Business Day

Proteas may have dodged a bullet

- Telford Vice London

One game into his tenure as SA’s interim team director‚ Enoch Nkwe remains unbeaten.

So does Quinton de Kock as captain of the T20 side.

Their records were preserved in the monsoon deluge that soaked Dharamsala on Sunday‚ and forced the abandonmen­t of the first T20 against India the opening match of SA’s tour‚ and of Nkwe’s and De Kock’s time at the helm.

The game was called off less than an hour after the scheduled start‚ doubtless not only because of the amount of rain that fell but also in the interests of spectators as only two of the stands at the ground are roofed.

That might have helped the Proteas dodge a bullet.

They won the only other match they have played at Dharamsala‚ piling up 200/3 in reply to India’s 199/5 in a T20 there in October 2015.

But that XI’s top six was Hashim Amla‚ AB de Villiers‚ Faf du Plessis‚ JP Duminy‚ Farhaan Behardien and David Miller. Only Miller is in the current squad. SA’s attack that day was Kyle Abbott‚ Kagiso Rabada‚ Marchant de Lange‚ Chris Morris‚ Imran Tahir and Duminy. Only Rabada is in the mix this time.

The bowlers‚ in particular‚ will not be unhappy that Sunday’s game did not get off the ground. Dharamsala is a Himalayan hittadrome where no boundary is longer than 65m and the thin air helps the ball fly faster and further.

Of the 56 grounds worldwide that have hosted more than five T20s‚ only at 13 of them have the runs flowed faster per over than Dharamsala’s tempo of 8.18. It has been a better place to bat than 76.79% of those 56 grounds. But not as good as Mohali‚ where the second match of the series is due on Wednesday. Only four T20s have been played there but runs have rushed at 9.10 to the over.

SA have been to Mohali four times‚ and have come away with wins twice: over Pakistan in the 2006 Champions Trophy and the Netherland­s in the 2011 World Cup. They have yet to beat India there‚ and perhaps it is not the worst thing that their ranks carry few survivors from that 2015 tour.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from South Africa