Townships could be just the ticket for MSL

“Currently the MSL is the second-most watched T20 league in the world behind the IPL.” – Thabang Moroe talks a big game. 

TELFORD VICE in Cape Town

IF you live in a township, the Mzansi Super League (MSL) could be coming to a ground near you.

The troubled tournament, now in its second edition and still without a headline sponsor or the prospect of breaking even, is currently playing out to mostly empty stands in the country’s major stadiums.

Except in Paarl, where the ground is part of the eastern suburb of Amstelhof, a disadvantaged coloured part of town.

A crowd of 5 500, the MSL’s biggest so far this year, attended the match between the Paarl Rocks’ home game against the Cape Town Blitz on Sunday.

That’s almost twice as many as the 2 844 who saw the Jozi Stars play the Nelson Mandela Giants at the Wanderers last week — despite the facts that the game was played on a Saturday and that it featured drawcards Chris Gayle, Kagiso Rabada and Jason Roy.

Only 3 104 were at St George’s Park on Wednesday to see the Giants beat a Cape Town Blitz side studded with Quinton de Kock, Dale Steyn and Wahab Riaz in a thrilling contest that was decided with only four balls to spare.

Paarl is undoubtedly a cricketminded place, so there’s no need to convince the locals to turn up.

But it wouldn’t have hurt that there are, comparatively, fewer entertainment options there than in bigger centres; neither that the competition appears to have been better marketed in Paarl than elsewhere.  

Those factors haven’t gone unnoticed. 

In an interview with television channel Newzroom Afrika on Thursday night, Cricket South Africa chief executive Thabang Moroe said: “We have to look at the Paarl Rocks and their stadium in the Boland and the number of people they are attracting.

“They’re people who’ve been hungry for cricket content — the stadium is in a township, and access is one of South African people’s problems.

“Not many people can afford to get to the stadiums and leave as late as the matches finish, and not everybody’s got access to a car to make it to the ground.

“Those are some of the things we need to work on to make sure we get those bums on seats, and help in getting people back home.”

Moroe said the MSL was “a perfect competition” to “take to the people”.

“We need to go back to the drawing board and look at our strategy and say, are we taking it to the right stadiums?

“And what would be the right answers in terms of moving matches around?”

A challenge to the noble aim of taking the MSL to the people is that every township ground beside Paarl’s would likely require a significant upgrade before it could host events of that size.

That’s a searing indictment of CSA, considering unity was proclaimed 28 years ago.

The blame for that can’t be laid at the door of Moroe, who admitted that swathes of empty seats was “not a good look” and correctly countered with “we need to look at previous domestic competitions, where attendance has been just as poor”.

Also, the weather hasn’t been a cricket fan, what with a third of the dozen games played so far washed out.

But Moroe made the stunning although unexplained claim, which was not interrogated on air, that the MSL was “currently the second-most watched T20 league in the world behind the IPL”.

Why then, besides the valid reasons Moroe has given, are so few people interested in seeing it first-hand?

And why, if the MSL is such a hot property, do almost no potential backers want to put their money where the tournament’s mouth is?

“We had a lot of work to get through in terms of commercial agreements that we needed to work on and sign in order to get the league over the line this year,” Moroe said.

“From the commercial side of things, there really isn’t that much work left to do.

“Except working hard on getting sponsors in.”

Maybe CSA should have done that first.

First published by TMG Digital.

CSA delay key appointment, which will keep Nkwe aboard

“The one thing we’re not going to do is get rushed into doing this thing.” – Thabang Moroe explains CSA not meeting their deadline to appoint a director of cricket.

TELFORD VICE in Cape Town

THABANG Moroe has hinted that Cricket South Africa’s (CSA) search for a director of cricket will continue, which means Enoch Nkwe will stay on as team director for the men’s Test series against England.

That would be an understandable, even responsible, course of action — but it will add to the uncertainty that clouds the game in the country.

Revenue woes, too many interim appointees in important positions, and the Mzansi Super League failing to capture enough attention are all more prominent discussion topics among cricketminded South Africans than feats involving runs and wickets.

Perhaps that’s why CSA chief executive Moroe did the media rounds on Thursday night.

He told SAFM: “Should we not be in a position to appoint the director of cricket tomorrow [on Friday], then Enoch Nkwe will continue as coach of the Proteas when England comes here.

“But we will need to give him the necessary support.”

Moroe went into more detail on television channel Newzroom Afrika: “We’ve never had this position before, so we’re trying as best as we can to get it right.

“Having said that, there will be mistakes we make in terms of the appointment.

“But the one thing we’re not going to do is get rushed into doing this thing.

“It’s a massive appointment and we’re not taking it lightly.

“We’re brainstorming around this issue on a daily basis with the board.

“It’s in the best interests of CSA that we take our time and appoint the best person for the job — almost a perfect fit.

“Somebody who will understand the cricket side of things and the business side of things because that will be just as important, commercially, for us; a person who also understands the administrative part of the game.”

Graeme Smith was, TMG Digital understands, the leading candidate until he announced his withdrawal last Friday — what Moroe seemed to refer to when he said, “The unfortunate incident happened last week.”

Smith posted on social media that, “… despite my obvious desire to make a difference during the long and, at times, frustrating process over the last 10 or so weeks of discussions, I have not developed the necessary confidence that I would be given the level of freedom and support to initiate the required changes”.

What would the position entail?

“His powers would begin and end with him appointing the manager of the team, previously termed the coach,” Moroe said.

“He would appoint the coach of the men’s team and the coach of the women’s team, and the under-19s.

“That’s literally where your powers stop.

“The team director, being the coach, then takes over and compiles who he feels should be their support staff and how they’re going to run that team.

“And then the director of cricket would appoint a high performance manager and role out the high performance plan with the manager.”

Perhaps that wasn’t enough for Smith — or maybe he couldn’t get that level of detail out of CSA, who are notoriously dismal communicators.

Former provincial administrator and national selector Hussein Manack and interim director of cricket Corrie van Zyl — who is currently suspended — were also interviewed.

To resort to the most irritating question in cricket, who’s winning?

“There’s no frontrunner at the moment,” Moroe said. 

“We set ourselves the timeline to fill the role before England comes here, so that the director of cricket can work closely with the team director and we can gauge the charisma between the two of them and see how they would role out their plans into the [2020] T20 World Cup.

“But should the need arise to go back, re-advertise and even start inviting internationals to apply, nothing is stopping us from doing such. 

“The deadline we had set ourselves was this Friday. On Friday we’ll sit around the table and discuss, and if we’re happy with where we are we’ll announce our decision.”

Moroe said the chance of CSA coming up with a name on Friday was “50-50 at the moment”, but he didn’t seem convinced that would happen.  

Nkwe was an interim appointment for the tour to India, and he could hardly be blamed for the 3-0 thrashing South Africa endured in the Test series — which was a hangover of their poor World Cup under Ottis Gibson.

But if England show that Nkwe’s team are still in a funk, his position will be under threat.

That part of this ongoing drama will start unfolding at Centurion on December 26.

First published by TMG Digital.