The Citizen (KZN)

IT’S BROKE, SO FIX IT

GRAVE MISTAKE: INTERIM APPOINTMEN­TS A COP OUT

- Ken Borland

Saying you are learning is the easiest get-out-of-jail card – Rhodes.

Former Cricket South Africa (CSA) chief executive and convenor of selectors Haroon Lorgat yesterday joined the call for the organisati­on to make permanent appointmen­ts in the Proteas management and also settle on the domestic structure as quickly as possible, blaming this uncertaint­y for the team’s hammering in India.

The Proteas went to India, the most daunting tour of all, with an inexperien­ced interim head coach in Enoch Nkwe and an interim director of cricket in Corrie van Zyl.

The recent retirement­s of Dale Steyn and Hashim Amla meant it was also the most inexperien­ced SA team for many years.

Added to that are the questions about the strength of domestic cricket, especially in light of CSA’s desire to increase the number of teams at the top level, thereby further diluting the pool.

Lorgat told The Citizen: “The lack of certainty in appointmen­ts, having inexperien­ced people in acting capacities and structures is a grave mistake and the first thing they must fix.

“When you are broken, like we are, you need to bring in new blood, get people in who have done it before, let them come in and help the team and the selectors.

“Former players like Shaun Pollock, Graeme Smith, Mark Boucher, Jacques Kallis, Jonty Rhodes – they can sweep up.

“People with ideas and strength of mind is what is needed, but what CSA don’t seem to want.

“We are walking down the barrel, never mind looking down it, and I don’t see a turnaround any time soon.

“England will more than likely thrash us, too, and then the bottom will fall out.”

Rhodes, who is a highly sought-after coach on the sub-continent, was also critical of the interim appointmen­ts and said the Proteas can’t keep saying they are learning.

“I was never part of a team that had interim coaches and I would have hated that. You need a strong back room for the guys to play to their potential.

“There were so many changes in the team and now there’s a whole new management team as well.

“The coaches have to know their roles and the players have to be comfortabl­e with them.

“You need a strong, united dressing room, but how is that going to happen with interim appointmen­ts?

“I know vital holes were left in the team and filled by guys who haven’t played Tests in India before, but saying you are learning is the easiest get-out-of-jail card.

“This business of learning lessons has to come to an end. You should be learning in every game.

“And there should not be such a big jump between domestic cricket and the Proteas,” said Rhodes.

New Delhi – India have evolved into a “multidimen­sional” team capable of winning anywhere in the world, irrespecti­ve of the nature of pitches, captain Virat Kohli and coach Ravi Shastri said after the side’s 3-0 series sweep against South Africa yesterday.

Kohli and his men won the third Test in Ranchi by an innings and 202 runs to complete a whitewash that also consolidat­ed their lead in the World Test Championsh­ip.

Kohli was particular­ly pleased with how his pace attack, despite missing Jasprit Bumrah, refused to let the spinners hog the limelight.

“To be the best side in the world you need to be multidimen­sional and all facets of your team have to fire and work properly,” Kohli said.

“Spin was always a strength, batting was never a problem for us. Fast bowling was very good at certain times and then all these young bowlers came ...

“Batsmen gave confidence to the bowlers, bowlers gave us amazing confidence that even with 300 on board, we’re always in every Test match,” he said.

“We certainly believe we can win anywhere in the world at the moment.

“You know, if we believe in ourselves, the way we are at the moment, we can win in England, Australia, South Africa, anywhere.”

India have traditiona­lly been formidable at home but struggled abroad, especially on lively surfaces which often defang their spinners and exposed technical limitation­s of many of their batsmen.

Shastri said the team was determined to succeed regardless of the nature of the surface.

“Our motto was to take pitches out of the equation – to hell with pitches,” he told broadcaste­r Star Sports.

“With the batting line-up we have, if they post big totals and then we have bowlers who can take 20 wickets – we can keep taking those World Championsh­ip points we are after.”

 ?? Picture: AFP ?? DOWN AND OUT. A dejected Anrich Nortje shows his disappoint­ment after the Proteas were whitewashe­d by India on the fourth day of the third Test in Ranchi yesterday.
Picture: AFP DOWN AND OUT. A dejected Anrich Nortje shows his disappoint­ment after the Proteas were whitewashe­d by India on the fourth day of the third Test in Ranchi yesterday.
 ?? Picture: AFP ?? THE SPOILS. The Indian team pose with their winning trophy at the end of the third and final Test against the Proteas in Ranchi yesterday.
Picture: AFP THE SPOILS. The Indian team pose with their winning trophy at the end of the third and final Test against the Proteas in Ranchi yesterday.

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