The Mercury

‘We didn’t do the basics’

- Lungani Zama London

RUSSELL Domingo wears a smile on most days, which makes his mood considerab­ly difficult to read.

So, as he gave his thoughts on his side’s eliminatio­n from the Champions Trophy, Domingo wore that smile through the pain.

Asked if he had considered his own position, applied for the job again, the answer came with a smile. “No, not yet.” Probed further, on whether he could commit himself to getting to the 2019 World Cup, the smile persisted. “I can’t say.” It was a bat straighter than any that had been offered by his batsmen out in the middle hours before, but it doesn’t advance the matter.

It’s a time for answers, and very few are forthcomin­g.

“I wasn’t there in the 2011 World Cup, but there might have been players who were there going, ‘Here we go again’ type of thing,” he said of the AB de Villiers moment.

“Look, he’s the best player in the world and the game was set up for him in that situation. There’s no doubt that does deflate the change room a little bit,” Domingo puffed.

“We’ve had two bad games here. We played averagely against Pakistan, really badly (against India), but it doesn’t make the side a bad side,” he reminded, the smile now gone.

“There are always going to be questions asked until the side wins an event, and rightly so. But there’s no magic wand,” he shrugged.

“Guys just need to make the best decision on the day and do what they’ve done prior to those particular games. We haven’t done that (on Sunday). We’ve played great cricket over the last year and this was probably our worst game. We didn’t do the basics right,” he moaned.

“A lot of things have been tried, a lot of things have been discussed.

“A lot of people have been involved and unfortunat­ely the results at the moment are still the same. You keep trying, that’s the bottom line. You can’t give up.”

No one expects the highest ranked team in the world (for now, at least) to give up, because this is their job. It’s their job to strive to be the best, yet one can’t help but sense that they keep driving up an autobahn in a tractor.

Domingo, one of that tractor’s drivers, has to take a share of the accountabi­lity. And yet, he wears the look (and smile) of a man who looks ready to walk away. A man tired of looking for answers to questions that will persist and persist.

“I don’t know,” he smiled, when asked what has to be done.

It’s a common South African cricket phrase of late.

“Players need to go away and think about it. It’s never good to make decisions when emotions are high, so once things have calmed down people need to sit down and think of a way forward once again,” he said of the future.

By people, he could have meant himself, others or anything else you can interpret from a man who gives little away.

“Now is not the time,” he ended. With that, he smiled and walked away.

At times like these, when no answers are being given to urgent questions, you have to wonder if he’s already walked away from it all.

 ?? PICTURE: REUTERS ?? Morne Morkel’s return to Proteas cricket was a shining light in an otherwise gloomy Champions Trophy tournament for the South Africans.
PICTURE: REUTERS Morne Morkel’s return to Proteas cricket was a shining light in an otherwise gloomy Champions Trophy tournament for the South Africans.

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