Cape Argus

Proteas selected ‘strongest 15 available’

- ZAAHIER ADAMS zaahier.adams@inl.co.za

PROTEAS women’s coach Hilton Moreeng is adamant that he has “the strongest 15 available for selection” and that he firmly believes that “it’s the best” combinatio­n to win the Women’s T20 World Cup.

The home team, who are set to play the opening game of the tournament against Sri Lanka at Newlands next Friday, have been submerged in chaos after Dane van Niekerk was omitted from the 15-player T20 World Cup squad.

The former captain was overlooked due to not meeting the national team’s fitness requiremen­ts, which includes running a twokilomet­re time trial in under 9mins 30secs.

The fall-out has been immense with Van Niekerk “absolutely broken”, while her wife and teammate Marizanne Kapp has requested “compassion­ate leave” and will therefore miss the Tri-Series T20 final against India in East London today.

The clash against the 2021 T20 World Cup runners-up is the Proteas’ final official match before the tournament gets under way.

“At the end of the day when you look at what are the minimum standards required for players to be able to firstly be available for selection, all players around the country know what is required.

At the end of the day it’s how you balance the team post the results, what you get from the fitness requiremen­ts because it’s a nonnegotia­ble in the country,” Moreeng said about Van Niekerk’s nonselecti­on.

“Every single profession­al cricketer knows it. Hence we have bigger squads, so we can make sure we have enough depth in certain positions. It’s the strongest 15 available for selection for us and yes we believe it’s the best especially for the conditions we’re going to (face).”

But what about Kapp? Does Moreeng expect his star all-rounder to return and assimilate herself back into the rest of the squad?

“She is part of the World Cup squad and is committed to us. I think she needed the break now and she’s been granted compassion­ate leave post the last game,” he said.

“We’re very happy with the form she is in and what she brings. We granted her leave so she can come to the World Cup and be ready to play.”

Moreeng’s primary task leading up to the opening game will be to rebuild the squad’s morale and get the team to focus on the job at hand, which is significan­t in its own right with South Africa hosting the Women’s T20 World Cup for the first time.

It has its own pressure, as we have seen with the Proteas men’s team who have failed to progress to the knockout stages at major ICC tournament­s in SA. This includes the 2003 World Cup, 2007 T20 World Cup and 2009 Champions Trophy.

Equally, the Proteas’ women also failed to advance from the 2005 World Cup group stages on home soil.

Moreeng, though, is confident his charges can refocus.

“The players are very profession­al, they know that these things happen. It’s something that you can’t control yourself and we don’t wish it on any player.

“For us, it’s to make sure that we finish the Tri-Series on a high and take that form into the World Cup.

“They know they need to get on with it and to make sure that they can put the performanc­es on the field. Overall, the squad understand­s what needs to happen and we have to move forward.”

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from South Africa