Cape Times

Markram ‘needed to get kicked down’

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

AIDEN Markram has acknowledg­ed that being left out of the national team has been the “kick up the ar**,” he needed after life as a profession­al cricketer had become too easy.

Markram started playing again two weeks ago, having missed two months of the season after fracturing a finger during the first Test against England at the end of December. But he has not been picked for the Proteas, and he says he is glad he hasn’t.

“A lot of things have been put into perspectiv­e. I was on cloud nine and the world seemed great. I needed to get kicked down,” Markram said at the Wanderers on Sunday, after scoring his second hundred in a week for the Titans in the One-Day Cup.

“I was fortunate with the start of my internatio­nal career, and things have really gone south since, but I quite enjoy the fact that it is all on my shoulders now, it depends how hard I work.

“I was a little spoiled, maybe even a bit of brat in the initial stages of my career, and I thought everything would be fine. I needed this kick up the ar** and now it’s about putting the head down and working hard.”

The heady days of 2018, especially the Test series against Australia where he scored two hundreds against an attack featuring Mitchell Starc, Pat Cummins, Josh Hazlewood and Nathan Lyon, seemed a long way off when 18 months later he was smashing his fist into a wall and breaking his hand in the process after making “a pair,” in the second Test against India in Pune last October.

Markram’s overall Test record remains a good one – he has scored 1 424 runs in 20 matches at an average of 38.48. Last year he averaged just 28.61 in 13 Test innings and his problems against spin – first highlighte­d in Sri Lanka in 2018 – continued in India last year although by the time of the Pune Test, he was struggling against seam bowling too.

Markram was on the cusp of getting dropped during the England series earlier this summer, but injury saved the selectors from making that decision.

The time off has given Markram the opportunit­y to reflect on his career and he is aware of the changes that must be made. “I needed to spend hours in the gym, to put in the sacrifices. The focus for me now is to really forget about performanc­e and to get stuck in,” he said.

He like many others had a poor World Cup as well – scoring only 140 runs in six innings – and at the moment it appears that other players have moved ahead of him in the pecking order in the “white ball”, formats. He met with Cricket SA’s interim director of cricket, Graeme Smith last week and was told he remained part of the Proteas’ plans.

 ??  ?? Aiden Markram
Aiden Markram

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