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IT WAS FRUSTRATIN­G

- LUNGANI ZAMA

“WE CAN’T get away from the fact that the batting was frustratin­g.”

Ottis Gibson played a straight bat to his South African team’s single biggest problem in

Sri Lanka. Over the course of their trip, almost all of their problems stemmed from an inability to put together decent totals with the bat. “We look at the way we played in the first three games of the series. Our focus for the last six or eight months has been trying to get ready for the World Cup, so we sat down and spoke about the style of play that we wanted,” the Proteas head coach explained. “We talked about having positive intent and taking the game on, but within that also comes player thinking and, today, I questioned our thinking,” he said in the aftermath of the T20 loss in Colombo.

The debate around South Africa’s eternally positive approach will linger until the

World Cup if they persist with it, and Gibson is not turning his back on the policy just yet.

“We want to be positive, but you still want to make good decisions. The teams that make the best decisions under pressure are the ones that perform the best, and the decision-making of some of our players was questionab­le.”

There was also an admittance that South Africa’s spin problems are a growing concern, and Gibson seems adamant that attack remains the best way of defending.

Find a way

“Some guys play spin very well and others not so well. But I still like the fact that we’re trying to score runs. My feeling is if you defend and get out defending then you’re still not scoring runs. You still have to find a way to score.

“I don’t want people to go into their shells and start to think that they have to defend. I want guys to look to score,” Gibson insisted.

Looking ahead to the World Cup, which is the ultimate project that is the crutch for any manner of experiment­ation between now and June next year, Gibson said the puzzle was starting to come together.

“I feel like right now we have 10 spots out of 15. We brought a very inexperien­ced line-up here. It’s not so much on purpose, but also about who is available. (Chris) Morris is injured, we felt Dale (Steyn) maybe going back and playing some county cricket would be good for him. We know what Dale can do in ODI cricket and we know what (Imran) Tahir can do.”

Another point of concern for the side is the lack of a proper all-rounder. Young Andile Phehlukway­o and Wiaan Mulder have shown promise with the ball, but their batting is not up to scratch. Yet despite the results, Gibson remains cheerful about his side’s prospects. He sees progress, even with the frustratio­n of losses and particular lows with the bat.

“I’m happy with where the side is going, of course I’m not happy to lose and I’m sure the people watching back home aren’t happy but, from the get-go, we said it wasn’t about winning for us. If it was all about winning for us we would have brought guys like Tahir and so on. Winning a series in Sri Lanka right now doesn’t give us a strong indicator of where we are going into the World Cup,” he maintained.

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Picture: BackpagePi­x
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