The Independent on Saturday

Cook’s ideal Test recipe

His batting is getting just the right consistenc­y Proteas need

- STUART HESS

EXACTLY a year to the day since an anguished conversati­on with his franchise coach about being overlooked yet again by the national selectors, Stephen Cook was basking in the glory of a Man-of-the-Match performanc­e in just his seventh Test.

For those who’ve been watching Cook for a number of seasons score with metronomic consistenc­y at domestic level, his display in Port Elizabeth against Sri Lanka, came as no surprise. You can almost hear the calls of: “Told you so.”

A year ago Cook sat in the Wanderers dressing-room off the back of an unbeaten 168 against the Warriors and wondered out loud to Geoffrey Toyana what it was he needed to do to break into the South African Test team.

Cook had celebrated that particular century more animatedly than others, perhaps thinking his time had finally come and that the selectors had to recognise the error of their judgment in sticking by Stiaan van Zyl for so long at the top of the order.

It would take them two more Tests to admit they were wrong, by which point the series against England was lost. Meanwhile Cook went on and made another hundred the following week for the Lions, and backed that up with another half-century a week later before Linda Zondi eventually phoned him.

As if to prove a point Cook duly stepped out at Centurion in the final Test against the English and made a hundred on debut. There was a vehement defence of the selectors’ backing of Van Zyl afterwards by coach Russell Domingo, but in the cold light of day, even he needed to recognise the importance of having a natural opening batsman at the top of the order for the Proteas.

Cook isn’t pretty to watch, he acknowledg­es that – although some of his drives off the back foot through the cover region at St George’s Park were aesthetica­lly pleasing – but he is mighty effective. Over 12 000 first class runs, most of those made in the toughest place in the world to open the batting. indicates a player who knows his game and because of that he plays to his strengths, something that may not be pleasing to the eye, but in the framework of what a team demands is extremely valuable.

Cook’s had an outstandin­g 2016, 575 runs at an average of 47.91 with three hundreds and two fifties and yet he still faced scrutiny from some viewers following a run of low scores in the first couple of Tests against Australia.

There is, as Cook discovered, far greater scrutiny over a player’s failures at internatio­nal level than there is domestical­ly and with many wondering who will stand down once AB de Villiers returns Cook suddenly became an easy target. That, despite the fact that De Villiers is no longer an opener and that by axing Cook to accommodat­e him, it would cause instabilit­y.

Cook has already underlined his importance to the Proteas and as the Port Elizabeth Test showed he and Dean Elgar are now beginning to combine well at the top of the order.

“The only way to forge a partnershi­p is to spend some time out there,” Cook said after their second innings opening stand of 116, which backed up their 104-run partnershi­p in the first.

Elgar, like Cook, is a grafter, but whatever time the openers spend at the crease, knocking the shine off the new ball, and putting some weariness into the minds and bodies of the opposition bowlers, will be taken advantage of by the middle-order.

So while that lean patch in Australia, which included a battling 23 in tricky conditions in Hobart, did see the pressure increased on Cook, he redoubled his efforts in Adelaide, concentrat­ed even harder and emerged with a fine 104 under lights.

“I’ve had lots of highs and lots of lows in the year,” said Cook. “You strive for consistenc­y in cricket, and hopefully I can now replicate the consistenc­y I had in domestic cricket in the Test arena.”

At age 34 many are wondering how much longer he can succeed at internatio­nal level, but there are a number of players touching 40, who’ve been successful lately – including Pakistani pair Misbah ul-Haq and Younis Khan and Sri Lanka’s Rangana Herath. Jacques Kallis was still scoring hundreds at 38.

Cook has always been fit and if anything the elevation into the Test team will have boosted his enthusiasm to keep going.

Form permitting, there is at least another three years of play in him and as he’s shown in just one year, in which he moved from anguish to ecstasy, playing Test cricket is exactly where he belongs.

 ??  ?? DISHING UP THE RUNS: After making a ton of runs at domestic level, Stephen Cook is now proving himself just as effective in the Test arena.
DISHING UP THE RUNS: After making a ton of runs at domestic level, Stephen Cook is now proving himself just as effective in the Test arena.
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