Cape Times

When a game plan goes out the window

‘It requires a mental shift,’ says JP Duminy, who also succumbed to a dreadful shot on Saturday

- Stuart Hess

WELLINGTON: The Proteas are clinging by a thread to the belief that they are good enough to win the World Cup this year.

Their captain’s anger at their 29-run defeat (via Duckworth/Lewis) to Pakistan in Auckland on Saturday has manifested in hurt for the rest of the squad. They’re hurting because they let him, themselves and what they stand for down.

A new day dawned yesterday, a new city beckoned, but the same old problems remain for the Proteas. A side containing some of cricket’s most talented players and yet under pressure – most often when batting second – they fold like a cheap suit.

It happened again in Auckland on Saturday – just as it had in three of the previous four World Cup matches in which South Africa batted second. They bowled well, with plenty of aggression, and though the fifth bowler’s ration of nine overs – shared between AB de Villiers and JP Duminy went for 77 runs – dismissing Pakistan for 222 was still an excellent effort.

Morné Morkel continued his superb form in the World Cup by picking up two wickets and is South Africa’s leading wickettake­r with 11.

Dale Steyn seems like he is back to his best form claiming 3/30 at Eden Park, while Kyle Abbott, despite taking some tap, still picked up Ahmed Shehzad and Shoaib Maqsood to underline his value.

However, it’s the batting that frustrates. A team that had scored 819 runs in their two previous innings’, got rolled over for barely 200 on Saturday – admittedly against the best attack they’d faced hitherto in the tournament – highlighti­ng their capacity to set a total and their inability to chase one.

From 67/2 in the 10th over, they collapsed to 102/6 in the 20th. All that talk about the importance of seven batsmen in the starting team amounts to absolutely nothing when those batsmen play in as irresponsi­ble a manner as many of the South African players did at the weekend.

“It (requires) a mental shift,” JP Duminy, one of those who succumbed to a dreadful shot on Saturday, admitted.

“In a few words: We haven’t been good enough. In the last couple of meetings we’ve had regarding chasing, we’ve hit the nail on the head about where we’ve gone wrong.

“We’ve got good KPIs (Key Performanc­e Index) and strategies in place for when we bat first; we set up the game for the back end, keep wickets in hand, have guys scoring hundreds … and I don’t think we need to veer too much from those plans and we’ve identified that.

“But every time we bat second, we’ve not stuck to it. Guys aren’t scoring hundreds, there’ve been no partnershi­ps, wickets have not been kept in hand for us to explode at the back end. So the strategies haven’t worked, it’s been the signature for us batting first and scoring 350-plus, and if we are going to be successful in chasing then we need to stick to those strategies.”

Duminy admitted that “scoreboard pressure” and the World Cup stage played a part too. Neither of those things are going anywhere, it’s South Africa’s players who have to adapt.

“It doesn’t matter who you are, those pressures are there. A mental shift is needed. We have time to accept that, take it all in, we need to accept the fact we haven’t been good enough and that could be the way forward for us.

“Look, it’s going to come down to the quarter-final and what are we going to produce if we find ourselves batting second? AB showed major fight in the way in which he played and batted, and that’s what we’ve asked for of ourselves, it’s also what he and the coach have asked for – is to show that fight, grit and that never-back-down attitude. “We were below par in terms of that mindset. Bar AB, we didn’t show any fight.”

South Africa will do a lot of talking over the coming days. First they will take a break – most to have a round or two of golf today, some to cast a line somewhere hoping to catch a bite.

Following that, their grim reality will confront them once more. The United Arab Emirates won’t test them at the WestPac Stadium here on Thursday. But that quarterfin­al match, most likely against Sri Lanka in Sydney next Wednesday, will.

“When you find yourself in that pressure situation – and I have found this – when you are in that pressure situation, the last thing you think about is the team’s gameplan because (the situation) gets too big for you,” said Duminy.

“We are chosen to represent the country to play on this big stage, this is what internatio­nal cricket is about, playing and performing in those pressure moments and that’s what makes you good or great.

“Look at AB, under pressure he performs consistent­ly, and that is something we have to get right as a unit. There are one or two guys getting it right but we are not getting it right as a team.”

When you are in that pressure situation, the last thing you think about is the team’s gameplan because (the situation) gets too big for you.

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 ?? Picture: NIGEL MARPLE, REUTERS ?? FEELING THE PRESSURE AGAIN: JP Duminy deals with a bouncer during South Africa’s disappoint­ing batting display against Pakistan at the World Cup in Auckland on Saturday.
Picture: NIGEL MARPLE, REUTERS FEELING THE PRESSURE AGAIN: JP Duminy deals with a bouncer during South Africa’s disappoint­ing batting display against Pakistan at the World Cup in Auckland on Saturday.

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