Cape Times

RABADA REACHES A MILESTONE

- MARK KEOHANE Keohane is an award-winning sports journalist and a regular contributo­r to Independen­t Media Sport

KAGISO Rabada has a love affair with Pakistan – and indeed, batsmen on the subcontine­nt. Rabada spearheade­d South Africa’s under19 cricketers to a historic first ODI World Cup win in 2014.

Now, seven years later in the first Proteas Test played in Karachi, Pakistan in 14 years, Rabada created more history in reaching 200 Test wickets and becoming the first bowler in Test history to dismiss a batsman from the subcontine­nt for his 1st, 50th, 100th, 150th and 200th Test wickets respective­ly.

Rabada was destined for greatness from the moment he took Indian superstar Virat Kohli’s wicket to start his Test career count. Kohli is regarded as the most complete batsman of the past decade.

Kausthub Gudipati is to thank for awareness around Rabada’s success against batsmen from the subcontine­nt. Gudipati, who describes himself as a social media presence who finds obscure and interestin­g cricket stats, produced the one showing Rabada’s subcontine­ntdriven milestones.

Kohli was the first, Sri Lanka’s Dimuth Karunaratn­e was the 50th, Bangladesh’s Mahmudulla­h the 10th, Sri Lanka’s Kusal Perea the 150th and Pakistan’s Hasan Ali the 200th.

Rabada took 8154 balls, which equates to overs bowled, to reach the milestone and only Pakistan’s Waqar Younis (7730) and iconic South African fast bowler Dale Steyn (7848) have got to 200 Test wickets quicker. Another South African fast-bowling legend, Allan Donald played fewer Tests than Rabada to get to 200 but he bowled more deliveries.

Rabada’s statistics have ensured his place among the sport’s elite bowlers. In just 44 Tests, he has taken nine five-wicket hauls and four 10-wicket hauls. Only Younis (19) and Steyn (13), had taken more fivewicket hauls at that stage of their respective Test careers.

The significan­ce of Rabada’s Test career is that he was born after South Africa’s first democratic elections.

Rabada is a brilliant fast bowler who has turned his potential into consistent performanc­e.

He is the leader of a fast-bowling pack that, pre-1994, would never have been able to play Test cricket.

We must never lose significan­ce of this because it is a a reminder of how many cricketers in the country were denied national and global opportunit­y and recognitio­n.

Rabada is a product of equal opportunit­y. He was schooled at the plush St Stithians in Gauteng and, according to his school coaches, his sporting pedigree was obvious.

I have always argued that transforma­tion in South African sport is about opportunit­y and not restricted to as simple a notion as a player being black and being given an opportunit­y at the expense of a white player.

Transforma­tion is about ensuring the black player gets as good a crack at making it as his white counterpar­t has been given for more than 100 years.

Rabada is the result of such an opportunit­y because he was born in South Africa in an era that allowed for this opportunit­y. Just imagine the world had never got to see his talent!

If you can imagine that, then you can grasp the sorrow and anger of those who remember so many black cricketers pre a democratic South Africa who never got to play on a world stage that Rabada often has made his own.

Rabada’s achievemen­ts since his internatio­nal debut in 2014 have been immense. Having made his Test debut in 2015, it took just three years for him to be ranked the world’s best ODI and Test bowler. He was just 22 years old.

In 2016 ,Rabada became the first player to win six awards at Cricket SA’s annual prize-giving, including the Test and ODI Cricketer of the Year and the Cricketer of the Year.

Wisden, cricket’s accepted authority and the game’s bible, named Rabada the best young player in the world in 2018. In Karachi, Pakistan, yesterday, January 28, he once again showed why.

Take a bow, KG.

Take a bow for a moment that transcends your sport in the context of your country of birth.

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