Sunday Times

Kolpak: Selling your soul or buying your freedom?

SA skipper bemoans inability to keep its best cricket players as Olivier packs for UK

- By TELFORD VICE

● Why have 43 South Africans taken up Kolpak contracts since 2004, thus turning their backs on the supposed pinnacle of playing internatio­nal cricket?

Because, no matter how much artificial­ly flavoured patriotism it’s drenched in, you can’t eat a Proteas badge. It is also no good for helping Eskom keep the lights on, nor for making SA’s increasing­ly febrile political and social realities fit for human purpose.

But don’t expect South Africans to agree, especially those who look to sport to ease the load of dealing with those realities.

As Ryan McLaren said: “If you’re a chartered accountant and you get an offer to go and work for a bank in New York, everyone says it’s a great opportunit­y. But if you’re a cricketer and that happens everyone says you’re stabbing your country in the back.”

Justin Kemp concurred: “It’s there, it’s lucrative and people can do it. So they will.”

Morné Morkel took up that theme on Cricket Australia’s website: “[Cricket SA] has to sit down and come up with plans because they're going to lose a lot of players in the near future and they need to protect against that.”

Faf du Plessis said: “It’s a problem that CSA will face; not because of what they’re doing wrong themselves. We need to put in structures to keep our players otherwise we potentiall­y will lose more.”

Duanne Olivier became the latest backstabbi­ng opportunis­t this week when he signed a three-year Kolpak contract with Yorkshire reportedly worth R2.7m for each of its three years; rather more than the R900,000-a-year, two-year deal CSA apparently counter-offered.

“Brace yourself — he’s not going to be the last one to do it,” Kemp said.

The news hit cricket-minded South Africans hard, not least because Olivier took 24 wickets against Pakistan in January. The seven against Sri Lanka last month helped him break into the world’s top 20 bowlers.

“I want guys to be the best they can be internatio­nally because that’s the legacy that you leave — your internatio­nal career,” Du Plessis said. “I’m very disappoint­ed that he didn’t live out the expectatio­n I had for him.”

Kemp went Kolpak for Kent in 2008, at 30 and months after he knew he had played his last game for SA. Morkel announced his internatio­nal retirement in February and is now on Worcesters­hire’s Kolpak books.

McLaren signed a Kolpak deal, also with Kent, in 2007 because “I was seventh or eighth in the [SA] queue, behind [Jacques] Kallis, [Shaun] Pollock …”. He returned to the fold two years later to play 66 white-ball internatio­nals and two Tests.

Olivier’s situation is different. He is 26 and has played in all five of SA’s home Tests this season. So he would seem to have a successful internatio­nal career within his grasp.

“Questions will be asked when you’re in the Test team and you still pack your bags,” Kemp said. “I would have found it very difficult to leave if I was a first-choice player, but every circumstan­ce is different.

“Players are well looked after in SA, but to go and play county cricket for five or six years and have the chance of getting a British passport are attractive options.”

And not only for the white players who are invariably cast as victims of SA’s transforma­tion policies who resort to a Kolpak future: six of those 43 South Africans have been black.

In Olivier’s case, despite his current form he couldn’t be sure of staying in the internatio­nal mix, what with rivals for his place of the calibre of Lungi Ngidi coming back from injury.

Indeed, of SA’s 25 Tests since Olivier made his debut, he featured in only 10.

“We look at the last month or two and we go, ‘How can you sign Kolpak? You’re playing and you’re doing well’,” Du Plessis said.

“But I think his decision was made a lot sooner than that.

“What unfolded over the summer was great for him but by then he was already, without us knowing it, halfway committed [to Yorkshire].”

Actually, it goes back further.

Olivier took 31 wickets in seven first-class games as an overseas pro for Derbyshire last winter.

When he returned, his Knights teammates — McLaren included — “could see there was something different: the ball was coming out of his hand much better and he was bowling much better”.

In the five Tests before Olivier went to Derbyshire he took 17 wickets at 23.12. In the five he played after his stint there he took 31 at 17.13.

English cricket helped make Olivier the bowler he is. Maybe they deserve a piece of him. Now they have it.

I’m disappoint­ed he didn’t live out the expectatio­n I had

Faf du Plessis

Proteas skipper To have the chance of a British passport is attractive

Justin Kemp Former Kolpak player

 ?? Picture: BackpagePi­x ?? Themba Zwane, of Mamelodi Sundowns, is challenged by Ronald Pfumbidzai of Bloemfonte­in Celtic during yesterday’s clash in Pretoria.
Picture: BackpagePi­x Themba Zwane, of Mamelodi Sundowns, is challenged by Ronald Pfumbidzai of Bloemfonte­in Celtic during yesterday’s clash in Pretoria.

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