South Africans help pandemic persist

Where else was omicron cooked up if not in the ranks of the unmasked, undistanced, uncaring, uncivilised antivaxxers? 

Telford Vice | Cape Town

Deep in the doldrums of lockdown last year, when for five weeks South Africans were not allowed to leave their homes to exercise or walk their dogs, we would appear on our balconies and verandahs every evening to applaud healthcare workers.

It was a moment to exhale, to be relieved to have lived another day. But on one of those evenings a particularly cynical Cape Town resident screamed into the crackle of clapping what everyone felt in their souls: “We’re all going to die!”

The story was related around a table in a restaurant on Sunday, where we had gathered to celebrate a mutual friend’s birthday. It was met with hollow levity, like that of all those who dare to look in the eye the trauma they have survived. And who know more harm is in their midst: the uninvited, unwanted guest at the party was omicron.

South Africa recorded no new cases of any variant of Covid-19 on November 14 and 18, and for most of that month the numbers were in the low hundreds. But, on November 23, there were 18,586 new infections. Only once in the first five days of December was the count below 10,000. Twice it topped 16,000.

The positivity rate on Sunday, when we sat and laughed and drank and ate and tried to behave as if all was normal, was 23.8% — almost a quarter of those tested were confirmed to have contracted the disease. Early indications are that most of them will not need a hospital, but we know by now that that can change in a heartbeat. Especially when hearts stop beating. We’re not all going to die, but some of us might.

South Africa’s role in all this is complex. Our scientists told the world of the existence of the new variant, which led, swiftly, to the closing of other countries’ borders to us. And to those countries either prohibiting or making it difficult and expensive for their citizens to travel to our shores and return home. Much the same countries have bought exponentially more doses of vaccine than they need to inoculate their entire population. That has led to claims of geopolitical racism.

It also means the cancellation of South Africa’s summer tourist season for the second consecutive year. In 2018 the holiday industry earned nearly 3% of the country’s gross domestic product and employed around 4.5% of all those who had jobs. 

Not that South Africans are blameless in this saga. On Sunday we could see each others’ unmasked faces as we laughed and topped up our drinks. So far, so legal. But on the street outside, mask-wearing seemed to be optional and social distancing was something that we used to do. Both measures remain, officially, mandatory.

But in a society where authority has never been respected — how were we supposed to respect the racist laws that held sway for hundreds of years? — regulations are disregarded with impunity.

We have among the most progressive constitutions in the world, and among the most socially conservative populations. Apartheid was declared dead in 1994, but white supremacy continues to thrive in every significant sense. We have developed some of the most advanced virology in the world because we have been fighting HIV and Aids for decades, but we are beset by roaming mobs of protesting Covid vaccine refuseniks and conspiracy theorists who, shamefully, compare efforts to administer the life-saving jab as widely as possible to the holocaust and apartheid.

Sunday’s happy scene would have been impossible during the more stringent stages of last year’s lockdown, when restaurants and bars were shut. Once reopened they were initially not allowed to sell booze. Despite that, many did. The code was to ask for a glass of grape juice, specifying red or white. A glass of wine would arrive, accompanied by an empty can that once held the correspondingly coloured grape juice.

Not unrelated is that drunk driving is, of course, against the law, but also a deadly national sport: research by road safety and medical experts shows that alcohol can be blamed for 27.1% of traffic deaths. So, along with restaurants and bars, liquor stores were also shuttered for weeks last year. That prompted many to nurture relationships with their friendly neighbourhood bootlegger.

Adalbert Gordon-Ernst, an anaesthetist at Groote Schuur, a major Cape Town hospital made world famous by Christiaan Barnard performing the first successful heart transplant there in December 1967, explained why the booze ban was necessary: “Alcohol went away and there was a dramatic reduction in the amount of trauma cases that we saw. The alcohol ban was lifted, and then this huge wave of trauma hit us. It saturated our system, and we were working with fewer staff dealing with regular surgical emergencies because we were reaching peak numbers of Covid patients that had to be looked after.”

We can’t handle our drink. But we keep drinking too much regardless. And, because of our drunken misadventures, we end up cluttering trauma wards that could be put to better use. Enough of us also can’t handle the truth that the vaccines work, which allows the virus time and space to mutate. Where else was omicron cooked up if not in the ranks of the unmasked, undistanced, uncaring, uncivilised antivaxxers? 

If we were honest with ourselves on Sunday, we would have conceded that that’s what we were really afraid of; that the bastards would lock us down again. The National Coronavirus Command Council is meeting as we speak, and tougher restrictions are anticipated. How far can we be from a vaccine mandate?

Only one person succumbed of Covid-19 in South Africa on Sunday. They were 89,966th death claimed by the pandemic in South Africa. That’s one, nevermind 89,966, too many. There will, of course, be far too many more.

We know we’re all going to die of something. But we want to go out on our own terms. And we don’t want to die sober.

First published by News9 Live

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Sri Lanka tour continues despite South Africa’s lockdown

South Africa recorded 14,796 Covid-19 cases on Christmas Day alone. A month earlier, on November 25, only 3,250 had tested positive.

Telford Vice |Centurion

SRI Lanka’s Test series in South Africa will continue despite the country being plunged into lockdown at midnight on Monday. President Cyril Ramaphosa announced a raft of new restrictions to combat a rocketing Covid-19 infection rate, including an alcohol ban, a tightened curfew, the prohibition of social gatherings, and the closure of rivers, beaches and parks in hotspot areas. 

But government said “sport, arts and culture activities, including both professional and non-professional matches, by recognised sporting bodies are allowed”, provided that “only journalists, radio, television crew, security personnel, emergency medical services, and the necessary employees employed by the owners of the venue … are allowed at the venue of the … match”, and that “only the required number of players, match officials, support staff and medical crew required for the sport match, are allowed at the venue”.

CSA’s interim board said on Monday that “the new restrictions will not impact the … match currently underway at … Centurion”, which reaches its fourth day on Tuesday. The second Test is due to start at the Wanderers on January 3, and a board spokesperson confirmed on Tuesday it would go ahead as planned.

South Africa recorded 14,796 cases of Covid-19 on Christmas Day alone. A month earlier, on November 25, only 3,250 had tested positive. The country passed a million cases of the virus this week.

First published by Cricbuzz.

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Never alone: the corona culture of sport and fandom

If a wicket falls in an empty stadium and no-one hears it, has it really fallen? The virus vexed future of playing and watching sport.

TELFORD VICE | Cape Town

“WHEN you walk through a storm.” Even the most casual football person knows what’s coming. “Hold your head up high.” If, somehow, they don’t know, the internet will tell them. “And don’t be afraid of the dark.”

There aren’t quite enough recorded versions … “At the end of a storm …” to assign one to each of the 54 074 seats at Anfield. “ … There’s a golden sky …” But many have been made since 1945 … “And the sweet silver song of a lark …” when it featured in Carousel, a Rodgers and Hammerstein musical.

“Walk on through the wind …” These lines have been ringing out wherever Scousers, actual and aspirant, have gathered since Gerry and the Pacemakers went to No. 1 in the UK charts in 1963. “Walk on through the rain …” At this point even non-Liverpool supporters pause to pay their respects, because this isn’t any anthem.

“Though your dreams be tossed and blown …” It’s the sound of loyalty and belonging … “Walk on, walk on …” and of knowing you are among comrades … “With hope in your heart …” This, surely, is the sound of love.

“And you’ll never walk alone … You’ll never walk alone.”

But, late on the night of July 22, Liverpool’s players and staff were indeed alone. With each other. They had gathered on a specially constructed podium in the stands of their famous stadium’s even more famous Kop end, which was draped in banners and flags.

The dazzling football both teams had played that evening, unhinged in the best way from having to take things seriously, in Liverpool’s 5-3 win over Chelsea was irrelevant. Nothing had mattered in the English Premier League since June 25, when Chelsea beat Manchester City to ensure Liverpool would win the title for the first time in 30 years.

As Jordan Henderson, Liverpool’s captain, thrust the trophy into the night sky, his players boomed their triumph behind him and lights, fireworks, music and glittery confetti filled millions of screens around the world. But there was a hollowness at the heart of the scene that could only have been filled by occupants of those 54 074 empty, silent seats. The only witnesses, bar the functionaries, were Anfield’s ghosts of successes and failures past.

You’ll Never Walk Alone had, of course, swooned around the void before kick-off. Lacking human embrace, the music bounced back the unhearing hardness, cold in its rejection. But the first touch of the ball was accompanied, on television, by a warm cheer for the champions.

Fact’s petticoat slipped from under fiction’s ballgown at the start of the second half, when the canned noise kicked in a heartbeat too late to spare viewers the rippling echoes of the players’ shouting and clapping their encouragement to each other. For a moment, sad reality was all there was to hear.

It’s the job of Adam Peri, a Sky Sports sound supervisor, to spare us that terrifying sound. National Public Radio sought him out and found him twiddling knobs for West Ham’s match against Watford in a studio kilometres from London Stadium. “Making sure the West Ham chants are nice and loud,” Peri said. A West Ham player went down. “I’m just going to trickle in a bit of whistles; giving it a bit of a boo …” 

He sees his role as “trying to anticipate what a player might do next, and in a way I guess I’m reading their mind. When you really get into the zone you’re living and breathing the game, feeling confident enough to use any sound that is available to help tell the story.”

The sounds Peri edits into viewers’ consciousness have been recorded at earlier matches by Electronic Arts, or EA Sports (EA), the makers of the FIFA video game. EA sound designer Paul Boechler revealed some of the geekery at play: “There’s things like the ‘oooh’ reaction for a save, and the ‘ooooooh’ reaction to a miss.” 

In football matches broadcast from Spain, a mosaic overlay was applied to camera shots that included the stands to break up views of endless rows of unfilled seats. Another difference will confirm the suspicions of those from sunnier climes that England’s unrelenting winter greyness seeps into hearts and minds. “The Premier League is doing negative reactions, but La Liga is actually not,” Boechler said. “La Liga is going with a much more positive reaction focus overall.”

La Liga head of communications Joris Evers confirmed as much, and added: “But it’s not the same. We want to try and get real fans back in the stands as soon as possible.” 

And so says all of sport. If a wicket falls in an empty cricket ground and no-one hears it, has it really fallen? England and West Indies restarted cricket with three Tests played in Southampton and Manchester. Not a lot besides the low burble of a crowd, artificially added by Sky, could by heard.

Without spectators the sound of major sport is of one hand clapping. That may be no bad thing. Instead of Sky’s audio smoke and mirrors, we could hear managers chewing gum between barks at their players. In Germany, Bundesliga viewers had the option of tuning out the canned atmosphere so they could do exactly that.

But it’s complicated, as the television audience discovered during a baseball game between the Los Angeles Dodgers and the Houston Astros in Houston played on the same day Liverpool raised the trophy. When Dodgers pitcher Joe Kelly lingered at first base after a confrontational play, Astros manager Dusty Baker, out of sight but not out of range of the microphones, was heard yelling, “Just get on the mound, motherfucker.”

Baseball has had an interesting relationship with empty stadiums. Alternative plans have had to be made for the millions of peanuts grown and roasted to be sold at games in the US, what with each team’s regular season schedule hacked from 162 to only 60 games. In Taiwan, cheerleaders smiled and danced at desolate stands. Down the road in South Korea, teams were in trouble after dressing up sex dolls and putting them in the stands. Bookmakers in the US have adjusted their odds to account for the assumption that, without spectators, home advantage isn’t nearly as influential.

Something similar happened in the Bundesliga, where teams achieved demonstrably better results than previously when they played away. And diving disappeared. What’s the point of trying to fool the referee by rolling like a freshly felled log for metres on end if thousands of one-eyed home fans aren’t howling in sympathy?

Will the seeming silence of the scrum, beyond the hit and heave, be shattered by the sounds of one pack of forwards trying to monster the other? Some of those noises come from strange places and are better unheard. It seems SuperSport, the primary broadcasters of the game in South Africa, will spare us the gorier details once rugby resumes. A spokesperson said the network was “still tweaking the tech, but as a matter of principle, we will incorporate virtual sounds, crowds and fan interaction”.

Even so, as long as stadiums stay empty except for players, officials and camera operators, a human-shaped vacuum will gape at the heart of sport. Professor Heather Reid is the philosophy chair at Morningside College in Sioux City, Iowa. She sits on the boards of publications like the Journal of the Philosophy of Sport and Sport, Ethics and Philosophy. Less extraordinarily, she’s also a fan, as she explained to the BBC: “I was in the bird’s nest stadium in Beijing the night that Usain Bolt broke the world record in the 100 metres [at the 2008 Olympics], and there’s this feeling that goes over the crowd that makes everyone feel like hugging each other. We transcend our partisan rooting for particular countries and a particular athlete, and we all start cheering just for what a human being is able to do.”

Unfortunately for all who know and cherish that feeling, another professor, bioethicist Andy Miah, the science communication and future media chair at the University of Salford in Manchester, is here to burst that bubble. “The big transition that people are coming to terms with is the idea that we are able to live within virtual worlds,” he said. “It’s really remarkable what’s happened over the last few months.”

Miah listed the Mutua Madrid Virtual Open Pro tennis tournament, which featured Andy Murray and Rafael Nadal squaring off not across a net but in front of a computer, holding controllers instead of racquets, as an example. And the Australia Virtual F1 Grand Prix, which replaced the cancelled real-world version: suddenly gamers were competing with drivers.

“Reality is going through a major upheaval,” Miah said. “Sport has always been a kind of unreality. We’re beginning to see a complete change of the relationship between the spectator and the player. People want to be part of the production of the sport, not just be spectators of it.”

Already, Formula E drivers’ electric cars go faster when they use a “fanboost” — a surge of bonus power available to the five drivers who win the most supporters’ votes. “We can imagine a future where you have crowds making decisions in the field of play in a much more direct way,” Miah said.        

The fans, it seems, are no longer content to watch alone.

First published by New Frame.

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Lockdown life lands big fish De Kock

“It’s going to be tough to play professional games. We’re going to have so many regulations. Realistically, I don’t foresee cricket being played for a while.” – Quinton de Kock on the game’s return in South Africa.

TELFORD VICE | Cape Town

CRICKET wants Quinton de Kock back from the coronavirus lockdown sooner rather than later, but the hankering is not mutual. South Africa’s white-ball captain and all-format wicketkeeper last picked up a bat four months ago. And he doesn’t plan on doing so with earnest intent for a while yet, despite being in the 45-man high performance training squad named last Monday.

During an online press conference after Cricket South Africa’s (CSA) awards on Saturday, when he was the major men’s winner, De Kock told reporters: “Look, I could be honest. Or I can be … I’ll give you my honest opinion: I’ve done nothing. Lockdown has been, you know, lockdown. I haven’t done anything. Obviously I’ve kept up with fitness. I’ve done my training in the gym and what not, but I haven’t hit a ball yet.”

Whyever not?

“There’s still so much time until the next serious cricket game is going to happen. So to go back to serious training … I don’t know when it needs to happen. I mean, you can go back to hitting balls, for now. But we could actually be hitting balls for no reason. That’s where I feel I’m at.”

The international schedule says South Africa are due in the Caribbean to play West Indies in two Tests and five T20Is from July 23 to August 16. But clearance to train was only obtained from government on June 26 and South Africa’s borders remain closed. Thus the tour exists only, and is likely to only ever exist, as an itinerary.   

“I’m sure other guys have trained, but I kind of needed a little bit of lockdown,” De Kock said. “I needed a break to spend time with myself, my family, friends. You know, do my own thing. I’ve really taken to it and really enjoyed it. I’ve tried to really stay away from cricket. But as soon as we get the full go ahead, when serious cricket is going to happen, then I’ll get back into it. I’m not too sure when it’s going to happen, but as soon as we get the go ahead then I’ll get back into it ASAP.”

Reminded that he was in the training group, De Kock said: “Obviously we’re all part of the squad. But, because of the regulations, it’s hard to have such a big squad in a certain environment. I’m based in a very remote place. There’s not much cricket around where I live. I’ve made sure my fitness is up to date. Practice almost becomes muscle memory. For me, at this point in my career, a break is more important than training.”

De Kock lives in Knysna, a picturesque seaside town in the Western Cape famed for its verdant forest, breathtaking views from craggy coastal cliffs, and South Africa’s finest oysters. It’s no doubt close to heaven for De Kock, who is happiest when he has a fishing rod — not a bat — in his hands. In August last year he went all the way to Bolivia with another of his ilk, Dale Steyn, in hopes of hooking the infamously feisty golden dorado.  

“I don’t need all that stress on myself. I could see from a mile away that I didn’t need the Test captaincy on top of my shoulders.”

As the 45-man squad cannot train together because of South Africa’s anti-virus regulations, the players are to report to their nearest franchise venue to practise in small groups. The nearest such ground to De Kock is St George’s Park in Port Elizabeth, 261 kilometres east of Knysna. But Port Elizabeth is in the Eastern Cape and travel across provincial lines is not freely permitted under the current rules, although De Kock might qualify for a permit. The closest regularly used franchise venue to Knysna that is also in the Western Cape is Paarl, some 437 kilometres to the west. It’s not on the coast, but the area offers decent trout fishing for intrepid anglers like De Kock.

He wasn’t about to take the bait: “It’s going to be tough to play professional games. We’re going to have so many regulations. Realistically, I don’t foresee cricket being played [in South Africa] for a while. I’m talking at least a month. Obviously we’ve got the three game thing, so we’ll play that. But international cricket, I don’t know.

“You’ve got guys like Jacques and Graeme, they’re on it. I haven’t been part of their conversation so I don’t really know. I’m sure they’re keen to get some cricket played.

“I’ve really enjoyed the lockdown, but it comes to the point where I also want to get back on the field and start playing. So I’m very unsure. I’m a bit in the clouds as to what’s going on.”

Jacques Faul and Graeme Smith, CSA’s acting chief executive and their director of cricket, are indeed working hard on getting the game back on the field. Their first step towards that happening is “the three game thing”, a single match of 36 overs contested by three teams of eight players in a new format called 3TC. Originally scheduled for June 27, the venture had to be postponed because CSA couldn’t secure government permission in time for it to go ahead as planned.

That has since been granted, and the game is now slated for July 18 in Centurion, which is in Gauteng — where around 4,000 new Covid-19 cases are being reported daily. Consequently the province’s premier, David Makhura, is considering enforcing a tougher version of lockdown. Faul told Cricbuzz on Sunday that CSA had identified Skukuza, a rural hamlet in Mpumalanga, and Potchefstroom in North West as viable alternatives if Centurion is rendered off limits for cricket in the coming days.

Not that De Kock, who is due to captain one of the 3TC sides, is wondering whether he might soon have the chance to angle for barbel in Mpumalanga’s Sand River, catch carp in the Vaal River in North West, or try his luck trawling for empty beer cans and other rubbish in Centurion Lake, which is undergoing rehabilitation in the wake of years of pollution.

De Kock was last on the field in Potchefstroom on March 7, when he captained South Africa to a six-wicket win to seal a 3-0 sweep in an ODI series against Australia. That was their only success in their last seven rubbers across the formats, not counting a disastrous 2019 World Cup campaign in which they won only three of their eight completed matches. So De Kock’s seeming ambivalence about getting back on the horse won’t sit well with some.

But he wasn’t betraying snowflake tendencies when he said he was enjoying lockdown. Not since 2012 has he had such an extended break from the game. Even so, he played 55 matches that year and has reached 50 games on this annual scoreboard five times in the previous eight years. He hit 40 matches in 2011 and has not dipped beneath that benchmark since. The time he spent in Bolivia with Steyn was one of only 11 full months in the past 96 — eight years — in which he has not played cricket.

Small wonder De Kock was relieved when Smith said in April that, because of his already demanding workload, he would not succeed Faf du Plessis as Test captain. “Me and [South Africa coach Mark Boucher] had a very informal chat,” De Kock said on Saturday. “I told him, look, I don’t know how I feel about being Test captain also. The reality is that’s just too much for me to handle. I know that and I realise that. I don’t need all that stress on myself. I could see from a mile away that I didn’t need that on top of my shoulders.”

Besides, having the white-ball leadership thrust on him in the throes of the tumult cricket in South Africa has been though on and off the field in recent months was challenging enough. Along with a new captain, the team has welcomed a new coach, and his backroom staff, twice since the World Cup. The chief executive is among seven suspended senior staff members, four board members resigned, and longterm sponsors severed ties.

A measure of the solid repair job Faul is doing was the announcement on Thursday of a new headline sponsor, Betway, for the men’s Test and ODI formats, the men’s T20 team and the women’s teams. But CSA have a long way to go before they can consider themselves out of the woods. And even though they expect to record a profit this year — not least because operations have been severely scaled down. For instance, staging Saturday’s awards online instead of shelling out for a venue and for the travel, accommodation, wining and dining costs of hundreds of guests probably saved CSA around USD117,000.

Players tend to try and remove themselves from all that, but they are not immune to the effects of instability, as De Kock explained: “There were a lot of changes, especially after the World Cup. Faf had a lot of pressure put on him, and my thing was to make sure I back him. It was difficult. But I found a way, mentally, to get past it.

“Playing for a high-profile cricket team you go through so many changes at so many different times that it almost becomes the norm to get past the difficult times. So it was difficult at stages but we got through it, which is the important thing.”

Doubtless a fishing rod and a stretch of water helped De Kock reach that peace.

First published by Cricbuzz.

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South Africa woos India, sends love to Sourav

“It would be great to see a cricket man like Sourav Ganguly get into the role of president of the ICC.” – Graeme Smith goes to bat for the BCCI boss.

TELFORD VICE | Cape Town

SOUTH Africa are hopeful that India will tour near the end of August to mark the resumption of cricket in the country in the wake of the coronavirus pandemic. The plan is for the teams to contest three T20Is behind closed doors, possibly in a sanitised accommodation, training and playing biobubble. Perhaps not coincidentally, it seems Sourav Ganguly can count on South Africa’s backing should he consider a bid for the ICC leadership.

“We had a teleconference with India [on Wednesday)] and we’re encouraged by their willingness to honour the agreement to play the three T20s in August, and if that’s postponed maybe a bit later,” Jacques Faul, Cricket South Africa’s (CSA) acting chief executive, told an online press conference on Thursday. “That’s very encouraging. We had a very good discussion with them.”

The conversation started in pre-lockdown February, when Faul and CSA’s director of cricket, Graeme Smith, travelled to India to meet with BCCI officials including Ganguly, the president. Smith and Ganguly played against each other for South Africa and India in eight Tests and five ODIs from September 2002 to April 2008. At 47 Ganguly is only eight years older than Smith. He played his last match for India in November 2008, less than six years before Smith retired. It seems a healthy respect exists between them.

Certainly, Smith didn’t shy away from going to bat for Ganguly with all the unsubtle effectiveness he would use to ruin bowlers’ figures during his playing career: “Leadership in our sport is going to be key, and having someone at a level who understands the modern game, understands the challenges that are going to be faced, emphasises more the people who get put into key positions. I think the president of the ICC becomes a key position. It would be great to see a cricket man like Sourav Ganguly get into the role of president of the ICC. That will be good for the game and good for the modern game. He understands it, he’s played it as the highest level, he’s respected, and his leadership will be key to us going forward. That would be a great appointment.”

The ICC is no longer headed by a president, but Shashank Manohar has confirmed he will not seek re-election as chair at the organisation’s annual conference in July. Smith left no doubt about his view on who should be Manohar’s successor: “Post Covid and the things that are going to come our way, to have strong leadership [will be important]. Someone like Sourav Ganguly is best positioned for that. I know him well. I’ve played against him and I’ve worked with him as an administrator and in television. He’s got the credibility and the leadership skills, and is someone who could really take the game forward. More than anything, that’s needed right now at an ICC level. We know the elections are coming up and there’s a few names in the hat but my own opinion is that it’s time someone closer to the modern game with leadership credentials got into a key position.”

Faul followed that lead: “We’ve always worked closely with India, and I think India must play a leadership role when it comes to the FTP and a responsible one. Our engagement with Sourav has been very positive. I haven’t played a lot of cricket against Sourav, so I don’t know him as well as Graeme. This is Graeme’s style — he comes out and he speaks openly, which is great. Even in administration, he comes out and farms the bowling. We’ve checked with the leadership [of CSA], if we would support an Indian candidate [for ICC] president, and at this stage we would. We don’t see any problems with supporting an Indian candidate, but we’ve got to look at who’s nominated.”

Later in the press conference, in answer to a question posed in Afrikaans, Faul elaborated: “There aren’t any candidates yet and there aren’t any nominees, but India play a big leadership role anyway. I don’t think any one country should control cricket; the countries that are strong can help other countries. There’s going to be speculation about who a suitable leader would be. It’s not as if there’s only one person who could do it. But it’s good to hear someone like Graeme Smith is of the opinion that someone like Sourav Ganguly could play this leadership role.

“We have to agree with Graeme that someone like Sourav would be a strong candidate. We can’t commit ourselves to that. We don’t even know if Sourav is available to do it. That’s Graeme’s opinion, and we respect it and agree that he could play a big role in world cricket. But we’ve seen what Graeme has done for us in several aspects. He has the respect of role players, including the media, players, officials and administrators. Considering the big contribution Graeme has made, I agree with him that someone like Sourav, if he is interested in a leadership position like this, could make an impact.” 

Friday marks the end of the South Africa’s eighth week in lockdown, and although the level of the restrictions look set to eased no end to the measures is in sight. Whether regulations will have eased enough to enable India to tour in August cannot be known. But CSA have to plan as if that will happen as a precursor to staging half a season from January, starting with the Mzansi Super League. “We’re looking at a return to play, a return to train, and a return to work,” Faul said. “The scenarios we use are three months, six months and nine months. We’re too scared to go beyond that for planning purposes. There’s still a low level of predictability.

“We’re in the process of seeking an audience with the minister of arts, sport and culture to get permission, if needed, to play behind closed doors. This will relate to the possibility of the India incoming tour. We’re trying to be very innovative.”

CSA have to pull out all the stops to generate revenue, what with the South African Cricketers’ Association expecting them to lose USD55.9-million by the end of the 2022 rights cycle — a scenario sketched before the pandemic, and that can only worsen given current conditions. A tour by India would put a dent in the losses but it won’t be easy to pull off. 

“The commitment is still there to get the three T20s done,” Smith said. “The goal is to keep in constant communication to see where both countries are sitting from a virus and a government regulation [perspective]. There is an element of guesswork. No-one understands what things are going to be like come the end of August. We believe we’re a socially safe and socially distant sport, and we believe we can get it done behind closed doors. We hope the world is in a better place come August.”

India’s entire touring party would, on arrival, have to spend 14 days in isolation on and another 14 days in strict seclusion before they depart. CSA’s chief medical officer, Shuaib Manjra, said it was likely they would remain in a “biobubble”, a “… sanitised cricket biosphere with strict entry standards and limited movement out …” for the duration of their visit.

But little was certain, as Manjra explained: “We probably will see peak infection in August and September, and we will probably see different peaks in different parts of the country. Nothing can be cast in stone. We’ll take our directive from government.

“Even if there is a biobubble, is there going to be international travel? I can’t see large-scale international travel coming back for the next three months, so that would be a limiting factor. Unless you get a charter flight, get them to land at a safe airport and take them straight into the biobubble.”

Manjra also had his scientific eye on the wider realities facing the game: “We’ve got to consider that our players have all had a two-month lay-off. They haven’t played cricket, they haven’t been able to train at maximum capacity. Consequently the risk of injury is significantly increased if they come back to cricket too early.

“What is the impact of intense physical activity on individual players infected by Covid-19 when they return to play?  

“What happens should a player develop Covid-19? I have no doubt that many of our players will develop the infection. The challenge for us is when are they safe to return to play, and what are the risks when they return? The more intriguing and challenging question is what is the risk for asymptomatic positives, [people] who have no symptoms but are Covid-19 positive? The risk to them would be significant and we need to determine how we’re going to identify and manage them.”

Smith’s focus was necessarily different, but no less stark: “All cards are on the table and we’re exploring all options. Sport has had to think like business, not just an events company. We’ve got to look at many aspects of our game and how we make it work. Neutral venues, coming together with other nations, looking at what the best opportunities to get our cricket done. Our goal is to get cricket up and running as quickly as possible.”

Also as safely as possible, of course. For all concerned. And the next time Smith is able to go to India he might find he has been granted the freedom of Kolkata.

First published by Cricbuzz.