Business Day

Elgar hopes time out has helped Bavuma

• Skipper says that it is his job to get the best out of the batter during the series in Australia

- Mahlatse Mphahlele

Proteas Test captain Dean Elgar is hoping middle-order batter Temba Bavuma has benefited from a few weeks’ break as the team leaves for a three-match Test series against Australia.

The Proteas leave for Australia on Thursday for the ICC World Test Championsh­ip tour Down Under, which starts in Brisbane on December 17 before moving to Melbourne from Boxing Day and Sydney from January 4. Bavuma has not played competitiv­e cricket since the T20 ICC World Cup in Australia, where SA failed to qualify for the semifinals after a defeat to minnows the Netherland­s.

Speaking as the team assembled in Johannesbu­rg, Elgar said he had held private conversati­ons with Bavuma.

“For now [the discussion­s] are personal, between me and him. I respect what he’s been through, but I can’t speak for what he has been through because I wouldn’t know how to deal with it personally.

“For now, I am respecting the space he is in. I think the time off maybe has done him well. The conversati­ons will still start with him — he just wanted a break from the game a bit and you have to respect that.

“He has a lot of pressure on him, but at the end of the day, we have work to do and he has to be in the right space for the team. That is the message I am going to put to him and I am sure he will respond well.

“He hasn’t played a lot of cricket of late and it is up to me to get him in the right space and give him the best opportunit­y to go out there and play a good brand of cricket for us.” Elgar expects a tough battle from their hosts in their own conditions.

“We’re playing in their home conditions and it is going to be feisty.

“The nature of the individual­s they have in their squad is brash, bold and in your face ... but that can work in our favour.

“I think we enjoy confrontat­ion as a group, we manage it pretty well and have calm heads around, so if they want to be in our face, it is fine.

“I definitely won’t shy away from it and will encourage the players not to either,” said Elgar. “What happened in the past is in the past.

“I am sure this series is going to be tough because playing against Australia Down Under is always tough and they are not going to make it easy.

“The style of cricket we have played over the past few years is tailor-made for playing over there. We still have our great fast bowlers.

“I always say I don’t want to face them [SA’s pace attack] in a match — it is bad enough facing them in the nets.”

 ?? ?? Dean Elgar
Dean Elgar

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