The Citizen (Gauteng)

Maharaj puts his hand up

MAHARAJ: KEEN TO GET A SHOT AT PROTEAS CAPTAINCY

- Ken Borland

Dolphins spinner frustrated with being boxed as a red-ball cricketer.

Keshav Maharaj is not satisfied to be merely South Africa’s number one spinner in Test cricket; the 30-year-old said yesterday that he wants to play in all three formats. And he even dreams of captaining the Proteas to World Cup glory one day.

While Maharaj is pretty much unchalleng­ed for his place in the Test team, having taken 110 wickets in 30 matches, he has only played seven ODIs and is yet to be picked for a T20 Internatio­nal.

Three of those appearance­s came in the whitewash of Australia earlier this year though and the left-arm spinner performed tidily enough to cement himself in the national selectors’ plans, being chosen for the abandoned limited-overs tour of India.

It was Maharaj’s form for the Dolphins as they won the Momentum One-Day Cup that forced his return to the green and gold as he ended as the fourth-highest wicket-taker with 16 wickets, despite only playing seven out of the 10 games, and had the best average in the competitio­n – 14.68.

“Since making my ODI debut in England in 2017, I had to work on my plan for limited-overs cricket and I went back to franchise cricket and worked as hard as I could.

“So it was a really good experience to be drafted back into the ODI side. Being boxed as a redball cricketer has been extremely frustratin­g for me because I was branded as a white-ball bowler early in my career!

“To be handed another opportunit­y for the Proteas was like making my debut again. I want to play for South Africa in all three formats, but for T20 I need to bide my time in the ODI side first. I want South Africa to be No 1 in all formats and if that happens then I must be doing my job. Then I just want to do better the next season,” Maharaj said.

And if one enquires about the Durban-born star’s long-term goals then the drive and ambition of a champion competitor becomes clear.

“When I asked what I had to do to get back in the ODI side, I was told that apart from my bowling I had to work on my batting as well.

“I was fortunate to have extra responsibi­lity as the Dolphins captain, it made me want to be able to bail the team out of any situation or put them in a winning position, and I managed to get some scores last season.

“I know I have a lot more ability with the bat than the numbers suggest.

“In India last year I tasted what it was like to get an internatio­nal 50. The biggest problem was getting the first one and hopefully now I can move to being a bowling all-rounder or even a fully-fledged all-rounder, able to contribute evenly with ball and bat.

“And I really enjoy captaincy, I really want to lead the Proteas.”

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 ?? Picture: Gallo Images ?? PUTTING UP HIS HAND. Proteas spinner Keshav Maharaj has said he would be up to the job of captaining the team in the Test arena.
Picture: Gallo Images PUTTING UP HIS HAND. Proteas spinner Keshav Maharaj has said he would be up to the job of captaining the team in the Test arena.

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