The Star Late Edition

Let’s use minor tourneys for our good, Stu

SPIETH PULLS THROUGH IN DRAMATIC OPEN WIN Proteas chasing tons of fun at their favourite Oval

- MATSHELANE MAMABOLO

IT MAY be that England have a ton of questions to answer as far as their line-up and style of play is concerned ahead of the third Test, but South Africa go into that match knowing they have room for improvemen­t.

They also need to be wary of any drop in intensity following the lengthy break between Tests. Some players returned yesterday from South Africa where they enjoyed the time off, while others have been dotted around England, staying with friends or spending time on the golf course.

As shrewd a captain as Faf du Plessis is, he’ll be well aware of any sluggishne­ss as the players begin their preparatio­n today. Du Plessis has his family in tow this week. Coach Russell Domingo arrives this morning following the tragic death of his mother, meaning the whole squad will be together for this first time in this series.

They will all be expecting a backlash from Joe Root’s team who’ve taken a hammering in the local media since that 340-run loss at Trent Bridge. England will be poring over the make up of their starting team with Tom Westley of Essex set to make his debut in place of the injured Gary Ballance. Keaton Jennings seems set to retain his spot as Alastair Cook’s opening partner, while a variety of options are available regarding the rest of the starting team – they could retain Liam Dawson and thus utilise the same bowling attack, or they could drop him and go with the extra batsman in Dawid Malan.

South Africa’s batsmen meanwhile face some self-reflection this week too. They may have received praise for their patient and precise approach in the second Test, but they’ll all be aware that they need to turn starts into something substantia­l. It was Du Plessis who mentioned – after Lord’s – that fifties are nice, but it’s hundreds that win Tests matches.

It’s been five Tests since a South African batsman last scored a Test hundred. That was Dean Elgar, against New Zealand in March. There have been 19 half-centuries since with Quinton de Kock and Du Plessis, tops in that regard with four each.

After the series win against Sri Lanka in January both Du Plessis and Domingo lamented the lack of consistenc­y from the South African batsmen – in terms of turning starts into hundreds. Whatever messages they’ve been sending have clearly not hit home with the batsmen, however. Last summer in nine Tests, South Africa’s batsmen scored 10 Tests

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MELBOURNE: The Australian cricketers’ union has told players a pay deal may not be struck with the national board before the home “summer of cricket”, which includes the lucrative and highly anticipate­d Ashes series.

The long-running pay dispute has already scuppered an Australia A tour to South Africa and left upcoming tours of Bangladesh and India in doubt.

The Australian Cricketers’ Associatio­n said it had presented a new “Terms Sheet” to Cricket Australia but warned players that a new collective bargaining agreement, known as the Memorandum of Understand­ing (MoU), would take time to complete.

Australia’s home summer kicks off with the first match of the five-Test Ashes series against England in Brisbane from November 23.

Around 230 players have been effectivel­y unemployed since the previous five-year MOU hundreds, the highest being JP Duminy’s 155 against Sri Lanka at the Wanderers. Elgar was South Africa’s most consistent batsman scoring a century in each series last season.

Neverthele­ss to be a top Test team, the South African batsmen must demand more of themselves. In the detailed analysis they’ll do over the coming days, they’ll see that The Oval – which will host its 100th Test – has been very good for batsmen in the last expired at the end of last month.

Local media reported on Friday that a week of talks between the union and CA had collapsed but the board said they expected them to resume early this week.

“Cricket Australia will not comment on details of the negotiatio­n but are surprised and perplexed at the current situation given progress is being made on a range of issues,” the board said.

The major sticking point in the dispute is Cricket Australia’s insistence that a 20-year-old model, under which players get a fixed percentage of revenue, should be jettisoned.

Cricket Australia believes the revenue-share model is unfit for modern times and is starving grass-roots cricket of funding, while players say it has underpinne­d the game’s growth and prosperity over the past 20 years.

The ACA said it had made a number of concession­s to CA in its ‘Terms Sheet’. few years. Hashim Amla knows just how good, for it was where he scored the South African Test record 311 five years ago. In that same match Jacques Kallis and Graeme Smith got big hundreds and in the years since, a further seven centuries have been scored there in four Tests, including Younis Khan’s 218 in last year’s victory for Pakistan.

The Proteas batsmen set a sufficient­ly solid foundation at Trent Bridge – in difficult con- ditions – to ensure victory there. Although no-one managed to score more than Amla’s 87, it was notable how the South Africans, Amla in particular, seemed to be getting back into the Test match batting rhythm.

Hopefully for him and the others, the lengthy break between the second and third Tests, has not impeded that rhythm for as recent history shows, The Oval is a ground where batsmen can enjoy themselves. STUART BAXTER would love to see the country’s attitude towards ‘lowly’ tournament­s such as the Cosafa Cup and the CHAN change for the better.

And the Bafana Bafana coach is hopeful that the team’s progressio­n to the next round of the latter event, courtesy of their 3-0 aggregate win over Botswana at the weekend, will help in this regard.

“I think the people have had an apathetic view of the Cosafa and the CHAN. But where does it fit? “the coach asked after Bafana’s 1-0 second leg win over the Zebras at Moruleng Stadium. “We have never really placed it anywhere in our program, But we are trying to create a place for it. What we have tried to do now is to say let’s put it somewhere where it serves South African football.” That service, as Baxter,

showed through the two-legged clash with South Africa’s neighbours, is to provide a platform for young players to gain the necessary experience that will stand them in good stead as they grow into fully-fledged internatio­nals participat­ing in qualifiers and finals of major tournament­s.

“So we are not just picking a random squad every time we play. We said let’s rather use it so that when these boys get up they will have ore experience­d heads. And I think it is working well for the future,” the coach explained.

He was particular­ly pleased at how the younger and new players he gave a run in the two legs fared.

“If you look at the younger ones that I knew little about, Sandile Mthethwa has been impressive; Sipho Mbule came in and gave a very mature performanc­e, but I knew him from SuperSport United. Tyan Mooh has done well and could have also scored more goals. We also have Jamie Webber.”

The key though will be for Safa to keep these young players in the system instead of letting them fall by the wayside as in previous years.

And with the squad progressin­g in this competitio­n, Baxter has the chance to have a closer look at the players for two more matches. Next up for Bafana will be Zambia, who hammered Swaziland 7-0 overall. The South Africans will host the first leg on the weekend of August 11, 12, 13 with the return leg scheduled for the next weekend in Zambia.

“The younger ones have thrown their hats in the ring, but are they ready now? No, they are not. But we have Zambia now and the young ones will get a couple of internatio­nal games. A few of them threw their hats in the ring, for example, (Siphelele) Ntshangase is a very talented player that I didn’t know too much about, who I thought: can he move up a level? Can he defend? Can he understand coaching, and he answered me and said ‘yes I can’. He did a good job. A player like him put his hands up a little bit and said: ‘hey just remember me for the future, keep an eye out for me’, which I will.”

Of course not all was perfect and Baxter knows he still has a lot of work on his hands before these youngsters are the finished product. But at least there is some light and it is thanks to the competitio­ns the country previously viewed with some disregard.

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