Cape Times

Proteas have to learn from mistakes

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

Third T20 Internatio­nal Australia: 193/5 (Warner 57, Finch 55, Smith 30, Shamsi 1/25)

South Africa: 96 all out (Van der Dussen 24, Klaasen 22, Agar 3/16, Starc 3/23) Australia won by 97 runs

ANOTHER series decider. Another defeat for the Proteas. At some stage Quinton de Kock’s team will have to learn from their mistakes if they are to at least be competitiv­e at the ICC T20 World Cup later this year.

The fundamenta­l element holding the Proteas back is their over dependence on captain De Kock. The skipper suffered a rare failure under the Newlands lights yesterday when Mitchell Starc (3/23) produced a similar beauty to his Wanderers gem and South Africa’s pursuit of the 194 required for victory was virtually over after just four balls of their innings.

In the first T20 in Johannesbu­rg SA slumped to a record 107-run defeat when De Kock had an early shower. Yesterday at Newlands, the margin was a similar 97 runs after the remaining Proteas batsmen could only muster 96 all out collective­ly.

The complete lack of form of the remaining batsmen is a headache the size of Table Mountain for Proteas coach Mark Boucher. It was the Proteas’ Achilles’ heel during their disappoint­ing Test series defeat to England, when no SA batsmen managed a century across the four matches.

The change of format and switch to coloured clothing has made no difference. The embarrassm­ent has simply taken on another form. An inquiry has to be launched, with Cricket SA’s acting director of cricket Graeme Smith tasked with identifyin­g the flaws that are currently permeating through the game at all levels.

The national team cannot continue to produce performanc­es where the top score is Rassie van der Dussen’s 24 and Heinrich Klaasen’s 22. Apart from the duo’s contributi­on, there were only two batsmen – David Miller and Dwaine Pretorius – who managed double figures. The sell-out crowd that had come out on a chilly Cape Town evening deserved better than watching Ashton Agar (3/16) toy with the SA batsmen.

They already had to endure Australia’s

batting unit lash the home team’s bowlers to all parts during the early part of the evening. The visitors’ opening pair of David Warner (57) and Aaron Finch (55) set the tone with a blistering 120-run stand in 11.3 overs.

It was batting from heaven, with both players scoring freely both sides of the wicket without taking any undue risks. They simply played positively and aggressive­ly, despatchin­g anything short or full to the boundary. SA’s woeful batting unit would be well advised to watch a replay of Australia’s start, just to see how easily runs can be scored.

At that stage the damage could have been much worse, but once again Proteas wrist-spinner Tabraiz Shamsi (1/25) halted the flow of runs with another impressive performanc­e.

Considerin­g Shamsi’s success in this series it is baffling that the team management have failed to utilise left-arm spinner Bjorn Fortuin’s skills during the series, particular­ly due to his success ratio in the powerplay.

The bowling unit were not faultless either. The lack of discipline remains an issue.

 ?? | RYAN WILKISKY BackpagePi­x ?? QUINTON DE KOCK is clean bowled by Mitchell Starc at Newlands yesterday.
| RYAN WILKISKY BackpagePi­x QUINTON DE KOCK is clean bowled by Mitchell Starc at Newlands yesterday.

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