Saturday Star

SA dare to snare silverware

Proteas’ roller-coaster ride aside, it’s time to kiss Champions Trophy

- LUNGANI ZAMA

AUTUMN killed the summer with the softest kiss, Jake Leonard wrote. A complicate­d South African summer of cricket is finally over, and not all of the kisses during the season were of the delicate touch.

The Titans continued their domestic dominance, but it is always the Proteas who are our ultimate barometer for the health of the game.

In often trying times, the Test side have shown that they have that quintessen­tially South African ingredient of gees by the bucket-load.

More than once, violent changes in personnel – or priority – within the national team threatened to derail the journey to redemption that the side had embarked upon in July, after a sincere meeting of men to draw lines, and renew ambitions.

No one quite knows what was said in the bosberaad but it is clear that it was necessary.

In the wake of that sit-down, the Test side have been in rude health, even without the services of South Africa’s most gifted player, AB de Villiers.

The mercurial De Villiers, now 33, has made public his wish to manage his schedule until the 2019 World Cup, a decision that was met with public confusion and concern.

In the wake of Kyle Abbott and Rilee Rossouw turning their backs on internatio­nal cricket, De Villiers’ Test sabbatical may have sunk a team with shallower reserves of character.

Take Virat Kohli out of Test cricket for India. How about Joe Root from England, Steve Smith from the Aussies, or Kane Williamson from the Black Caps? They all become different teams, with a massive hole in the heart of their batting order.

The Proteas that play under Faf du Plessis, however, seem to have grasped the concept of getting on with the job in front of them. The rest will take care of itself.

De Villiers, of course, has left a hole, and the repair work of that area is still an ongoing process. Importantl­y, it hasn’t been used as a crutch to explain shortcomin­gs.

The same could be said of Abbott’s departure. He had seemingly come into his own with the ball, in all formats, but his mind had already been made up before the successful trip to Australia.

As he celebrated his Man of the Match and moment award into the small hours in Hobart, he knew deep down that it was the last series of significan­ce he was playing for his country.

Abbott finally confir med his change of heart to the rest of the nation at the turn of the year at Newlands, by which time South Africa had wrapped up the series against a brittle Sri Lanka side.

The subcontine­nt side were a mediocre filling in a sandwich of far weightier Antipodean slices, at the start and end of the summer.

South Africa were magnificen­t when they needed to be in Australia, digging in when they needed to, and sticking the knife in when the opponents’ jugular was availed. They found new heroes, too. Keshav Maharaj’s ascension to the senior side was met with alarm in some quarters, but the left-armer’s stock rose sharply across the summer, as he toiled away when he had to, and then became a weapon when the conditions encouraged him.

He was one of several, inspired selections by a panel that didn’t get too much wrong over the course of the summer.

Their biggest concer n remains at the top of the order, where they need to commit to finding a long-term partner for Dean Elgar.

Despite a prolonged show of faith by the suits, Stephen Cook’s confidence withered away all season, and poor Theunis de Bruyn confirmed that he is a middle-order man, and not equipped to bunt out the new ball.

The other concern is the prolonged silence from the blade of Hashim Amla, who has been the rock of the side for most of his career.

Below him, JP Duminy has also endured a season of frustratio­n, and he will know there’s a gaggle of young stars chomping at his heels after rich pickings in the domestic scene.

A third successive Test series victory in Australia was the undoubted highlight, but drubbing the Aussies 5-0 in a one-day series, and also out- lasting a decent Kiwi outfit 3-2 in another 50-over tussle, were also notable triumphs for the Proteas.

The 50-over unit, led by De Villiers, looks to be a machine that is getting itself into fine working order, just in time for the latest opportunit­y to strike gold.

The Champions Trophy is getting ever closer and South Africa are again marked as the sincerest of contenders.

In 2016/17, the landscape in South Africa shifted and there was a similar reshuffle within the national cricket team.

Faf du Plessis has displayed a penchant for leadership, even if his choice of after-mint was ridiculous­ly called into question by some quarters in Australia.

In the absence, or amid the struggles, of veterans, the likes of Kagiso Rabada and Quinton de Kock have assumed the role of senior players, swimmingly, and there have also been some strong additions to the squad during the past campaign.

The autumn may have come with temporary respite, but it is to winter that South Africa now looks to.

There, in the heart of England, they will hope to fulfil their destiny with a kiss of some silverware.

 ??  ?? SA one-day captain AB de Villiers struts his stuff on the recent tour of New Zealand.
SA one-day captain AB de Villiers struts his stuff on the recent tour of New Zealand.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from South Africa