Moreeng denies dressingroom divide

“Whatever challenges we encounter, which are in every changeroom, we discuss as we go along.” – Hilton Moreeng

Telford Vice / Cape Town

DENIALS weren’t hard to find at a press conference given by South Africa’s coach and captain on Friday, seven days before they need to have found a way past the elephant in their dressingroom.

How would Hilton Moreeng manage the schism in that space about his retention as coach, especially with the start of a series against Pakistan looming next Friday? “There are challenges here and there, internal things we discuss,” Moreeng said. “Regarding the changeroom being divided, it’s not something that has happened. All of us are looking for the way forward — we need to see how we can improve on our last performance in the World Cup. We are building as a team. Whatever challenges we encounter, which are in every changeroom, we discuss as we go along.”

That despite the now common knowledge that senior players want Moreeng replaced, which they have told CSA in writing. He has been in the job for almost 11 years and has guided South Africa to two ODI World Cup semifinals and to the final of this year’s T20 World Cup. But Cricbuzz has learnt some of his players feel the team are succeeding “despite him, not because of him”. They want fresh ideas.

Moreeng staying on at least until the end of the year — his previous contract expired on June 30 — likely led to Suné Luus’ decision to relinquish the captaincy. Why did Moreeng think Luus had walked away six months after becoming the first South Africa captain to take a senior team to a World Cup final? “She decided to step down because she wants to contribute to the team and her performances,” Moreeng said. “It was tough but we had to accept it. That’s how the player feels; she feels she can contribute more.”

Luus averages 26.96 in ODIs as a captain compared to 22.39 when she isn’t. Her T20I strike rate is 100.66 when the buck stops with her and 107.38 when she doesn’t have that responsibility. The differences are on the bigger side of marginal but, more pertinently, she has been succeeded by Laura Wolvaardt, who sources say at first rejected the leadership offer. Was that the case?

“No, that’s not true,” Wolvaardt said. “I had a conversation with the coach and the head selector [Clinton du Preez] and they asked if I wanted to do the role, and I said it had definitely been in the back of my mind for some time and I was excited to get the opportunity. We mutually agreed on the two tours to see if it was something I would respond well to, batting-wise and leadership-wise.”

Wolvaardt has been appointed in an interim capacity for three ODIs and as many T20Is against Pakistan in Karachi from September 1 to 14, and for three ODIs and five T20Is against New Zealand in South Africa from September 24 to October 15. She will “see if it’s something I am able to handle and if I can still focus on my batting with the added responsibility”.

What kind of captain would she be? “I like to think of myself as calm and composed. I’m hoping I am able to bring that onto the field. We’ll see what happens in tight games. I’m more soft-spoken than what other captains might be. I’m going to try and lead through my actions, lead from the front.”

What did Moreeng make of Wolvaardt’s elevation? “She has a very good cricket brain and is a very disciplined cricketer. The way she goes about her game is evident to everyone in the team. I don’t think the responsibility will impact her performance. She knows the importance of both roles she plays in the team. We don’t think it should be a challenge regarding her performances.”

Wolvaardt has played 134 matches for South Africa across the formats. She has been a central cog in their batting unit almost from her debut at 16 in an ODI against England in Benoni in February 2016. “It’s not like I’m coming into a side where I don’t know half the people,” she said. “It’s about making sure I get the best out of the players. My main objective is to see where everyone is at and make sure everyone is ready to go.”

Some of these matters would have been interrogated at a camp in Pretoria from August 9 to 18. “We could speak and find out what the actual challenges are,” Moreeng said. “What needs to be discussed and sorted out is busy being sorted out.”

The rest are in the hands of CSA. Or what Moreeng called “discussions happening above our pay grade”. His position, for instance, has been advertised. That can only cause anxiety. “Uncertainty comes with the job,” Moreeng said. “For us it’s about focusing on what is front of us.” Like the elephant in the room, you would hope.

Cricbuzz

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Wolvaardt’s turn in the spotlight as women hit the headlines

“Because she’s a good person. She knows that the team needs this, and that the team comes first.” – a view on why Laura Wolvaardt took on the captaincy.

Telford Vice / Cape Town

YOU can have any cricket story you like in South Africa these days as long as it’s about women. On Thursday the headline was Laura Wolvaardt being named captain for the imminent series against Pakistan and New Zealand.

“Having more of a leadership role is something I’ve wanted to take on,” Wolvaardt was quoted as saying in a CSA release. “It’ll help me as a cricketer and learning to think as a captain on the field will hopefully help my batting as well. I’m very excited to be able to contribute in another way too, and not just in batting.

“What I can bring to the role is the experience that I have in the side. I’ve been playing international cricket since I was 16 years old, I know quite a lot of players in the circuit and I’ve been playing in the leagues as well. So I’ve played a lot of cricket in recent years and, hopefully, I’m able to use that experience and the knowledge to my advantage when I captain the team. I’d like to also think of myself as quite calm and level-headed and that’s probably more of the approach that I try to take on the field as a captain.”

Wolvaardt will be in charge for three games in each of the white-ball formats against Pakistan in Karachi from September 1 to 14, and for three ODIs and five T20Is against New Zealand in South Africa from September 24 to October 15.  

On Friday we learnt how the vacancy Wolvaardt has filled had come about. CSA’s release that day said Suné Luus would “no longer continue her interim captaincy”. Unwisely, it did not explain why. Leave a vacuum like that and it will soon be filled by speculation.  

Luus had stepped into the breach when Dané van Niekerk fell short of then required fitness standards — they have since been relaxed — and was ruled out of the T20 World Cup, which was played in South Africa in February. Under Luus, South Africa reached the final of a senior World Cup of any kind and any gender for the first time.

So her departure from the job jarred. As did CSA’s use of the word “interim”. Twice at press conferences during the T20 World Cup Luus told reporters that she was no longer deputising in the position, which she had done since Van Niekerk broke her ankle in January 2022. On February 9, more than a year since she had taken over the leadership and the day before her team’s T20 World Cup opener against Sri Lanka at Newlands, Luus said: “It’s always difficult being a stand-in captain. You’re always one foot in, one foot out.” Holding the wheel as an appointed captain “makes my job easier, to take control and stamp my authority on things and how I would like to go about things”.

Although temporary, Luus’ appointment was not interim. Maybe that’s semantics, but her team’s performance at the World Cup and Van Niekerk’s international retirement in March made the matter a no-brainer. Of course Luus, who also took South Africa to the semifinal of the 2022 ODI World Cup in New Zealand, should have continued in the role.    

Why hasn’t she? Because, it has been reliably learnt, she is among senior players in the squad who have told CSA, in writing, that they want a coach who has the kind of fresh ideas they have seen implemented in franchise leagues. For them the methods employed by Hilton Moreeng, who has been South Africa’s coach for almost 11 years, no longer cut the mustard.

So Luus gave up the captaincy, the right thing to do under the circumstances. But she and Wolvaardt are known to be friends, and the chances of them being of like mind about the coach are surely high. Indeed it is understood Wolvaardt at first turned down the captaincy when it was offered to her in the past few days. So why did she take it? “Because she’s a good person,” a source close to the situation told Cricbuzz. “She knows that the team needs this, and that the team comes first.”

She also knows what international captaincy feels like. South Africa’s five-match ODI series against India in Lucknow in March 2021 was tied at 1-1 when Wolvaardt stood in for an injured Luus. The South Africans won two games on the bounce under Wolvaardt to clinch the rubber with a match to spare.

Like her teammates Wolvaardt will go into the Pakistan series buoyed by Tuesday’s news that CSA will pay women the same match fees as men for internationals, and will in the coming summer establish the first professional domestic league for women in any team sport in South Africa.

The women’s team doesn’t attract the broadcast revenue commanded by men, and except for the T20 World Cup women’s matches haven’t attracted major crowds in South Africa. But the men’s side have never made it past an ODI or T20I World Cup semifinal, and unlike the men the women have a title sponsor.

Also, with women’s sport of all kinds on the rise among spectators — who wouldn’t want to watch female footballers target the ball in their challenges rather than see their male counterparts thunder into opponents’ ankles? — and consequently in a commercial sense, levelling the match fees is another no-brainer.

Except, of course, in the brainless wastes of social media. Meyrick Pringle, a swing bowler who played four Tests and 17 ODIs for South Africa from February 1992 to October 1994, posted an article about the equal match fees on one of his pages. Among the comments on Pringle’s post was this: “Can they move the boundary markers back out then, please.” And this: “Only fair that my mate who is a professional musician gets paid the same as Mick Jagger.” And even this: “Now AB [de Villiers] should identify as a woman and go play some [women’s] tournaments.”

You can have any kind of women’s cricket story you like in South Africa these days. Just as long as you don’t expect them to please all of the readers even some of the time. Especially those who never could cover drive nearly as well as Wolvaardt.

Cricbuzz

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Luus no longer captain, Tryon absent as Moreeng moan grows

“The team are winning despite him, not because of him.” – an opinion of Hilton Moreeng.

Telford Vice / Cape Town

SUNé Luus, who captained South Africa to the T20 World Cup final in February, is no longer in the position. The vice-captain, Chloe Tryon, is not in the squad. Unhappiness over the re-appointment of Hilton Moreeng as coach is understood to be at the heart of the issue.

On Friday CSA announced a squad to play three matches in each of the white-ball formats against Pakistan in Karachi from September 1 to 14. Luus was selected but not named captain. Tryon, a release said, had “requested a leave of absence” and was not picked.

No captain was named. The decision had been deferred until closer to the tour, “ensuring a seamless transition and continued success for the team”. That seems unlikely given the dressing room is split over Moreeng, who has been South Africa’s coach since December 2012. 

Senior players, Cricbuzz has learnt, wrote to CSA expressing dissatisfaction over Moreeng’s coaching philosophy. Although Moreeng is not unpopular at an interpersonal level, several sources have said some of the players feel “the team are winning despite him, not because of him”. His methods are deemed outdated, an opinion supported by the fact that he has been in the job for almost 11 years. During the latter part of his tenure South Africa’s players have been exposed to modern coaching styles in competitions like the Big Bash League and The Hundred.   

The complaint reached CSA’s board, which referred it to its cricket committee, which appointed a task team to investigate. It was felt that as the charges against Moreeng were made in a way that did not follow CSA’s established grievance procedures they could not be acted on.

Luus no longer captaining the team is thought to be directly linked to that decision. If she is among the players who have expressed a wish for Moreeng to be removed she could hardly continue in her leadership role. Tryon asking not to be in what looks like an increasingly strained environment is understandable.

Moreeng’s previous contract expired on June 30. That it took CSA until Friday to confirm he would stay on until December 31 would only have inflamed the players’ concerns. Uncertainty fuels unhappiness, a lesson the suits seem determined not to learn.  

It is unfortunate that matters have reached this sorry stage considering Luus’ team were the toast of the game in their country not quite six months ago, when — despite being without Lizelle Lee and Dané van Niekerk — they became the first senior South Africa side to reach a World Cup final. Australia beat them by 19 runs, but it seemed they had put the women’s game in their country on its surest footing yet.

CSA now contract 16 players and are set to announce a new professional league, but women’s cricket in South Africa has been impoverished and under-appreciated compared to the men’s game. This year’s T20 World Cup, which was played in front of adoring home crowds, was considered an important step in changing those realities for the better. Now, it feels like a false dawn.

But it cannot be forgotten that Moreeng helped take South Africa to the heights they reached in February, and to the ODI World Cup semifinals in 2017 and 2022. Like his players he had to find ways to win despite scant resources and support for his team. He has been, one administrator said on Friday, “a one-man band” and had “consistently” taken his concerns to CSA about what he and his players needed and lacked.

A dozen of the 15 players who were in the T20 World Cup squad will be on their way to Pakistan in the coming weeks. But, for now, the focus is on the women who won’t be there. And on the man who will.

South Africa squad for Pakistan series: Anneke Bosch, Tazmin Brits, Nadine de Klerk, Mieke de Ridder, Lara Goodall, Sinalo Jafta, Marizanne Kapp, Ayabonga Khaka, Masabata Klaas, Suné Luus, Nonkululeko Mlaba, Tumi Sekhukhune, Nondumiso Shangase, Delmi Tucker, Laura Wolvaardt.

Fixtures (all at the National Stadium in Karachi): T20Is — September 1, 3 and 5. ODIs — September 8, 11 and 14.

Cricbuzz

Testing time for lesser spotted South Africa

“It’s about longer concentration, and it’s more taxing on the body and the mind.” – Hilton Moreeng on turning white-ball players into a Test team.

Telford Vice | Cape Town

HOW do you prepare a team for a match in a format they hardly ever play? Hilton Moreeng, the coach of the South Africa side who will start a rare women’s Test against England in Taunton on Monday, smiled at the question.  

When South Africa last played a Test the No. 1 song in the US was Taylor Swift’s “Shake it Off”. On the first day of the match, but more than 15,000 kilometres away in New Orleans, Solange Knowles — Beyoncé’s younger sister — married Alan Ferguson. Who? Nevermind: they separated five years later. Or before South Africa had played another Test. Yes, their drought has outlived marriages. Since the women were last in whites, against India in Mysore in November 2014, South Africa’s men have played 65 Tests.   

Only five of Moreeng’s squad of 15 have played first-class cricket, all in Tests; earning six caps in all. Or the same number won by Moreeng alone during his days as a wicketkeeper for Free State’s first-class side in the early 2000s.

With 37 first-class caps, which are also Test caps, England’s squad are six times more seasoned than their opponents. Their most recent match in the format wasn’t almost eight years ago but in January. This year. Not that England have been lurching from one Test to the next. They have played five since South Africa’s most recent; four against Australia, one against India, all but one of them drawn.

Australia and England played the first women’s Test at the Exhibition Ground in Brisbane in December 1934. One or both of those teams have been involved in 173 of the 290 women’s Tests yet played: almost 60%. New Zealand, India, South Africa and West Indies have played 107. Men played 238 Tests before women made their debut. The current Headingley Test between England and New Zealand is the 2,467th between men’s teams — eight-and-a-half times as many as women have played.

South Africa will go into Monday’s match having featured in 173 white-ball internationals since a handful of their players last pulled on a pair of whites. Small wonder Moreeng said they were struggling to adjust. “The ones battling currently are our batters, because we’ve just come from a white-ball competition against Ireland [earlier this month, when South Africa played three matches in each format],” Moreeng told a press conference on Thursday. “What has helped is the prep we had prior to the Ireland tour; a three-day and four-day game where we introduced most of them to the format. The bowlers have adapted much better.

“We know that, in the other two formats, you can build partnerships. But in this one you need to take it session by session. It’s about longer concentration, and it’s more taxing on the body and the mind. Technically players need to be sound. Everyone is starting to understand, and they’re excited to see how it goes.”

South Africa completed their Test preparations in a drawn three-day game against England A at Arundel that ended on Thursday. The star of the visitors’ first innings of 301 was opener Laura Wolvaardt, who batted for more than three-and-a-half hours and faced 148 balls to reach 101, whereupon she retired. That Wolvaardt succeeded will not surprise those familiar with her textbook technique and solid temperament, but it remains astounding that she should reel off a century in her first senior representative two-innings match. In the same innings Lara Goodall scored 51 and Suné Luus made 48. Wolvaardt and Goodall shared a stand of 116. All told in their first innings, the South Africans batted for almost five hours and faced 489 balls. Wolvaardt’s opening partner, Andrie Steyn, and Luus scored half-centuries in a second innings of 325/9 declared that lasted for almost five-and-a-half hours and 535 deliveries. 

That was enough to nurture hope in Moreeng: “How batters set up their innings, taking their time and showing application, wasn’t there in the preparation matches that we had. We are very happy to see that on the back of white-ball cricket. Most of our batters have spent time in the middle to be able to understand what’s required.”

As for the bowlers: “They need to make sure they can manage the excessive swing they get with the Duke ball on these pitches, and also the lengths they have to adapt to. They need patience around setting up batters and working towards a plan.”

There were eight South Africa debutants in that 2014 Test. There could be 10 in Taunton on Monday. The only squad survivors from Mysore are Trisha Chetty, Marizanne Kapp, Lizelle Lee and Chloe Tryon. Maybe that’s no bad thing considering South Africa lost by an innings. “We were well in the game, then we lost concentration as a unit after tea and that’s when we lost the match,” Moreeng said, a reference to South Africa losing 6/25 on the second day. “It shows what a lack of concentration can do. We need to make sure that everyone understands the discipline required in this game and how you need to stay focused and stay on the button because every session is critical. We need to make sure we stay focused and competitive in every session.”

Not only to perform well but to refute, with deeds, not words, Dean Elgar’s assertion in April: “It’s a man’s environment when it comes to playing at this level.”

First published by Cricbuzz.

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South Africa’s climb up the scrap heap continues

“We know we have not played our best cricket, but it’s not how you start the World Cup that matters. It’s how you end it.” – Marizanne Kapp

Telford Vice | Cape Town

SOMETIMES things are gained, rather than lost, in translation. Marizanne Kapp, for instance, was not wrong when she told a press conference on Monday, “We scrapped together enough runs to get over the line.”

It wasn’t a slip of the tongue. Earlier she had used “scrapped” in the same sense in a television interview. Kapp, whose first language is Afrikaans, should have said South Africa scraped together. That would have been correct, but it wouldn’t have been right. Because they didn’t scrape their runs together in their World Cup match against England in Tauranga. They scrapped for them, and scrapped hard.

Had England taken one of the four chances, including a stumping, that they wasted trying to dismiss Laura Wolvaardt — the first of them nine balls into the match — she wouldn’t have anchored South Africa’s innings until the 36th over and scored 77. Had Suné Luus not shared 73 with Wolvaardt, and had Kapp not followed her 5/45 — remarkably her first five-for in the 116th time she has bowled in her 121 ODIs — by stepping into the breach left by Wolvaardt to score a gritty 32, the result would likely have been different. Wolvaardt’s seamlessly silky strokeplay apart, and even she survived and prospered from a fair few false shots, South Africa’s batting was scrappy. In the best way; the Kapp way.      

The same was true in their matches against Bangladesh and Pakistan, in which they batted first and were dismissed for 207 and held to 233/9. Against England, they chose to field first and were set a target of 236 — and made their highest total of the tournament so far to win by three wickets with four balls to spare.

That marked only the second time South Africa had beaten England in the seven World Cup matches the teams have contested, and for the first time since 2000. It was also just the second time in the 24 World Cup games in which England had put up a total of 230 or more that they failed to defend it.

The win was South Africa’s third in as many matches at this year’s tournament. They have celebrated hattricks previously, but in 1997 one of the elements was Denmark and, in 2000, the Netherlands. This is the first time they have beaten three of the game’s stronger teams consecutively at one World Cup. They are the only other team at the tournament besides Australia with a perfect record after three matches.

England also registered a hattrick on Monday, although not one to celebrate. South Africa’s success over them followed their narrow losses to Australia and West Indies, making this the first time they have gone down in three consecutive games at a World Cup. That comes in the wake of four defeats in the white-ball formats in Australia in January and February. Rarely have England, who have won four of the 11 editions of the World Cup and are the reigning champions, been in such poor shape. All three of their games have been tight, but the fact is they are second from bottom in the standings, sandwiched between Bangladesh and Pakistan.  

That’s a reality check for those South Africa supporters who want to believe their team are bound for glory this time. Maybe they are, but right now all they’ve done is beat the worst performing three sides in the tournament. Their bigger challenges are still to come, starting with New Zealand in Hamilton on Thursday.

Kapp knew that: “We are nowhere near our best yet, especially with the bat, and I think today will go a long way to give us a boost in the right direction.” She’s been around long enough to know something else when she sees it: progress. “In the past the close games were the ones we lost,” she said, and returned to her first point. “We know we have not played our best cricket, but it’s not how you start the World Cup that matters. It’s how you end it.”

That Kapp dared to go there tells us everything we need to know about her. It was against England that South Africa’s 2017 campaign ended. In an almost unwatchably tense semi-final in Bristol, the home side prevailed by two wickets with two balls remaining. Kapp made a desolate figure sitting on the outfield long after the match ended and the field cleared. The memory has remained raw: “We know the heartbreak we had in the previous World Cup.” And yet she didn’t flinch at revisiting that pain, and instead used it as a measure of how far South Africa have come. How do you not fall in love with that?

Dané van Niekerk did. A long time ago. She and Kapp have become fixtures in the team since making their debuts two days apart in March 2009, and Van Niekerk was appointed all-format captain in June 2016. Two years later Kapp and Van Niekerk married each other. Kapp went into Monday’s match one wicket behind Van Niekerk in ODI career terms and is now 77 runs away from surpassing her on the batting charts. Van Niekerk no doubt considers that unfair, because while Kapp is marching past her milestones she is holed up at home in Gqeberha nursing an ankle she broke on January 6 — two days after Kapp’s birthday — and that took her out of the World Cup. Indeed, it was darkly poetic that the twitter profile from which Van Niekerk spewed a steady stream of support for Kapp and the team on Monday was illustrated with a photograph of the couple’s home — complete with the pool deck on which Van Niekerk fell and was injured.

“I’m just happy she watched,” was Kapp’s immediate response to being told Van Niekerk had been an avid spectator of a match that started at 3am, South Africa time. But there was more where that came from, something more gentle and admiring: “I believe a lot of our performances that we put in the last year, year-and-a-half have been because of her. She carried this team for a very long time and it’s so sad that she’s not here to enjoy this with us. I know she’s our biggest supporter. I’m not going to lie — she leaves a massive void; not only skill-wise, but just having her around the group. I know she’s back home cheering for us. This one was for her.”

As she started that tribute, Kapp’s usually steely eyes betrayed the merest hint of shine. By the end, it had vanished. Too late. We know there is no cricketer harder than Marizanne Kapp. Now we know there is softness somewhere in there, too. 

It shouldn’t surprise us that she doesn’t show it often. In a world obsessed with projecting and protecting a mythical heteronormative image, and considering sport’s role as a blunt instrument in that flawed cause, those who don’t fit the cracked mould put on the bravest of faces simply to survive. Even daring to play cricket while female is, for some, beyond the pale. Just days ago, in the middle of a women’s World Cup, a reader wrote: “Quite simply, very few people, female or male, are interested in female cricket; about as much as male netball!”

This, of course, came from a man. What is it about men that they think they speak for all of us; men, women and children, and regardless of whether they have asked us if we agree with them? It is misogyny, plain and simple. But it is also fear — that should they watch women play cricket objectively they will be forced to concede that they are rather good at it. And that that might mean women could be good at other things men would not want to learn that some women are as good or better at than some men. And that among those things, in the South African context, is winning cricket matches.

Because while South Africa’s women’s team win some and lose some, and play well and play badly, and deliver performances both woeful and wonderful, something they have yet to do — unlike their male counterparts — is choke.

Maybe that’s what happens when the challenge doesn’t end after the game, because men won’t let it. Because being a woman in an unfairly male world has always been part of your life. And because being a woman who defies gender stereotypes makes your life harder still. How do you get through that? You scrap; all day, every day.

What is cricket next to that? A refuge, surely, but also and ultimately nothing more than a game.

First published by Cricbuzz.

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World Cup squad player profiles

15 of South Africa’s best.

Telford Vice | Cape Town

WHO are the women flying South Africa’s flag at the World Cup? These are their potted biographies:

Suné Luus (captain)

Dané van Niekerk’s slippery pool deck — on which she fractured her ankle less than a month before the start of the 2022 World Cup — was Luus’ gain going into the tournament. She took over the captaincy, a job she had done in 20 previous ODIs, to keep the leadership in the hands of a leg-spinning allrounder. Luus became, in May 2017, at 21 years and 124 days, the second youngest South African and the ninth youngest woman overall to captain a national team in an ODI.

In 2016, Luus equalled the 37 wickets West Indian Anisa Mohammed took in 2011 as the world record for the most claimed in ODIs in a calendar year. Luus scored 52 and took 6/36 to become the second woman after England’s Heather Knight to make a half-century and claim a five-wicket-haul in the same ODI. When she took 6/45 against New Zealand in January 2020, she was the first woman to have two six-fers to her name. A year later, Luus became the 10th player to score 1,000 runs and take 100 wickets in ODIs.   

Tazmin Brits

Tazmin Brits never planned to have a cricket career. Instead, she thought she was bound for Olympic glory. She was the junior world javelin champion in 2007 and fixed her eyes on the prize of the 2012 London Games so firmly she had the five interlocking circles of the Olympic symbol tattooed onto the inside of her right biceps. But fate had other ideas, and in November 2011 a car crash ended her athletics ambitions. More than seven years later, in May 2018, having come back from much physical, mental and emotional pain, Brits made her South Africa debut in a T20I. 

Although she was without a half-century after seven ODIs heading into the 2022 World Cup, she had reached 50 three times in her 20 T20Is. That suggests a big hitter, and Brits can certainly wield the big stick when that’s needed. But she is also blessed with the ability to work the ball around the ground for ones and twos.  

Trisha Chetty

As the oldest player in South Africa’s 2022 World Cup squad, Trisha Chetty is also among the most accomplished. She holds the world record for dismissals in ODIs with 165 and is the second-most capped wicketkeeper in the format after England’s Sarah Taylor. In October 2010 Chetty shared an opening stand of 170 with Shandré Fritz, then the highest partnership for any wicket in T20Is. Chetty is one of six members of South Africa’s 2022 World Cup squad to have played Test cricket.

A genuinely quick-handed stumper, Chetty is also a legitimate middle order threat having scored 16 ODI half-centuries going into the 2022 World Cup. But her most recent foray into that territory was in May 2017. Part of the reason for that is the success of the women batting above her: she wasn’t required to bat in seven of her last dozen ODIs before the World Cup.

Mignon du Preez

Although three members of South Africa’s 2022 World Cup squad are older than Mignon du Preez, she was in many ways the senior pro in the side as their most capped ODI and T20I player. Having assumed the captaincy in October 2011, she led the side in one Test, 46 ODIs and 50 T20Is before relinquishing the leadership in June 2016 in order to focus on her batting. It was with her at the helm that women’s cricket began to be taken more seriously in South Africa, hence her favoured status among players and the public.

That Du Preez had a bright future in the game was apparent as a 12-year-old, when she hit 16 sixes and 25 fours and scored 258 in an under-13 inter-provincial match. She scored 55 on ODI debut, in January 2007, and in August 2007 she and Johmari Logtenberg put on an unbroken 224 for the fourth wicket, then the second-highest stand in all women’s ODIs.  

Lara Goodall

Few batters have been as eager to put risk quite as far above reward on their list of priorities as Lara Goodall. When she is at the crease, stop what you’re doing and watch. You may not be detained for long, or you may be there for a while. But you will not be bored. Goodall has no qualms about hitting the ball in the air, setting off on singles that may or may not be there, and pulling ever more inventive strokes out of her kitbag.

Those attributes would scare off the more conservative kind of coach. Happily, Hilton Moreeng has not been among them. He was instrumental in Goodall’s return to the national squad in January last year after an absence of 15 months. She also didn’t play for South Africa between January 2017 and February 2019. The reward was Goodall’s scores of 49 and 59 not out in a series of five ODIs in India in March 2021. The latter helped clinch the series.   

Shabnim Ismail 

South Africa’s box office fast bowler, and among the quickest and most aggressive in all the game. And if you don’t believe that, ask Shabnim Ismail — she’ll confirm exactly that. Except that she will argue no-one is faster or more aggressive. Good luck winning that debate, not least because she has the facts to counter any dissent on the matter.

Ismail was South Africa’s all-time leading ODI wicket-taker going into the 2022 World Cup, and the fourth-highest overall. She also led the South Africa list in T20Is, and was third in the world in that format. She was named player of the match after the WBBL final in November 2020, when she took 2/12 to help Sydney Thunder beat Melbourne Stars by seven wickets. She is one of the half-dozen in the World Cup squad who have played Test cricket. 

Unusually for female cricketers, who attract an unfair amount of criticism which often veers into abuse, particularly online, Ismail has been open about challenges she has overcome. Her Wikipedia page lists her suspension for an incident involving alcohol abuse in July 2014, and she has admitted to dealing with an obsessive compulsive disorder.  

Sinalo Jafta 

Picked in the 2022 World Cup squad along with stalwart wicketkeeper Trisha Chetty, Sinalo Jafta had played only 16 ODIs heading into the tournament despite making her debut in October 2016. But, as a gutsy grafter, she has quietly kept her name in the selectors’ plans with decent performances behind the stumps and with nuggety lower order batting.

Jafta was born into the game’s Eastern Cape heartland. But she came to cricket from hockey, in which she seemed to destined for a senior international career. Once she made the choice to focus on cricket, she figured she would be a bowler. Only when she was 16 did donning the stumper’s pads and gloves appeal as something she wanted to do.  

Marizanne Kapp

A fast bowler’s fast bowler. A middle order batter’s middle order batter. A cricketer’s cricketer. Marizanne Kapp is the epitome of the modern player. Her performance in both disciplines has been central to South Africa’s success since she made her debut at the 2009 World Cup. That will not change in this year’s tournament.

Kapp’s searing seriousness, particularly when she is steaming towards the bowling crease, tall and imposing, a splendid splinter on the move, is a sight to behold. But stay out of her way if things don’t go according to plan. After South Africa went down by two wickets in an intensely competitive 2017 World Cup semi-final in Bristol, Kapp spent several minutes sitting silently on the outfield long after the rest of the players had left the scene. It probably didn’t ease the pain that she was named in the ICC’s ODI team of the year in 2017. 

Kapp became the first South Africa player, and only the third woman, to take a hattrick in a T20I in September 2013. Also capped at Test level, she was third among South Africa’s all-time ODI wicket-takers and second on the T20I pecking order as the 2022 World Cup loomed. She was their fifth-highest runscorer in both formats. Among those above her in all of those categories was Dané van Niekerk, whom she married in July 2018. A former provincial athlete and netball player, Kapp has a degree in sports management. 

Ayabonga Khaka

If Ayabonga Khaka is in the market for a nickname, she could do worse than call herself Black Ice. No bowler is cooler under pressure, and none seems able to execute their skills to such a high level as consistently. There is an unshakeable calm about the way she goes about her business, which tends to have a settling effect on the rest of the team. 

She had conceded less than a run a ball in 63 of her 73 ODIs going into the 2022 World Cup, and claimed wickets in 51 of them. Khaka banked a career-best 5/26 in January, when she was named player of the series. She was seventh, two places behind Shabnim Ismail, in the ICC bowling rankings before the tournament. Although less explosive than South Africa’s regular new-ball pair of Marizanne Kapp and Ismail, Khaka’s team have come to rely on her for stability.  

Masabata Klaas

If Masabata Klaas’ medium pace looks gentle and unthreatening, be especially careful. It is anything but — as she proved in May 2019 when she became the 10th woman to claim an ODI hattrick. Which isn’t to say Klaas is a firebrand, but her subtle skills are appreciated in a side not short of emphatic players. The irony is that her sporting role model is among the most emphatic performers to grace any arena: Serena Williams.

When Klaas first asked the boys at her primary school whether she could join their break-time game of cricket, they scoffed and told her to go away. She persisted and eventually the boys relented and tossed her the ball. That was the last time she had to beg her teammates for a bowl. Ninety-five international white-ball caps later, it’s more true than ever.

Lizelle Lee

Ms Dependable herself. And Ms Devastating. Leading up to the 2022 World Cup, Lizelle Lee had passed 50 in six of her last eight ODI innings. That hot streak included her third century in the format, 132 not out off 131 balls in March 2021. In a T20I in February 2020, she hammered 101 off 60 balls. 

By then, she knew how to score big and quickly. In an under-19 one-day interprovincial game in December 2010, she piled up an outrageous 427 in a total of 690/1. She smashed an undefeated 169 off 84 balls in a senior inter-provincial match in October 2013. No-one has scored more ODI hundreds for South Africa, and her 26 half-centuries is also a record. Despite that, none of her international centuries have been scored at home.

Lee is a familiar face on the English and Australian short format circuits, one of the half-dozen current South Africa players who have won a Test cap, and among eight women from anywhere who have opened the batting, kept wicket and captained in the same ODI.  

Nonkululeko Mlaba

Having made her T20I debut in September 2019 and played her first ODI in January 2021, Nonkululeko Mlaba — who was 21 going into the 2022 World Cup — is among the newer members of South Africa’s dressing room. But it did her chances of quickly becoming a key member of the attack no harm that, before the tournament, she conceded less than a run a ball in all four of the ODIs in which she had bowled all 10 of her overs.

By then, Mlaba had claimed only four wickets in her eight ODIS, but they were all prized: Pakistan’s Javeria Khan, India’s Deepti Sharma and Sushma Verma — in the same match — and West Indies’ Sheneta Grimmond. 

Tumi Sekhukhune

You should know what you’re getting into when a player lists her role model as Shabnim Ismail, as Tumi Sekhukhune has done. At 24 heading into the 2022 World Cup, Sekhukhune hadn’t yet had the chance to live up to her hero’s exploits. But she was making her mark — in the 19 ODIs in which she had bowled, only twice had she gone for a run a ball or more. 

Sekhukhune had never batted higher than No. 9 for South Africa in her 42 matches in both white-ball formats, and in her 139 matches all told she had taken guard only 56 times. But might there be an allrounder in there somewhere? In an under-19 inter-provincial one-day game in December 2016, she came in with her team in trouble at 40/4, shared a stand of 141, and finished not out on 63 off 124 balls. Then she took 1/2 as her team polished off the opposition for 32 in 14.3 overs. It was in a T20 at that level that Sekhukhune took her first five-for — a haul of 5/15 in an innings that included eight ducks.  

Chloé Tryon

Going into the 2022 World Cup, just eight women from any country had made a higher score batting at No. 6 than Chloe Tryon’s 69-ball 79 in February 2017. Her 92 off 68 deliveries in August 2016 was the second-best effort by a No. 7. She hasn’t always scored that many runs, of course, but you can count on her for at least a few: not since February 2016, or 49 innings before the World Cup, had she been dismissed for a duck. Indeed, she had been removed without scoring only four times in her 69 ODI innings.

It’s that level of reliability that has made Tryon a familiar figure in South Africa’s middle order. Since her international debut, in a T20I in May 2010, she has played in the only Test the team have contested and in almost two thirds of all their white-ball fixtures. Little wonder she was made vice-captain for the 2022 World Cup.

Laura Wolvaardt

She was only 22 at the 2022 World Cup, but it was already a cliché that Laura Wolvaardt owned the most dazzling cover drive in all of cricket. It’s more a piece of jewellery than a stroke, a thing to be noticed and marvelled at. And appreciated for the beautiful confluence of bat, ball and perfect timing that it is.

But there’s a lot more to Wolvaardt than one gem of a shot. In August 2016, she scored 105 to become, at 17 years and 105 days, the second-youngest woman to celebrate an ODI century. That was in just her seventh innings in the format at that level, by which time she had also made two half-centuries. Going into the 2022 World Cup, she had made three centuries and 21 50s — equal with and second to Lizelle Lee in South Africa’s record books — to go with her three T20I half-centuries. No woman playing for South Africa has reached 1,000 or 2,000 runs faster in ODIs, and only Mignon du Preez, Lee and Trisha Chetty have scored more runs — and they have had between 68 and 26 more innings than Wolvaardt. Three of South Africa’s top 10 highest ODI innings belong to Wolvaardt. The only other player to appear on that list more than once is Lee, who is there twice. Wolvaardt had the highest all-time ODI average by a South African before the World Cup.

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A more than suitable team

“The team make it easy. They know what they want to do. I think I’m just there to say who bowls when.” — Suné Luus

Telford Vice | Cape Town

SIX wins on a single visit? Never before has a senior South Africa team of any description achieved that level of success in India. It’s a wonky stat in the sense that only twice previously have they played six or more matches on one trip to the biggest chunk of the subcontinent. But, considering their history there, that has been merciful.

So the women’s team that will depart Lucknow on Wednesday evening having beaten India 4-1 in the ODI series and 2-1 in the T20I rubber have set themselves apart. Even their losses have a place in the narrative of victory. The first, in the second ODI by nine wickets with 31.2 overs remaining, followed a resounding win in the opening match. Would South Africa recover from that dramatic deflation? Would they ever. They scored 223/4 to win the next match. Only five times had they hunted down a bigger target, and their total would have been still higher had the innings not been reduced to 46.3 overs. Then they made 269/3 to claim the fourth match — their highest successful chase. That decided the series with a game to spare, which South Africa also won. Their sole T20I loss came on the back of a rare failure by the batting order, but it was suffered in the dead rubber that followed them holding their nerve in teetering tension to win the second match — and with it the series — off the last ball.

Lizelle Lee piled up 288 runs in the ODIs to surge to the top of the world rankings. But Punam Raut was only 25 behind with Mithali Raj 78 adrift. No other South African reached 200 runs. Jhulan Goswami and Rajeshwari Gayakwad took eight wickets each and had economy rates of 3.51 and 3.56. South Africa’s leading wicket-taker was Shabnim Ismail, with seven. The series’ most economical bowler was Ayabonga Khaka, who went for just 3.44. But she took only one wicket. Something similar unfolded in the T20Is, where Shafali Verma was the leading run-scorer with 130. No South African, nor another Indian, reached 100. Gayakwad and Ismail each took four wickets but their economy rates diverged significantly: 4.75 for Gayakwad, 8.20 for Ismail.

As much as South Africa were a juggernaut as a team, their superiority was not clear at individual level. Maybe that’s the value of stability and experience. Hilton Moreeng has been their coach since December 2012. Mignon du Preez, Marizanne Kapp and Ismail each have more than 100 ODI caps, and Ismail, Suné Luus and Lee have 98, 80 and 79 appearances in T20Is. The other side of that coin is that they have enjoyed these advantages for a long time but not performed as well as consistently as they have in recent weeks. What’s changed?

“I’m not really sure what to pin it down to, but from the way we started the Pakistan series [at Kingsmead in January and February], to the way we started the India series there was a silent confidence going around in the camp,” Suné Luus told an online press conference on Wednesday. “Nobody really thought about it, but since the moment we hit the ground running in the Pakistan series, everyone never doubted their own skill and the skill of their teammates next to them. Nobody ever doubted that we wanted to win and were going to win. There was never any fear of failure. That was maybe there previously. Everybody was determined and motivated to move forward as a team.

“Maybe we were better prepared than them, having played the Pakistan series [whereas the South Africa series were India’s first since the T20 World Cup in February and March last year]. Or maybe we believed in ourselves more. I don’t really know what was the difference, but at the end of the day we just played better cricket.”

Luus is central to an example illustrating her point. Dané van Niekerk has been South Africa’s regular ODI captain since October 2016, their T20I skipper since February 2018, and a matchwinning allrounder besides. She should thus have been vital to their chances of beating Pakistan, not to mention competing in India. But Van Niekerk — and fellow stalwart Chloe Tryon, the vice-captain — have been off the field with back injuries since November. Cue Luus’ apparently seamless elevation: South Africa beat Pakistan 3-0 in the ODIs and 2-1 in the T20Is. And now the unprecedented triumph in India.

“Dané left big shoes to fill; she’s an unbelievable leader and captain,” Luus said. “But the team make it easy. They know what they want to do. I think I’m just there to say who bowls when.”

Luus’ small smile as she made her joke later broadened when she cautioned: “You mustn’t believe anything you hear about bubble life. It’s really not as exciting as you think.” We hear a lot about the trials and travails of players trying to perform at their best despite the restrictions imposed by Covid-19 lockdown regulations. Mostly, we hear it from men. Maybe reporters women don’t ask women about this as often. Or maybe women, already facing a range of obstacles in their bid to be taken seriously in cricket, simply get on with it.

“It’s a new thing for a lot of teams and a lot of the hotels we go to,” Luus said. “We were lucky enough to have a recreational room where there was table tennis, chess and darts [equipment], and some other games as well. We could come in, switch off and not think about the game. Otherwise we could focus on some studies, catching up on assignments here and there; not too much — you’re still on a cricket tour. Everybody’s very excited to go home now and breathe in some fresh air; go walk around, whether it’s in the street or in a nature reserve. Just somewhere.”

That South Africa have been a breath of fresh air for their watching supporters is undeniable, especially in a cricket culture where the performance of the other senior national team has become a corollary for the ongoing harm being done to the game by the dangerously inept upper reaches of CSA.

It isn’t often a sponsor should be mentioned in despatches like these but an exception needs to be made for Momentum, the financial services company whose name is attached to the women’s team. The company agreed to back all male one-day cricket in South Africa, down to under-13 level, in June 2012 and it became the national women’s team’s title sponsor the next year. But in September last year it announced it would not seek to renew the contract that expired in April this year because it was, a statement at the time said, “not satisfied with the current state of affairs at CSA regarding governance and other reputational issues”. But it will continue to back the women’s side until April 2023, at least. The team’s success could be seen as Momentum’s reward for holding CSA’s feet to the fire.

“As a business we have gone through tough times, and we needed someone to believe in us when we were under pressure,” Carel Bosman, the head of sponsorship, told the press conference. “We believe in this team. Regardless of what’s going on, we’re going to continue supporting them. There will be more news coming of us supporting this team.”

It helps that the players who have your company’s name on their kit are scoring runs, taking wickets, winning games and celebrating their success for all to see on television. “As a sponsor, performance is an element that almost comes as a bonus,” Bosman said. “When we got involved with the team we believed they could be the best in the world, but ultimately it’s still down to the team, the coaching staff and the management to make it happen.”

He saw a switch flick at the 2020 T20 World Cup, where South Africa went down by five runs, on Duckworth/Lewis, in a white-knuckle semi-final against Australia at the SCG. “Something changed in their minds. They suddenly realised they can be the best and they can beat any team in the world. You can’t really explain to people how close they are. To see it all happen and to be part of that process is very special, because it’s not guaranteed.”

It isn’t, and South Africa will face a challenge to retain their positive momentum — not their sponsor — because their slate of engagements for the coming months is blank.

You don’t want to waste this form. You want to bottle this feeling. Come on CSA, do the right thing. Along with the team they feel duty-bound to watch — and who will host Pakistan in white-ball series next month — give South Africans the team they want to watch.

First published by Cricbuzz.

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Faraway fan proud of her team

“It’s about gaining confidence in what we do. You can see in our skills that the confidence is sky high.” – Dané van Niekerk

Telford Vice | Cape Town

SOUTH Africa’s No. 1 fan has been stuck on the couch since January: “Every game. I won’t miss a ball. I’m very proud; 4-1 against India in India is historical. I’d give anything to be in the changeroom at the moment.” But for a back injury, she would have been.

It’s been almost four months since Dané van Niekerk picked up a bat or bowled a ball in anger, on a drizzly Sunday at the North Sydney Oval in the colours of the Sydney Sixers. Ominously, perhaps, it was November 22 — the same date John F Kennedy had been assassinated 57 years previously. She last played for South Africa on another wet day in Australia’s biggest city: March 5 last year, when the hosts squeezed her team out of their World T20 semi-final by five runs with the help of Duckworth/Lewis. 

Van Niekerk watched every game, every ball at Kingsmead in January and February as the side she has captained in 72 of her 186 internationals beat Pakistan in five of six white-ball games. And as they handed India a masterclass in their ODI series in Lucknow, which ended on Wednesday with South Africa winning by five wickets with 10 balls to spare.

The Lucknow matches started at 9am (IST), so dew was a factor — every game was won by the team batting second. India were held to totals of less than 200 three times and dismissed twice, and South Africa were bowled out for 157 in their only loss. But India have had only 11 first innings bigger than the 266/4 they made in the fourth game on Sunday, when South Africa achieved their highest successful chase to win by seven wickets with eight balls remaining.

Punam Raut and Lizelle Lee scored the series’ only centuries, but South Africa had eight half-centuries compared to India’s six. Half the eight batters who topped 100 runs in the rubber were from the visitors’ ranks. Jhulan Goswami and Rajeshwari Gayakwad were the leading wicket-takers with eight each, and both delivered better figures than the 3/28 claimed by Shabnim Ismail in the first match, South Africa’s best bowling performance in the series. So it isn’t clear why South Africa were dominant, although it is true that they played spin far better than in past Asian adventures.

For Van Niekerk the proof was in the intangibles: “This team has come a long way. There’s a lot of experience in the group and a lot of maturity around them. It’s about gaining confidence in what we do. You can see in our skills that the confidence is sky high. The players are hungry to put in performances. It’s a combination of things that have been coming for a couple of years.”

Not many sides would have played as well as South Africa did in the wake of the removal from the equation of someone as central to their cause as Van Niekerk. Add to that the absence of vice-captain Chloe Tryon, who also has a back injury and also last played on November 22. The stand-in captain, Suné Luus, missed the third and fourth matches in Lucknow — when South Africa faced their toughest chases — through illness. Laura Wolvaardt stepped in seamlessly, and scored 53 in what proved to be the series decider. To win, and win well, despite all that is remarkable.

Tryon would seem to be further from a return to action than Van Niekerk, who said: “I’m on a programme and there are protocols to follow. It’s about proving match fitness. I’m very close.” But the cricketless months have been difficult, not least because her major source of support, wife Marizanne Kapp, has not been around because she is also an integral part of South Africa’s XI. “It is a frustrating thing to go through,” Van Niekerk said. “As a cricketer you always want to play and you want to be there with the team. I call them my second family because they are; I spend a lot of time with my teammates. But the nice thing about our team is that we’re so happy for each others’ successes. To see all these youngsters putting up their hand and doing well makes me proud. It’s healthy because nobody can be complacent.”

Of the four South Africans who scored more than 100 runs in the India series only Mignon du Preez, at 31, is not in their 20s. At 28, Lee is a stalwart of 166 internationals and the top-ranked batter in ODIs. The other two, Wolvaardt and Lara Goodall, are 21 and 24. Anneke Bosch, who at 27 has eight ODI caps to her name, was afforded just two innings in Lucknow but she made them count: she was 16 not out when rain ended the third match with South Africa ahead on Duckworth/Lewis, and she scored 58 on Wednesday. Two of the five South Africa bowlers who had the best economy rates, Nadine de Klerk and Nondumiso Shangase, are 21 and 24. Their second-highest wicket-taker, Tumi Sekhukhune, is 22.

Their No. 1 fan is 27 and firmly focused on another engagement in the Antipodes, in March and April next year. “We’re building momentum going into the World Cup,” Van Niekerk said. She plans to be in the dressingroom for that. And maybe on the podium.

First published by Cricbuzz. 

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Men make women see black

“If you bring women together and you give them one goal, greatness will happen.” – Suné Luus

Telford Vice | Cape Town

WHILE Faf du Plessis was holed up in a Karachi hotel room on Saturday his compatriots were taking on Pakistan in an ODI at Kingsmead. Not that they were dressed like a South Africa team. They were all in black, as if they were a New Zealand white-ball side. But their names gave their nationality away: Laura Wolvaardt, Mignon du Preez, Marizanne Kapp, Shabnim Ismail, et al.

Why the change from the usual green gear? Because of the evil men do, and an effort to combat it. “Black Day” is a CSA initiative to raise the alarm about gender-based violence (GBV), an epidemic in South Africa. The World Health Organisation says femicide — the murder of women and girls because of their gender, and almost always committed by men — accounts for the deaths of 12.1 out of every 100,000 women in the country every year. That’s more than four-and-a-half times the global average of 2.6, and it’s only one of the shocking statistics on the apparent addiction South African men have to GBV. Another is that a woman is murdered every three hours in this country. Still another that someone is raped or sexually assaulted in what Interpol calls “the rape capital of the world” every 25 seconds.

“From a male perspective it’s really important that we create awareness on this,” Du Plessis told an online press conference. “It’s something I don’t take lightly. It’s not just a women’s problem in our country. It’s an ‘us’ problem in South Africa. Especially as males, we need to be better. If you look at the stats on gender-based violence in South Africa it is insanely ridiculous. It’s one of the most important things in our country that we as males need to do better; that our country becomes more aware of what’s actually going on and how bad that situation is. I’ve had lots of conversations on this specific topic. I want to learn as much as I can. The more you speak about it the more your jaw drops because of what’s going on in South Africa. This is something we as the men’s team can get involved in on a much higher scale.”

Suné Luus, who captained South Africa on Saturday in the absence of the injured Dané van Niekerk, told an online press conference last week: “This is such a big day for us, to help educate the people of South Africa and whoever is watching all over the world. That we as the Proteas and CSA stand against this is an important message. We’re trying to help wherever we can and make a difference. If you bring women together and you give them one goal, greatness will happen. That’s the vision for Black Day.”

Women’s Criczone, an online magazine, quoted Mignon du Preez as saying: “We have an opportunity to speak up against GBV and we want to really break the silence about violence and abuse. We know it’s family, friends … mothers, daughters [who go] through this. We really want to encourage men out there to also stand up, have a voice and be gutsy to speak up about it as a very sensitive topic. We need to take the lead and be role models and set good standards for our kids and encourage them to continue to live a life of respecting women.”

A CSA release quoted Mary Makgaba, the chief executive of People Opposing Women Abuse, a non-governmental organisation, as saying: “A nation which undermines the rule of law and does not protect women and children from acts of domestic violence, sexual violence, emotional violence, financial violence, physical violence and femicide is not a winning nation.”

That a high profile man should speak on the subject is at once right and part of the problem. Du Plessis is correct to say men are central to eradicating this tendency among South Africans. Misogyny, driven by cultural and religious prejudices, is rampant in all communities and at all socio-economic levels of the country’s deeply patriarchal society. South Africa’s constitution enshrines equality, but the document has little impact on the daily reality of the citizens whose lives it purports to govern. So it is sensible to enlist men in the fight against a scourge of their own making.

But some will wonder whether men will only take the issue seriously if a man demands their attention. They will point to the violence of another kind meted out to Candice Warner at St George’s Park during Australia’s tour in March 2018 — when spectators wore masks depicting a former lover’s face to try and bait her spouse, David Warner — as evidence of dangerous attitudes and behaviours in South African cricket. If those men could so brazenly abuse a woman they had never met, what would make them not beat up, rape and murder the women and girls in their lives?

Questions like that are a long way from being asked, nevermind answered. But at least Du Plessis has joined the conversation.  

First published by Cricbuzz.

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SA keen to come in from Covid cold

A test is not a Test, and doctors’ opinions come before coaches’.

Telford Vice | Cape Town

WHEN someone connected to an international cricket team says, “We’re just looking forward to the next test”, we think we know what they mean. But when that team is South Africa’s women’s side, and when the official who says that is their doctor, it means something else.

South Africa last played a women’s Test in November 2014, and the pedants among us will spot that the first letter of the last word in the quote above is not capitalised. What Dr Tshegofatso Gaetsewe was talking about was Covid-19 testing. And so she should have been, what with South Africa scheduled to play six white-ball games against Pakistan at Kingsmead from January 20 to February 3.

The pandemic has struck the squad already. A player and a member of team management tested positive before the squad went into their bio-secure environment (BSE) on Friday. Both are asymptomatic. “They are currently in isolation,” Gaetsewe said on Monday. “They are well, and they will join the BSE at a later stage if deemed necessary. Since we’ve entered the BSE no member of management or player has tested positive.”

But that didn’t mean the focus on detection would be eased — the next round of testing will be conducted on Wednesday. “Our camp is a month long, so we’re going to do [weekly] tests just to make sure we do not miss asymptomatic cases that could potentially be infective and spread,” Gaetsewe said. “We’re just looking forward to the next test.”

Were there gender differences in how the coronavirus strikes victims, and thus in how it is managed in men’s and women’s BSEs? “It’s very broad, it’s very varied, it changes all the time, it doesn’t choose gender, it doesn’t choose age,” Gaetsewe said. “It attacks you whatever gender you are, whatever age you are. We are equally at risk. What we cannot predict is the severity of disease.”

The pandemic isn’t South Africa’s only challenge, what with captain Dané van Niekerk and senior pro Chloe Tryon ruled out with lower back injuries they sustained in December. But ace allrounder Marizanne Kapp, who was hospitalised with an elevated heart rate while playing in the WBBL in November, has returned to full fitness. “It’s a very big setback,” coach Hilton Moreeng said of Van Niekerk’s and Tryon’s removal from the equation. “One reason is that you don’t know how the year is going to pan out because of the virus. When there is opportunity to play cricket you want to have all your best players available because you don’t know when you’re going to have another opportunity. From another perspective, the players who are going to get opportunities can show what they can do and that will make us stronger. The team needs to move forward.”

Who would captain the team in Van Niekerk’s absence? “We know in the past Suné Luus did a very good job, but that is a discussion that will happen closer to the time,” Moreeng said. Luus has led South Africa in 19 of her 153 white-ball matches. Pertinently, she helped guided the team to a drawn ODI series and victory in the T20Is against Pakistan in South Africa in May 2019.  

The South Africans were last on the field as a team at the SCG in March last year, when their T20I World Cup semi-final against Australia went down to the wire. The Aussies won by five runs and went on to beat India by 85 runs in the final. The Pakistanis also played their most recent match in that tournament — a washout against Thailand. In their previous game South Africa beat them by 17 runs.

Eight of the 14 players contracted by CSA have since featured in T20 leagues in other countries, but it’s been a long wait for them to gather again. Not that they are congregating like they did in the past. “The bio-bubble is very strange for everyone,” Moreeng said. “You can see the players’ minds are still going towards the old behaviours. You still want to do what you used to be able to do. The players haven’t seen each other for a long time and they want to chat. Social distancing and masks and everything makes it very difficult. We control what we can control. It’s not always what you want as a team.

“For our team talks we use these types of [online] platforms. You can’t sit in a room and discuss things like you used to be able to do. That will be the case until we know what the road ahead is going to be. But, so far, the players’ behaviour has been very good. They understand what it’s all about.” Which is returning to action safely: “The most important and exciting thing for us is that this is an opportunity to play cricket. It’s been a year when we haven’t had competitive cricket. It’s about getting on the park first.”

Anti-Covid travel regulations forced the scrapping of Australia’s tour in March and April — it was abandoned 10 days before the first match was to have been played — and of a visit to England in September. How did Moreeng and his players manage those disappointments?

“It’s safety first. Life is what matters at the end of the day. Yes, we wanted to play. We had just come back from a World Cup where we came close to getting into the final. So when that happened it was a blow for each and every one in the squad, because it was so close to the time [of the start of the series] when it was called off. But it was not in our control. We can only control what we can control.”

Like making sure everyone sticks to the rules until, and after, the next test. And the one after that …

First published by Cricbuzz.

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