Cape Argus

Coach says Boks will do the ‘real talking’ on the field

- COMMENT BY LUNGANI ZAMA

THE Springboks and the Wallabies have both made three changes to their line-ups for their internatio­nal clash in Bloemfonte­in tomorrow, with Bok coach Allister Coetzee saying the real talking “would be left for the field”.

There will be a Bok starting debut for Stormers and Western Province wing Dillyn Leyds, while scrum-half Ross Cronje and loose forward Francois Louw have been recalled. Coetzee and his players are under pressure after taking a record 57-0 beating at the hands of New Zealand in Albany two weeks ago, although a fixture against Australia does not seem to pose the same kinds of problems, especially back on home soil.

South Africa, however, will be extra keen to end up on the winning side tomorrow, given that last time out against Australia, in Perth three weeks ago, the outcome was a 23-23 draw.

Coetzee said: “I know results are important, but they will come if we get the basics right. Our processes are our focus point on Saturday, not the result.”

Coetzee did admit, though, that getting the win in Bloemfonte­in was important.

“The loss to New Zealand was a horror experience and we hope to be more accurate in our execution this week,” he said. – Sports Staff

IN THE end, it wasn’t his frosty relations with India and the BCCI, not the match-fixing saga, or even complicati­ons from transforma­tion that ended Haroon Lorgat’s tenure as the boss of cricket in South Africa. Ultimately, it was an obsession with a new venture that is drawing ever closer, even if big matters around it appear further and further away.

Even before a ball has been bowled, the T20 Global League has already taken its casualties. The biggest, thus far, is Lorgat, a man who seemed to have adopted the tournament as his personal mission, his coup de grace in a colourful career in cricket administra­tion.

He was everything and everywhere, concerning himself with every last detail, not content to delegate even a portion to the rest of the team. Seemingly, he started to take liberties and making executive decisions, and the dinner, drinks and negotiatio­n bills stacked up as rapidly as totals during a powerplay.

Lorgat is not the first man who has been seduced by the power and potential of a flashy, new tournament. South Africans are very familiar with a man by the name of Lalit Modi, who was the The Don in the early days of the IPL.

He promised the world, and when that promise looked like faltering, he cut financial and administra­tive corners that were always going to come back and bite him. He threw money at every problem.

Modi eventually walked away from all cricket last month, still licking his wounds and saying what could have been. Few men walk away quietly from these things, because the numbers involved are equal parts dizzying and destructiv­e.

Lorgat’s Waterloo, as it transpires, is the not so insignific­ant matter of a broadcast deal. A month away from the big show, and a partner is still a no-show. Lorgat has been zipping between SA and the Middle East as a matter of urgency of late, desperate to deliver the one bit of good news that would have salvaged his job – and perhaps his reputation. Already, Cricket South Africa’s relationsh­ip with SuperSport has been compromise­d by the dealings over the T20 Global League.

Lorgat, whether by design or dismay, marooned himself by the manner in which the broadcasti­ng rights procedure has gone. He constantly maintained that everything was under control, and those who were suggesting otherwise were simply mischievou­s media with an agenda. It turns out that the smoke above him was due to the fire around him.

Losing a key player in a new venture, just a month before the launch, hardly fills investors with confidence, and CSA now have just five weeks to restore order – and confidence – in a product that appears to be finding trouble at every turn.

Despite coming into power during an especially tricky period for SA cricket, Lorgat’s legacy will now be defined not by the things he did, but by the deals he couldn’t close.

 ??  ?? FRONT AND CENTRE: Haroon Lorgat seemed to have adopted the T20 Global League as his personal mission.
FRONT AND CENTRE: Haroon Lorgat seemed to have adopted the T20 Global League as his personal mission.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from South Africa