Cape Argus

Proteas seek better execution, consistenc­y

- STUART HESS stuart.hess@inl.co.za

CAN South Africa string together a performanc­e of high quality consistent­ly over a few hours and get themselves a win today? Oh, and can they then repeat that twice more this week?

It is infuriatin­g watching this Proteas limited overs side right now precisely because there seems to be a lot of potential, but with that, the threat of some self-induced disaster is always imminent.

It is the nature of teams like this current Proteas group; inexperien­ced, constantly changing, and trying to adopt and implement a style that might provide them success in a tournament.

Whereas last year’s T20 series against England highlighte­d a distinct gap between the Proteas and one of the best limited overs teams in the world, the matches against Pakistan – both in Lahore in February and on Saturday at the Wanderers – showed a Proteas team that could compete, but only fleetingly.

It’s worth rememberin­g that this is a side shorn of its best players; the Indian Premier League has a majority of them, while injury has sidelined new captain Temba Bavuma and their most consistent batsman Rassie van der Dussen.

Saturday’s starting XI featured three debutants, while another squad member, Migael Pretorius, hasn’t played internatio­nal cricket, Heinrich Klaasen is a stand-in captain, and throughout the squad just two players – Tabraiz Shamsi (29) and Andile Phehlukway­o (31) – have played more the 20 T20 Internatio­nals.

“We are being forced to experiment (with selection),” said

Klaasen after Saturday’s four-wicket defeat.

Earlier, he’d deflected a question about the in-form Kyle Verreynne’s absence from the starting side for the first T20 Internatio­nal against Pakistan by saying he wasn’t a selector.

It did seem a strange choice not to include Verreynne on Saturday, but perhaps space can be found for him in the line-up for today’s second match (Wanderers, 2.30pm start).

What South Africa badly need is to start executing game plans on a more consistent basis.

There were elements of the positive brand everyone’s talked about so often, especially with the bat. South Africa had set up their innings beautifull­y, batting at 10 an over for the first 14 overs and making a total of 220 a distinct possibilit­y.

Klaasen bemoaned his and Pite van Biljon’s dismissals as reasons for South Africa failing to kick on in the last six overs.

“We were set, it was our job to go to the end,” he remarked.

Pakistan’s death bowling was excellent, allowing South Africa just 48 runs in the last six overs, with the hosts hitting just three boundaries in that period.

By contrast, South Africa were appalling when defending the same period later.

Pakistan, with Mohammad Rizwan to the fore, smashed 71 runs in the last six overs, with 11 boundaries, as the Proteas regularly and by large margins missed their yorkers.

“It’s the right game plan,” said Klaasen, “it’s about fine tuning and executing.”

And after that it’s about doing so consistent­ly, from over to over and match to match, starting today.

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