Daily News

Herath the danger man

- ZAAHIER ADAMS

HAVING been cast initially in the shadow of all-time great Muttiah Muralithar­an, it took a while for Rangana Herath to convince the Sri Lankan public, let alone the world, that he was spinner worth taking seriously.

However, once “Murali” hung up his internatio­nal spin fingers, Herath has undoubtedl­y taken over the lead role with aplomb.

Sixty wickets in 2012 at an average of 23.61 confirmed his status, but that did nothing to change his personalit­y. He still works in a bank even though he’s played 75 Test matches since debuting in 1999, and hasn’t altered anything in relation to his action, appearance or demeanour.

Herath remains a portly figure that ambles up to the crease without much fuss and simply brings his arm over through the simplest of mechanics. On an island fascinated with slow bowlers who deliver doosras, teesras, chauthas or paanchwas often with actions that earn the ire of the ICC’s regulation committee, Herath offers up no such mystique.

But within this simplicity lays Herath’s effectiven­ess. As the batsman searches for the expected turn that should accompany a looping delivery, he is surprised by its sudden straighten­ing which routinely thuds into the pads or rattles the timber.

It is formula that has earned Herath 351 Test wickets and ensured he will loom as the major threat to South Africa’s chances of maintainin­g their recent upward curve in Test cricket once the series gets under way on Boxing Day at St George’s Park in Port Elizabeth.

The Proteas are well aware, though, of Herath’s prowess. It was on the tourists’ last visit here that the left-arm spinner sent shockwaves down the spines of the South Africans with a nine-wicket haul at Kingsmead. It was a monumental performanc­e because it propelled the islanders to the maiden Test win on South African soil.

The greater significan­ce was that it also represente­d a changing of the guard with the victory also Sri Lanka’s first since Muralithar­an had retired 16 months earlier.

In this modern-age of internatio­nal cricket most 38-yearold’s are already comfortabl­y positioned in the commentary box or developing their coaching careers and not still slugging it out in the middle trying to win games of cricket for their country.

Herath though is almost a throwback to a bygone era and his old-fashioned style will certainly put the Proteas batting unit through the most rigorous of workouts over the summer.

A batsman who he will encounter most often is the enigmatic Quinton de Kock. And how quickly he can knock over South Africa’s wicket-keeper/batsman will undoubtedl­y have a huge bearing on the series.

The contrasts between the two could not be greater. For all Herath’s almost boring nature, De Kock is the antithesis through his exciting and innovative style at the crease.

The attitude may be simple in “see ball, hit ball” but the execution is thrillingl­y brilliant. De Kock lights up the game when he walks to the crease with the mindset of never wanting to be intimidate­d regardless of the match situation.

If he feels that the time is right to waltz down the wicket and bash a spinner over his head, Faf du Plessis (captain), Kyle Abbott, Hashim Amla, Temba Bavuma, Stephen Cook, Theunis de Bruyn, Quinton de Kock, JP Duminy, Dean Elgar, Keshav Maharaj, Wayne Parnell, Vernon Philander, Kagiso Rabada the 24-year-old will think nothing of doing just that. This bravery proved hugely successful on the recent tour of Australia where De Kock was undoubtedl­y the South Africa’s star performer with willow in hand. He completely dominated Nathan Lyon with the off-spinner at pains in where to actually bowl to De Kock who treated him with disdain from the moment he came on to bowl.

It is likely that De Kock will adopt a similar attitude against Angelo Mathews (captain), Vikum Sanjaya, Dushmantha Chameera, Dinesh Chandimal, Dhananjaya de Silva, Nuwan Pradeep, Rangana Herath, Dimuth Karunaratn­e, Lahiru Kumara, Suranga Lakmal, Kusal Mendis, Dilruwan Perera, Kusal Perera, Kaushal Silva, Upul Tharanga Herath because he will not want the Sri Lankan veteran to settle into any form of rhythm.

Herath, though, will not succumb like Lyon and be intimidate­d by De Kock’s aggression. Instead he will view De Kock’s advances as a wicket-taking opportunit­y and relish the challenge of having a young upstart trying to hit him out of the attack.

It will certainly make for intriguing cricket watching a master of his trade go head-to-head against the fearlessne­ss of youth.

 ?? PICTURE: EPA ?? SPIN DOCTOR: Sri Lanka’s Rangana Herath has taken 351 Test wickets since his debut, 17 years ago, against Australia in 1999.
PICTURE: EPA SPIN DOCTOR: Sri Lanka’s Rangana Herath has taken 351 Test wickets since his debut, 17 years ago, against Australia in 1999.

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