The Sunday Mail (Zimbabwe)

Jansen: Proteas’ magnificen­t number seven

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Marco Jansen

FOR someone who has taken 16 wickets — joint at second-highest — at the World Cup so far, Marco Jansen, instead, spends a lot of time talking about the runs he has scored.

“I just love batting. I enjoy batting a lot more than bowling,” Jansen said to select media.

“Whenever I bat, it gives me more joy. Bowling also gives me joy, but it’s a bit more hard work.

“You can’t always get away with everything and it’s also not nice seeing the ball fly 80 or 90 metres if you don’t put it where you want,” he said. That is not the first time Jansen has expressed a preference for what he does at number seven in the line-up — where he has a licence to play with freedom — over his role with the new ball, which he described as a “real job”.

Batting allows him to show what he can do, with almost no strings attached, but with ball in hand. “I am expected to take wickets.” And so far, he has delivered.

In seven matches at the tournament to date, Jansen has taken more wickets than any other bowler in the powerplay — 12 at 13,08 — and has conceded at less than five runs to the over.

The next most successful new-ball bowler is Dilshan Madushanka, with seven wickets at 19,43 in the powerplay.

And Jansen and Madushanka are a distance away from anyone else: Josh Hazlewood, Jasprit Bumrah, Mohammed Shami and Mohammed Siraj had five each at the end of Thursday’s India vs Sri Lanka game.

Jansen’s success has come through a combinatio­n of skill and strategy, with South Africa using him to open the bowling, alongside Lungi Ngidi, asking him to hit hard lengths and making use of clever field placings to take advantage of any early nip.

“He is hitting great lengths, he is swinging the ball both ways, and he has got a great bumper,” Kagiso Rabada said after South Africa’s last win, over New Zealand.

“Normally, if you have that in your artillery and you execute it more often than you don’t, you will be successful.

“He is just a natural bowler. He has got a natural action, he can swing it, he can nip it, he is gifted with a talent of just bowling and making it look natural,” he said.

Even though Jansen himself has had to do a lot of work to try and make it look that way, especially in the absence of significan­t swing, as has been the case in many parts of India.

According to ESPNcricin­fo’s ball-by-ball data, 57 percent of the 359 balls (including wides and no-balls) Jansen has bowled at the World Cup so far have been either on a length or short of a good length, on or outside off stump.

He has used the short ball only 36 times and taken four wickets, which translates to 10 percent of his deliveries accounting for a quarter of his wickets, which also illustrate­s his selective and successful use of the bouncer.

Jansen had only played 14 ODIs over 20 months before being named in the World Cup squad, but also had 11 Tests to his name.

At 2,06 metres, Jansen is among the tallest players at the tournament and the knowledge that he can use that to aim for the ribcage, the throat, or even the helmet is likely always on batters’ minds.

That he does not overly rely on the short ball (something South African bowlers in the past may have been guilty of) is the result of close attention to detail in training under the guidance of bowling coach Eric Simons, who is on a short-term deal for this World Cup.

“Eric is very specific in terms of where we want to hit — in terms of the length, the stumps, the lines — which is a very good thing because before I was just warming up for the sake of warming up to get my body loose.

“Now, it’s about actually focusing on a target and subconscio­usly working on something. In my case, it’s hitting off stump or middle stump,” Jansen said.

While there are still times when South Africa’s line-up can look a little short — and those are the times when the top order wobbles — and the balance of their side can seem off, Jansen has shown signs that he is growing into his role at the top of the lower order.

His unbeaten 75 off 42 balls and 151-run seventh-wicket stand with Heinrich Klaasen against England strengthen­ed his claim on the genuine-all-rounder front, but he is careful to not say the spot is permanentl­y his.

“I don’t own anything but I try to earn it,” he said. — Cricinfo.

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