Cape Argus

Rassie and Elgar get valuable time in the middle

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

IT will be another nine months before Rassie van der Dussen’s left forefinger functions properly again. But for now, he can bat, and as far as the Proteas are concerned, that is all that matters.

Van Der Dussen had his first serious innings in almost three months yesterday, spending around two hours at the crease in Potchefstr­oom to score 45 for the DP World (Gauteng) Lions in their 4-Day Series clash with the North West Dragons.

Van der Dussen injured the finger while fielding during the second Test against England in Manchester. The knuckle was shattered when struck by the ball and he still can’t straighten it, but it’s good enough to bat.

“I was expecting a lot more pain and discomfort, but it actually went okay,” he said of the training sessions against the Lions attack.

He showed no signs of discomfort at the JB Marks Oval, and was probably tested more by his teammates at training than anything he faced from the Dragons on a placid pitch.

His first runs came via a boundary off a short wide ball, while there were a few pull shots when the home team’s bowlers dropped their lengths.

Van der Dussen couldn’t have hoped for an easier outing on his return and was probably feeling a bit too comfortabl­e when he loosely drove at a half volley from Renaldo Meyer, which he edged through to the wicketkeep­er shortly after lunch.

For Van der Dussen, the next few weeks provide crucial game-time to get into the right mental state for the three-Test series against Australia.

“You have to prepare almost for the worst in terms of pressure, skill, abuse and all those lovely things Australia brings,” he explained.

“The next two or three weeks, the aim is to really get out of my comfort zone and make sure the training is harder than (playing) is out there.”

Van der Dussen knows he and the batting unit have underperfo­rmed in the last year, but cites mitigating circumstan­ces.

“If you look at numbers, it’s probably been inconsiste­nt and not where we want it to be. We haven’t scored enough hundreds and our averages aren’t what some of the other country’s players’ are.

“But if you look at the last two years, the conditions we have played in have been really tough, and I think we must see it in context.”

Listing the series that the Proteas have played in the last 15 months, Van der Dussen said all the surfaces used were tricky and the opposition bowlers were of such high quality that scoring runs was never easy.

“While not looking for excuses, the conditions in the last two years (were tough) and if you assess a situation, you must look at it in context. I think actually we’ve done alright. Our position on the (World Test Championsh­ip) log says we’ve done okay.”

SA are in second place behind Australia and a series win next month will go a long way towards securing them a spot in the final next year.

Besides Van der Dussen’s return, Dean Elgar’s century for the Titans at SuperSport Park yesterday would also have eased some of interim coach Malibongwe Maketa’s concerns.

The Proteas Test captain also had a difficult tour to England, and needed time at the crease to regain some form and confidence. He had to survive initially against aggressive bowling from the Knights’ Gerald Coetzee – who will be a teammate in Australia – and Migael Pretorius.

On a pitch with good pace and bounce like he’ll find Down Under, he played a pleasing innings of 137 – the 45th century of his first class career.

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