The human behind the Anrich Nortjé machine

“There have been times when I’ve gone to the hardware store or the supermarket, just to get out.” – Anrich Nortjé

Telford Vice | Cape Town

IN the heat of the second IPL qualifier in Sharjah last month, Rishabh Pant was having a word with his bowler as he walked back to his mark, making for a sweetly comic scene: the Delhi Capitals’ captain is 15 centimetres shorter than the man he had buttonholed. Then again, most people aren’t as tall as Anrich Nortjé.

Their discussion ended wordlessly, but not without communication. To signal that he had caught the skipper’s drift, Nortjé, his eyes closed, his expression accepting, nodded his head sidewards. It was a gentle moment of truth from a secret life, a glimpse into the human behind the machine.

We’re used to seeing Nortjé steam towards the crease, pale and grim as the reaper himself. We marvel at the smoothness with which this totem pole on the hoof unfurls his long arms and legs. We’re relieved we are not at the other end of the pitch, fated to deal with a ball — delivered near, at or upwards of 150 kilometres an hour — that could smash our toes or take our heads off before dismissing us. His gesture to Pant made him real in a context that wasn’t about broken bones or soaring appeals.

It suggested there’s more to Nortjé than fast bowling, and there is. For a start, he is impressively over-qualified for a cricketer with a Bachelor of Commerce degree and a post-graduate diploma in financial planning.

We might have had a different idea of Nortjé’s talents had a broken collarbone in his second-last year at high school not ended his rugby career. He used to patrol at fullback or direct operations from flyhalf. He also captained the first XI, batted at No. 3 and, in the words of his coach at Brandwag High, Francois Anker, “bowled plenty of stumps physically broken”.

Nortjé was last near the scene of those crimes when his home town had another name. Or, as he told Cricbuzz, so he thinks: “I can’t remember when I was there … the end or middle of August? I don’t know … probably just after we came back from Ireland, to visit my parents.” That was in July. Uitenhage, where Nortjé was raised, was renamed Kariega on February 23 — the same day Port Elizabeth, which is less than 40 kilometres away and where he now lives, became Gqeberha.

If you live in Gqeberha and you see someone who looks like Nortjé hanging around the local shops, apparently aimlessly, it could be him. “Life goes back to normal when you go home,” he said. “It’s about trying to get used to that normal life again. It takes a few days to settle in and get used to being in your own bed. There have been times when I’ve gone to the hardware store or the supermarket, just to get out. My wife was at work, everyone was at work. So you couldn’t go and see anyone.”

He spoke not gloomily but with a smile that gleamed through the fuzziness of a Zoom call. Behind him was the familiar sight of the inside of a player’s hotel room. Before the pandemic, our interview would have been conducted facelessly on the phone. Now we could see each other, adding levels of connection, recognition and reaction — exactly what has been taken from the masked masses on the street.

Covid-19 has changed everything, and not in welcome ways. When we turn on our televisions to watch cricket, we’re looking for signs that not all we thought we knew about the world has been irrevocably altered. The players pay a high price to provide us with that reassurance. Is it too high?

“To be playing cricket is really nice. For that day or those few hours on the field, things are sort of back to normal. You’re in an environment where you can compete and actually do some work. But then, when you get back to the hotel, you’re back in a bubble. You can’t go out. You can’t do anything.

“So things get tough, especially outside of tournaments — where the focus is on the actual event and there’s a lot happening. But in a series things can get long and dragged out. Most of the time you won’t have your family with you. You feel privileged now to be able to walk outside. There are definitely a lot of struggles with this.”

One of those battles is with the expectation that players should perform at the same levels of skill and intensity as before their reality off the field was turned upside down. Wasn’t that unfair?

“It affects everyone differently and at different stages. Sometimes you’ll find a player who’s completely out of it, and at other times they’re in a good space. Some players handle it better than others. Some guys are able to cut out everything, all the background noise, when they step over the boundary. That’s probably what you want. It’s different for everyone and it is difficult, but we’re lucky that we can still play cricket and hopefully we don’t have to be in environments like this for too much longer.”

Being able to play in front of real, live humans again has been a blessing: “It’s nice to have people at a game making some noise, even if they’re supporting the opposition. When I’m facing a ball or bowling a ball, whether they’re making a noise or not doesn’t really affect me. But it’s different when you’re warming up or after a game, when you can’t help but notice how quiet everything is without crowds.”

Having fans in attendance wasn’t all he enjoyed about the IPL: “It was good to get back to these conditions, and a nice challenge. I was able to change a few things, which helped me; one or two technical things, especially with the newer ball.” But it wasn’t all work: “I had my wife with me for the whole time. So while I watched quite a bit of the cricket to start with, I slowly moved away from doing that and just relaxed where I could.”

Could he put on his B Com mortar board and tell us whether the behemoth that is the IPL was going to dominate the world game? “There’s definitely still space for all of the formats. Red-ball cricket, as everyone knows and says, is the toughest challenge. It’s the main format. But, as we can see in a lot of places, almost every country is trying to get in on the T20 action. There’s going to be more and more of it. But there’s still place for everything else.”

Maybe not in places like South Africa, where the game is at the mercy of bigger, brighter markets. Surely the best players will follow the money?

“That’s difficult to say. What South Africa have done by going back to a provincial set-up [featuring 15 teams rather than the previous six franchises] is probably a step in the right direction — having more teams, more players, more eyes. That’s what you want. You try and add experience in those teams and grow everyone. What we saw with the MSL is that you had a few guys coming through to make their debuts for South Africa.” Indeed, a dozen players, Nortjé among them, have cracked the T20I nod after featuring in the MSL.

He was picked for the 2019 World Cup but had to pull out just more than three weeks before the start of the tournament after breaking his thumb in the nets. He dodged a bullet — South Africa suffered their worst performance on that stage, losing five of their eight completed games. They’ve done better this time, winning three of four group matches. A crunch clash looms against high-flying England in Sharjah on Saturday with a place in the semifinals likely on the line.

“I don’t think we’ve played our best game yet, where everyone performs. But you’re probably never going to have that. It’s about getting as close to that as you can. As long as we keep working towards our next opportunity, working towards the next ball … If you bowl a wide, for your next delivery try and bowl your best ball. It’s about focusing on the now, not the past or the future.”

The value of that statement is in the fact that Nortjé made it, like everything else he said in this interview, before he became South Africa’s best bowler at the T20 World Cup in terms of wickets, average and economy rate, and one of the best at the tournament. He is putting his bowling where his wide open eyes are.

First published by Cricbuzz.

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From Asia with love for South Africa’s fast bowlers

At home, if you run in hard, bowl fast and get the ball in the right areas, you’ve already taken half a wicket a lot of the time.” – Anrich Nortjé

Telford Vice | Cape Town

IT started with Allan Donald. Then came Brett Schultz, twice; the same number as Shaun Pollock and Morné Morkel. Lance Klusener, Jacques Kallis and Kyle Abbott own one each. Dale Steyn has five. Anrich Nortjé became the ninth in Rawalpindi on Friday.

The ninth South Africa fast bowler, that is, to claim five wickets in a Test innings in Asia. Pakistanis might think that an odd point to make, considering their current prime minister’s previous occupation and the exploits of Wasim and Waqar. Before the ongoing second Test, Rawalpindi itself had yielded 71 wickets to spin and 205 to seam. But, over the Indian Ocean and far away, the pitches of the subcontinent — all of them — aren’t considered suitable for producing quality quicks. Rather bowl spin, keep wicket, or bat. Bowl seam up? On those dust traps? Why would you want to subject yourself to that hardship?

It’s a view fractured through the prism of a place where pitches do indeed boom with bounce and sing with sideways movement. And it’s clearly wrong, as Nortjé proved again in taking 5/56. He ended Pakistan’s first innings by removing Nauman Ali and Shaheen Afridi in three deliveries, brutal balls aimed at the ribs. Catches were duly fended to the close fielders. Hapless batters caught in the crosshairs at the Wanderers or Centurion will know exactly how Nauman and Afridi felt.

Nortjé bowled well enough — gliding rather than thundering to the crease, letting loose in one lithe, liquid line, and allowing the ball, erring batters and eager fielders to do the rest — to outshine even that thoroughbred of the breed, Kagiso Rabada. For only the third time in the 35 innings in which he has bowled 10 or more overs, Rabada went wicketless. As much as South Africa have come to depend on Rabada, with Nortjé firing from one end and Keshav Maharaj sealing off the other, his lack of success was hardly felt.  

A significant chunk of the worth of Nortjé’s work was undone by stumps, which South Africa stumbled to 166 behind and with their top four dismissed. But they would have been in a significantly worse position were it not for him. In this, too, there was evidence of fast bowling’s relevance on pitches like these: consecutive deliveries from Hasan Ali found the thin edge of Dean Elgar’s bat and breezed past — and perhaps under — Rassie van der Dussen’s defences.

Conditions, conditions, conditions is a mantra of those who like to think they know more about cricket than the rest of us. In most prejudice there is a little truth, as there is in this. No subcontinent pitch can compare to South Africa’s livelier surfaces. But that doesn’t mean fast bowlers should pitch up in disguise in Asia. “To try and utilise what you get is important,” Nortjé told an online press conference. “Plans do change [depending on the conditions]. Here, you want to be as tight as possible and not give any width. Especially when the ball was harder, we saw an opportunity to get the short ball through and it paid off. It’s still the subcontinent but you still want to try and be on the money with the bouncer especially … It wasn’t your typical wicket, like we had last week [in Karachi] where there wasn’t a lot of bounce. Here, there is still something in your favour if you run in hard.”

Nortjé is playing in his 10th Test, but even before coming to Pakistan he knew of whence he spoke on Friday. He earned his first two caps in Pune and Ranchi in October 2019, when he bowled a total of 49.3 overs and conceded 179 runs for the reward of one wicket. But it was quite a prize: Virat Kohli trapped in front with an inswinger that followed two balls that moved away.

“I was quite happy that conditions weren’t easy; I learnt a lot from that,” Nortjé said of his India experience. “You try to prepare as much and as well as possible, but putting in a performance in the subcontinent means a lot … At home, if you run in hard, bowl fast and get the ball in the right areas, you’ve already taken half a wicket a lot of the time.”

He had made some bespoke adjustments with the help of Piet Botha, his coach at Eastern Province, for Pakistan: “One of the big things I’ve learnt is the angles that I run and where my momentum is going. I’ve been focusing more on that in the last while. We try to keep specific things as simple as possible. But, particularly in the last while, I try to keep my angles — even where I start running from — as straight as possible. That’s helped me a lot, particularly in the subcontinent. When I go a bit wider, because there’s not a lot of bounce here, it’s an easy cut shot most of the time. In South Africa you’re trying to get into that channel. Here you’re trying to hit the stumps most of the time, and you also don’t want to be bowling on leg stump. Hopefully I can take it back to South Africa. That will help me ask more questions.”    

There’s a basic humility about Nortjé that he would brought with him from Uitenhage, a no-nonsense town in the Eastern Cape some 40 kilometres from the bigger — not big — smoke of Port Elizabeth, which is home to St George’s Park. Or South Africa’s slowest pitch. Fast bowlers grow up hard there. That can only help Nortjé in the second innings. “We’ve seen one or two stay low, so maybe that will come into play more,” he said. “I don’t think the fast bowlers will be completely out of it. There may be different methods of going about it but I think we will be in the game later on.”

Nortjé is rarely out of the game, even when South Africa’s aren’t in the field. Against England in December 2019 and January 2020, he batted for more than two hours and faced 89 balls at Centurion, and for more than three hours facing 136 deliveries at St George’s Park.

Can bowl, can bat, cannot give anything less than his all. Because a good fast bowler is a good cricketer, whatever they’re asked to do and wherever they’re asked to do it.

First published by Cricbuzz.

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Anrich Nortjé’s hymn to hope

“I take it as a compliment in the sense of trying to go out there and fight.” – Anrich Nortjé on being called a Dutchman.

TELFORD VICE at St George’s Park

DOM Bess hadn’t yet completed the over that had been interrupted by rain for almost four hours when the St George’s Park band brightly lurched into a chorus from one of its hardiest, hoariest standards. “Zizojika Izinto” is a hymn written in isiXhosa, one of South Africa’s 11 official languages. Its melody climbs high as a steeple and then swoops off on a wing of hope, taking all who can hear with it. For long minutes and multiple renditions, and whether you speak the language or not, you are transported to a better place.

It’s about a lot more than music: a song to sustain the spirit during the country’s long struggle for freedom, and an anthem since adopted by more than one political party in the democratic era. It tells us about ourselves and who and what we aspire to be, not least because its title translates into “turn things around”. South Africans like to believe, with not as much justification as we think we have, that nobody does that better.    

And, the gods know, South Africa needed turning around in the third Test. They still do. Nelson Mandela took 27 years to get out of jail. Faf du Plessis’ team require another couple of days, but it won’t be easy. Anrich Nortjé knows that better than anyone.

He took guard at 5.45pm on Friday. At 4.52pm on Saturday, he sparred at a wide one from Ben Stokes and Joe Root snared a sharp, low, dipping catch at first slip. Much happened in the 23 hours and seven minutes between those two poles, but Nortjé wasn’t mulling the philosophical niceties as he countenanced his dismissal. He crumpled to a grounded knee at the crease, poked a gloved thumb through the grille of his helmet into his mouth, and stared for many seconds into the middle distance towards the dressingroom from which he had come, it seemed, a thousand years earlier. If only, he might have been thinking, he could exchange the years for balls faced. He shouldn’t be so hard on himself.

Nortjé was at the crease for more than three hours and faced 136 balls — and scored runs off only nine of them. His strike rate, 13.2, is the lowest in any first-class innings of 110 or more deliveries. “It’s not really about scoring runs for me,” Nortjé said after stumps on Saturday. “It’s about facing a few balls … as many as possible.” He dealt with the three deliveries Bess bowled before bad light and then rain ended Friday’s play. Job done? Not by a long chalk. On Saturday, Nortjé got into line with impressive willingness to blunt England’s fast bowlers, notably Mark Wood, who never strayed from the upper 140 kilometres-per-hour and touched 150. “I haven’t really had to deal with that,” he said of facing Wood’s high octane. “It gives confidence that I can do it. It’s nice to be able to do that. But it’s not the nicest thing to have to do, I’m not going to lie.” Nortjé is in Wood’s league of pace. Did being on the other end of the equation engender sympathy for the batters he bowls to? “No.” 

Nortjé saw the allegedly better equipped Dean Elgar, Du Plessis and Rassie van der Dussen come and go. And if he wasn’t so polite he would say he could also see that he looked the best of them. “There’s a bigger battle between [frontline batters] and the bowler compared to with me,” Nortjé said. “When I get a half-volley sometimes, I still block it. You can’t really compare. I’m not in the batting meeting, I can tell you that.” Nortjé faced exactly 100 deliveries fewer than the player who holds the record for the longest innings by a nightwatch for South Africa. But that guy came with a reputation as a batter: Mark Boucher, for it was he, can only have been proud of Nortjé as he watched from the dressingroom.

Uitenhage, too, will be proud of Nortjé. Some 40 kilometres from Port Elizabeth, it’s a tough town filled with tough people who build cars for a living. But they will have a soft spot for Nortjé, their homeboy, who definitely started their engines. On Friday, Charl Langeveldt, South Africa’s bowling consultant, described Nortjé in a television interview as “a proper Dutchman”. It’s a mild pejorative slung at first-language Afrikaans speakers, and its use in towns like Uitenhage will earn a beer bottle to the temple.

But this is different. “I’ve been called that for quite a long time; it was the first time it was on air,” Nortjé said. “I take it as a compliment in the sense of trying to go out there and fight, and come hard and be aggressive, with a lot of heart. It’s something I do try and pride myself on. When conditions get tough, when its 40 degrees, I try and be the guy to run in and come hard. I try and make things happen with the ball, not really with the bat. But if I get an opportunity, if I have to take a few blows, I’m willing to do that.”

Uitenhage has given South Africa other promontory people, among them the bloodless Balthazar Johannes Vorster, the apartheid state’s third-last leader and among its most brutal monsters. More happily, Enoch Sontonga also hails from Uitenhage, and he also composed an isiXhosa hymn that is special to South Africans. Outside of St George’s Park, you will hear it more often than “Zizojika Izinto”. It’s called “Nkosi Sikele’ iAfrika”, or “God Bless Africa”, and it’s the first half of the national anthem.

Should Nortjé’s effort inspire South Africa to turn things around in this match, they will be blessed indeed. 

First published by Cricbuzz.

Nortjé intent on not going anywhere slowly

“I’ve been bowling the same way for a few seasons now with no injuries so the two I had recently is part of the game,” – Anrich Nortjé

TMG Digital

TELFORD VICE in London

THE logic seems simple — take your foot off the gas if you want to keep your arm in the attack.

Anrich Nortjé begs to differ: “There are enough medium pacers in the world, I don’t want to compete with them.”

Nortjé and his 150 kilometre-an-hour missiles have blazed a trail in the 11 games he has played in the past four months, lighting up the Mzansi Super League (MSL) and then South Africa’s one-day series against Sri Lanka.

Thing is, he could have played 26 more matches in that time, 17 of them for South Africa, and taken who knows how many more wickets than the 19 he claimed.

An ankle injury that required surgery ended Nortjé’s MSL after three games and removed him from the selection equation for South Africa’s Test and one-day series against Pakistan as well as the Tests against Sri Lanka, albeit that he probably wouldn’t have been in the frame for the red-ball stuff because of the quality of the incumbents.

He made his debut in the ODIs against the Lankans and was in the squad for the T20s but missed all three with a shoulder problem that will take six weeks to heal.

The silver lining is that it has taken Nortjé out of the mix for the Indian Premier League, but isn’t that his body telling him it isn’t coping with what he is asking it to do?

“I’ve been bowling the same way for a few seasons now with no injuries so the two I had recently is part of the game; it’s sport so injuries will occur.”

He should be back in action by the time the World Cup starts on May 30, and it’s more probable than possible that his name will be among the 15 Linda Zondi announces on April 18.

How hard is it for him to think about anything else?

“Yes, the World Cup squad is something big, but I’m just trying to focus on getting back to full fitness and to try and be better and stronger when I get back.

“With some extra strength work and one or two technical corrections I would like to hit 150 kph in most of my games when I get back and improve one or two things from a skills point of view as well.

“So for now I’m focused on how I can improve and not too much on what others control.”

Plainly, what Nortjé is not thinking about is taking things as slowly as some folks do in his hometown of Uitenhage.

Did growing up in a smaller community help him develop a better sense of himself and his strengths — which, unusually for a modern professional, have earned him a B Com —  than if he had been part of a more metropolitan milieu?

“It’s difficult to say as I don’t know how I would’ve been as a player if I was in a bigger city, but what I know is that I’m clear on what I want and where I want to go.

“That’s the most important thing for me to have as a player.”

On a clear day in places like Uitenhage, you really can see forever.