Business Day

SA focus moves from pitch to wickets

• Team is geared up for ODI but centre of attention is the 2019 World Cup

- Telford Vice

Here we go again. Five days after their intense Test series ended at the Wanderers‚ SA and India will clash again at Kingsmead in Durban on Thursday.

Here we go again. Five days after their intense Test series ended at the Wanderers‚ SA and India will clash again at Kingsmead in Durban on Thursday.

This time the ball will be white‚ the kit coloured and the pitch flat.

“One-day cricket should be about good wickets.

“Always. Hopefully, the pitch talk is done now.”

That was Faf du Plessis at his media conference on Wednesday‚ curtly but politely trying to put to bed the justifiabl­e fuss over a Wanderers Test pitch that the Internatio­nal Cricket Council labelled “poor” on Tuesday.

Not that the heat will be off the Indians‚ who have won only five of the 26 completed ODIs they have played against SA in this country.

“I think it tells a story‚” Du Plessis said. “It means there is something there that’s difficult for a touring team to get accustomed to.

“But this Indian team has the names on paper to change that.

“Conditions were bowling friendly [in the Test series] but I was surprised at how consistent the Indian seamers were.

“From a batting point of view there are a few inroads we could make,” he said.

This ODI series is unusual in that it comprises six games‚ and that SA’s thinking is different.

“Our mindset has changed‚” Du Plessis said. “We’ve always tried to focus on the now.

“Then when you get to a big tournament that becomes your focus as well. This is the first time we’ve taken a small step away from the now and a bigger step into the future.

“This is the first time that every conversati­on we have is about seeing how we can have a look at more players.

“Obviously the now is important — we play series to win series.

“But there’s a big focus on how we can get a lot of the guys opportunit­y,” Du Plessis said.

A case in point is that AB de Villiers‚ who will miss the first three games against India with a finger injury‚ will be replaced on Thursday by Test opener Aiden Markram. That‚ Du Plessis said‚ would give Markram the “opportunit­y to bat in different places in our order; that’s a great way to evolve your own game”.

The idea is big but the logic is simple.

“A year-and-a-half‚ two years from now you want to make sure there’s a group of players who have had time in the middle and time in pressure situations‚” Du Plessis said.

“So you don’t just hope that your [first-choice] XI is fit all the time.

“You do everything you can to try and win every game but I think we’re a bit more focused on two years’ time.”

What Du Plessis did not have to say is that all of SA’s energies will be trained on winning the 2019 World Cup in the 29 ODIs they will play before the tournament.

India’s current schedule also shows 29 ODIs. Having won the World Cup in 1983 and 2011‚ their desperatio­n to add a third title might not be as intense as SA’s bid to break their duck.

Then again‚ Du Plessis’ team won’t feel the heartbeats of more than a billion people willing them to triumph in England in 2019.

That can be as good as it can be bad‚ but the South Africans already have enough to think about — in the now as well as in the future.

THIS IS THE FIRST TIME WE’VE TAKEN A SMALL STEP AWAY FROM THE NOW AND A BIGGER STEP INTO THE FUTURE

Faf du Plessis SA captain

 ?? /Anesh Debiky/Gallo Images ?? No messing about: Proteas captain Faf du Plessis anticipate­s excellent batting wickets for the one-day series against India.
/Anesh Debiky/Gallo Images No messing about: Proteas captain Faf du Plessis anticipate­s excellent batting wickets for the one-day series against India.

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