people more proud to have played for Australia than Ponsford, Lawry and Chappell. But they weren’t hung up on the actual cap. Perhaps they should have been — in January last year Shane Warne’s was auctioned for AUD1,007,500, which was paid to bushfire emergency services in recognition of the sterling service they rendered during the “Black Summer” of 2019/20.

South African cricket has a tendency to copy what happens in Australia, so the one and only cap concept has taken hold here, too. But there have been exceptions. Quinton de Kock has had his replaced after losing the original. And if you’ve noticed Elgar looking sharper in recent series, this could be why. His old cap was more like Waugh’s than anything anyone could wear without having to resort to industrial strength shampoo afterwards. So he was given a new one.

To his line above about his cap conundrum, Olivier added, “ … If I’m playing.” Of course, if he isn’t picked he has no need for new headgear. But even the traditionalists would concede that is about as likely as Warne turning down an opportunity to bowl to Daryll Cullinan.

Olivier has been the class act in South Africa’s first-class competition this season, taking 28 wickets at 11.10 in four matches for the Lions. Regardless of Nortjé’s fitness, there should never have been a debate about him playing. What some have called a controversy was entirely manufactured, as poorly as it was transparently so. He is eligible and he is performing. What else matters? Those smallminded South Africans who have a problem with Olivier’s presence because of their wrongheaded thoughts on patriotism need to get over themselves.

“I’m very happy to be back in the squad and, yes, I know people will have mixed feelings about it,” Olivier said.” But, at the end of the day, it’s okay. You handle that and you deal with those pressures or the criticism that comes with that. But you know, when I came back, I felt very welcome with everyone.”

That didn’t mean he expected to pick up where he left off: “I’m a nervous person when it comes to playing, and if it’s my first over I’m very nervous. Maybe it might be similar to a debut because I haven’t played [for South Africa] for three years. It will be interesting to see what the nerves will be like. But I’m sure, if I am selected to play, my nerves will be shot through the roof.”

Elgar spoke on Monday about the growth he had seen in Olivier’s game since he went to England. Previously, he had been a galumphing thumper of a fast bowler who relied mainly on pace and the pitch. It seems the rigours and requirements of county cricket have added arrows to his quiver. 

“I feel like I am a different player,” Olivier said. “Firstly, I’m more mature. From a cricketing point of view, I genuinely believe I’m different. The UK has helped me a lot; just perfecting that fuller length that every bowler wants to bowl. For me, it was quite difficult because it can come across floaty and I wasn’t that consistent. I’m still working on it: I’m not going to get it right every time.

“People thought I only bowl short, and fair enough: I did. But now I feel like I have a different element to my game. It might not work every time but I believe in my process, I believe in my strengths, and I believe that’s the best way I can help the team.” 

India come to South Africa as the top-ranked Test side. They are led by Virat Kohli, who has accomplished almost everything there is to accomplish in the game. Except win a Test series in South Africa, which the Indians never have. South Africa go into the rubber under a range of extraneous pressures, not least those fuelled by a public divided over Mark Boucher’s suitability for his role as head coach. Boucher, who has only a level two coaching certificate, has been attacked since his appointment in December 2019. The noise reached a crescendo in July when Paul Adams said Boucher had been among the players who had described him as “brown shit” in a dressing room song. Boucher’s apology has been drowned out and dismissed by anger.

“There will be a lot of pressure but if we can, as a team, stick to our plans and not get drawn in by outside news or whatever emotionally, we will be in a good position,” Olivier said. “You’re playing against world-class players, but at the same time it’s an exciting challenge. I would need to bowl to Kohli. It will be tough but it’s exciting. You’re bowling to probably the top four batters in the world. It’s like making a statement to them: we are here to compete, we are not just going to roll over.”

“It’s not about focusing on everything happening outside. It’s about focusing on ourselves as a team and investing in our environment and the way we are going to go about things. That is very important because when things are tough, you are going to have to rely on your teammates. When you are up against a wall, that’s when you are going to need everyone together. And we are. The beauty of this bubble thing is that you get to spend time with people. It’s good. You adapt.”

And you break glass if you must. Or have a word with the team manager.

First published by Cricbuzz.

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A smile to delight and disgust

“Maybe we have to say we back our coaches and management and we need to give them a lot of love.” – Dean Elgar

Telford Vice | Cape Town

WHEN Dean Elgar smiles, pay careful attention. It’s not that South Africa’s Test captain doesn’t crack a grin as often as anyone else. He does, maybe more than most. But what makes his face light up sets him apart from those made of different, perhaps less sturdy stuff.

Mention tough times and see him beam. This comes with the territory. Opening batters accept as part of the job challenges that are beyond the abilities of those who will come to the crease after them. Some know this from the start of their careers. Others learn the lesson soon enough, or they don’t last. Elgar has lasted with the best of them.

He had 21 first-class innings before he opened the batting, for the Eagles against the Titans in Bloemfontein in February 2007 — and promptly scored 225. He made a pair on Test debut, at the WACA in November 2012, when he batted at No. 6. But two innings later he banked the first of his 13 centuries, an unbeaten 103 against New Zealand at St George’s Park in January 2013, batting at No. 7. Six innings after that he opened for the first time at that level. He has done so in 94 of his 120 Test innings, and exclusively since July 2014. Mixed and matched between the numbers is the character of a throwback to the days when cricketers didn’t care who they offended, as long as they put their team first.      

So questions about South Africa’s problems on and off the field had Elgar smiling wide at an online press conference on Tuesday. The latest calamity was the withdrawal on Tuesday of Anrich Nortjé, South Africa’s most successful bowler in the format this year with 25 wickets at 20.76 in five matches, from the imminent series against India because of a hip injury.

That ends the debate about the inclusion in the squad of Duanne Olivier, who said in answer to a reporter’s question after he signed a Kolpak contract with Yorkshire in February 2019 that he would want to play for England. The end of the Kolpak era on December 31 last year brought Olivier back into contention for South Africa, where he has been the stand-out bowler in the first-class competition this season with 28 wickets at 11.10 in four matches for the Lions. Thus Olivier, who took 48 wickets at 19.25 in 10 Tests before his defection, thoroughly deserves a recall. But South Africans who confuse sport with patriotism have been angered by his selection.

Elgar is not among them: “I’m excited to have him back, knowing what he can do on the field. There’s no bad feelings about what’s happened in the past. I want to win cricket matches and series for South Africa, and I’m sure I’ve got 100% backing in our changeroom when it comes to that.

“He adds a different intensity and energy. You can see he’s a different cricketer to what he was the first time he played for us, which is awesome. He played a lot of cricket in the UK, so he’s bringing a lot of knowledge and experience to the changeroom. That’s something we need at the moment. He’s a matchwinner. If he can win cricket matches for us I’m all for having him back.”

The Nortjé setback came on the back of a blue Monday of news. First CSA said they would investigate Graeme Smith and Mark Boucher, the director of cricket and the men’s national team coach, in the new year in the wake of the Social Justice and Nation-Building (SJN) project making adverse “tentative findings” about them regarding allegations of racist conduct. That was followed by the scrapping of the third edition of the Mzansi Super League, which was to have been played in February, for financial and Covid reasons. Then CSA announced that the stands would be empty during India’s tour of three Tests and as many ODIs, also over pandemic fears.  

As an international of more than nine years’ standing and a first-class player for more than three years before that, strife and bungling in South African cricket is nothing new to Elgar. Even so, the governance and financial depths the game has crashed to in the past four years have been remarkable even by CSA’s lowly standards.  

“We’ve been through such crappy times that we’ve actually formulated such a good bond within our group,” Elgar said. “If we were in the first month of all these bad scenarios, then maybe we could use that as an excuse. But we’ve been there, and we’ve formulated something that works for us. We’re extremely strong. Our culture’s been tested and pushed to levels I didn’t think it would have been pushed to in my short term as captain [since March]. I think we’ve come out on top of it. It’s about the learning process behind it. We must always be mindful that even if things are bad off the field we can’t use that as a cop-out. We’re a professional team and professional players, and we want to strive to go up the rankings. We focus on cricket and hopefully cricket will look after us.”

But it seems the testimony implicating figures like Smith and Boucher at the SJN, the negative reaction that followed, and the project’s report — which is vague and clumsily compiled and being challenged by lawyers, hence CSA’s probe — had indeed permeated the dressing room walls. Certainly, Elgar’s contempt for the suits was plain. As was his dissatisfaction with what he saw as their lack of support.

“We’ve had so many different administrators that we don’t even know who’s there now,” he said. “We haven’t had a lot of stability from an administrative point of view. Hopefully sooner than later there’s a lot more stability within CSA.

“Backing has been tough, especially with regards to our coaches and our team management. I don’t think we’ve received a lot of good stuff around that. From the players’ point of view, maybe we have to say we back our coaches and management and we need to give them a lot of love.

“It’s not nice to see our coaches get lambasted for things. I know the work they’re putting in behind the scenes, which no-one else sees. Only us as a players’ group notice that, and we’re extremely grateful. That’s one of the biggest downsides of what’s been happening the last while.”

As much as opinions like that, and the way they are expressed, will delight some South Africans, they will disgust others — particularly many of Elgar’s black and brown compatriots, who see the SJN as a rare opportunity for truth and reflection in the ongoing conversation about race in South African cricket, which remains skewed towards white interests in many senses — from the number of white players in the national teams to the location of the grounds where those sides appear.

So Elgar will doubtless be criticised for his comments. The only way that blow can be blunted will be for him to perform and for his team to win. He sounded up for the task: “It doesn’t matter which teammates I’ve had in the past, I’ve always wanted to be someone who leads from the front with the bat. Scoring runs is massive for me, let alone being the captain and making decisions. I’m never going to run away from that responsibility.”

India’s supporters, too, won’t take kindly to Elgar saying: “We know it’s going to be tough. It’s also going to be tough for the Indian batters to face our bowlers. I’d rather be sitting here knowing that than sitting in the Indian dressing room knowing that they have to face our bowlers.”

Similarly, asked about Ravichandran Ashwin’s record against South Africa — the off-spinner has taken 53 wickets at 19.75 against them — Elgar lurched onto the front foot: “He hasn’t had a lot of success in South Africa. You can’t really compare the success he has had in India against our batters because the conditions are so different. It’s not realistic for us to focus on that.” Indeed, Ashwin averages 15.73 against South Africa in India, and 46.14 in South Africa. In Elgar’s follow-through, he tempered his answer with: “He’s one of the best off-spinners India have produced, and we’re mindful of that.” But there could be no mistaking his bracing aggression.

Expect to see plenty of it in the first Test at Centurion on Sunday. There it was again near the end of Elgar’s presser after the media manager listed the names of the reporters who would ask the last questions.

“And then my words are finished,” Elgar said. Through a smile, of course.

First published by Cricbuzz.

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Olivier comes full circle with Test squad return

Who could blame Duanne Olivier for signing a Kolpak contract? By the time he halted his international career, cricket in South Africa was in administrative freefall.

Telford Vice | Cape Town

POTCHEFSTROOM is blessed with sunshine, sleepiness and students. Two of the latter, having soaked up plenty of the first and been rendered the second by a few too many beers, made a lazy offering of interest in the cricket on a late September afternoon in 2017: “Lekker [nice] Dwaine!” 

Spot the deliberate mistake. Ensconced on the grass banks that ring most of Potch’s quaint ground, the students were praising Duanne Olivier, then playing his fourth Test, against Bangladesh. In the open-air pressbox, a beloved Afrikaans-speaking denizen of the ink-stained corps, a man old enough never to have had to learn to type with more than two fingers, didn’t bother looking up from his decades-long hunch over his steaming laptop, which once was a clacking typewriter, to boom: “Dis Duanne, jou poephol! [It’s Duanne, you asshole!]” 

Not quite 17 months later, in February 2019, Olivier was playing the last of his 10 Tests, against Sri Lanka at St George’s Park, before he joined the Kolpak express to England. He had signed a three-year deal with Yorkshire, which he found more attractive than CSA’s offer of a two-year contract.

Who could blame Olivier. By the time he halted his international career, cricket in South Africa was in administrative freefall. Between them, a CSA board led by president Chris Nenzani and an executive arm headed by chief executive Thabang Moroe were hurrying the game towards financial and reputational ruin.

The rot started during that 2017 Potch Test, when Haroon Lorgat was prised out of the CEO’s office. Lorgat, a former ICC chief executive, wasn’t perfect. His relationship with the most powerful organisation in world cricket, the BCCI, was fractious at best. It was under his watch that Kyle Abbott was unfairly axed from the XI for the 2015 World Cup semi-final. He tried to undermine reporters whose work cast him in a poor light. But even Lorgat’s detractors couldn’t say he wasn’t impressively competent. He served as a buffer of proficiency between the small-minded, ham-fisted, arrogant board and the interests of cricket itself. With Lorgat removed, the Nenzani-Moroe axis and its greedy entourage were free to do as they pleased. And they did.

Until, that is, December 2019, when Moroe was suspended in the wake of CSA revoking the accreditation of five senior cricket writers, prompting long-term sponsors to desert the game. Moroe was fired in August 2020, 10 days after Nenzani had resigned. In October last year and with government help, the entire malignant board was consigned to cricket’s scrapheap of unhappiness.

An interim structure — which included Lorgat — was in office until June, when CSA were afforded a majority independent board for the first time in their history. In a decision as surprising as it was welcome, Lawson Naidoo, a highly respected activist, lawyer and constitutional expert, was elected chair. Rarely has cricket in South Africa been in such principled hands.

The other side of this equation is the United Kingdom’s exit from the European Union on December 31, which ended the Kolpak era. Players who had taken up those contracts, all of them from outside the UK, were compelled by the counties to renounce their availability for their national teams. So South Africa’s prodigals returned, Olivier among them.

On Tuesday he was named in South Africa’s Test squad for the series against India that will start on December 26. There is thus a neatness to the now closed circle that was opened on that late spring afternoon in Potch.

He went to Headingley having taken 48 wickets at 19.25 in his 10 Tests, and 154 at 22.53 in 35 games for his franchise, the Knights. He wasn’t as successful for Yorkshire, claiming 75 at 32.42 in 25 first-class matches. But he did mature, searching out a fuller length and trusting seam and swing to do their bit rather than banging the ball into the pitch, as had been his main method on South Africa’s harder, faster surfaces. That has shown in his four matches for the Lions this season, in which he has claimed 28 at 11.10. No bowler has taken as many wickets and none has looked as likely to strike.

Lungi Ngidi, Beuran Hendricks, Glenton Stuurman and Sisanda Magala are also in the squad, but add Olivier to an attack that will feature Kagiso Rabada and Anrich Nortjé and you have a quiver of quicks worthy of one of the tougher tests South Africa will face in the modern game. India will bring an allround powerhouse, a team for the ages who have proved their class in most conditions.

But not in South Africa, where the closest India have come to winning any of their seven series is the drawn rubber of 2010/11. They have won three matches here and lost 10. Expect the gap to narrow this time, not least because Virat Kohli is quite likely the most ambitious man ever to step onto a cricket ground. And because South Africa is the only country outside of the subcontinent, bar New Zealand, in which he has not captained his team to a series win.

Much will be written on this rubber, and it should be. Before Saturday there were serious doubts it would happen, given the ever-shifting pandemic landscape. Now that it is set to go ahead — at least for now; no-one yet knows what omicron will do to us — the mulling and musing will gain momentum. Events on the field will be only part of the story. 

Unlike when South Africa play England, whose superiority complex irks them, or Australia, who they cannot stand for too many reasons to get into here, or Pakistan, whose competitive spirit they can’t help admiring, the narrative of their encounters with India has veered in polar fashion.

From a dull start in 1992/93 to the unnerving intensity of 1999/00 — still South Africa’s only series win in India — to the unfairness of the Nagpur pitch in 2015/16, to the South Africans returning that favour wickedly at the Wanderers in 2017/18, we can never know what a rubber between these teams is going to deliver. But we know it will be closely watched, even by drunk students with a dodgy idea of the players’ names.

First published by Cricbuzz.

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