Business Day

SA stars go on the blink

Lesser lights grab the limelight

- Telford Vice

SA cricket’s domestic competitio­ns are in as sharp a focus as the national team in the wake of the latter’s disastrous Test series in India.

And the former are ahead on the bigger picture’s scoreboard in the current round of franchise first-class matches.

Only six of the dozen fit players who shambled to a 3-0 loss in India are playing for their franchises and none of them made an impression on the first day’s play on Monday‚ though only four had the opportunit­y.

That asks questions of the prevailing view that the quality chasm between domestic and internatio­nal cricket is an important reason why SA were so disappoint­ing against Virat Kohli’s team.

Heinrich Klaasen and Zubayr Hamza did not bat for the Titans and the Cobras on Monday and in Tuesday’s first session in their games against the Knights and the Warriors, respective­ly.

But Senuran Muthusamy did for the Dolphins against the Lions and managed only 23 off 58 balls before he skied a pull to midwicket. Lungi Ngidi bowled 13 overs for the Titans and took 1/59‚ Dane Piedt had a similar day at the office for the Cobras, claiming 1/57 off 23, and teammate George Linde went wicketless in nine overs.

None of those performanc­es were particular­ly poor‚ but they also did not illustrate why the standard in the domestic arena is so far below what it needs to be for SA to perform better at internatio­nal level.

Piedt took another wicket in the morning session on Tuesday‚ and Linde went to lunch with figures of 3/67, but Ngidi found no more success in the five overs he bowled‚ in which he went for 25 runs. Muthusamy bowled only one over before lunch and conceded three runs.

While all that was not happening‚ Raynard van Tonder‚ the Knights’ 21-year-old opening batter‚ was scoring 204, and five other allegedly lesser lights banked scores of between 61 and 70.

No doubt SA players are readjustin­g to their home conditions after weeks on the subcontine­nt‚ and perhaps they are still recovering from the physical and mental aspects of the beating they took there.

But the argument that the franchise system is where SA’s problems start is not as sound as its proponents would like us to believe. Could it be the other way around: because SA’s players consider themselves so superior to what is seen all the time on the country’ s grounds they do not pay the domestic game the required respect?

And that‚ consequent­ly‚ they are being exposed as arrogant and complacent when they can least afford it?

That is too neat an explanatio­n‚ but it deserves to be part of the conversati­on that cricket in SA must have with itself if it is to improve.

 ?? /Johan Pretorius/Gallo Images ?? Showing the way: Raynard van Tonder celebrates his double ton for the Knights in their match against the Titans in Bloemfonte­in.
/Johan Pretorius/Gallo Images Showing the way: Raynard van Tonder celebrates his double ton for the Knights in their match against the Titans in Bloemfonte­in.

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