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Skipper Bavuma wants talks with Nkwe

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

TEMBA Bavuma wants to have face-to-face talks with the Proteas men’s team’s former assistant coach Enoch Nkwe to discuss the latter’s concerns about the side’s culture and environmen­t.

Nkwe shocked the national team and Cricket South Africa by resigning on the eve of the team’s tour to Sri Lanka, and in his resignatio­n letter cited “concerns about the functionin­g and culture of the team environmen­t”.

Those concerns are the subject of an investigat­ion by Cricket SA which acting chief executive Pholetsi Moseki said would include gaining the perspectiv­es of the players. Bavuma’s will undoubtedl­y be sought, but given his close personal relationsh­ip with Nkwe – built together at the Lions when Nkwe was coach and Bavuma captain – Bavuma wants to go deeper.

“When I get back to South Africa, I’d like to sit down with him, and maybe unpack it a bit,” the Proteas’ limited overs captain said from Colombo yesterday.

“I’d like to hear it from him. He’s the subject at the end of the day. If there is merit and validity to his comments, then as a member of the team, it’s something I will take on board and then have a discussion amongst the team.”

Bavuma confirmed that private conversati­ons about Nkwe’s resignatio­n had occurred among the players but no official forum had been created for them to hear from Nkwe.

“We’ve looked at ourselves as a team to see how best we can do things, that’s not to say the culture is an unhealthy one. Every team has areas in which they can improve, and you have to have those conversati­ons to identify those areas.”

Bavuma, Kagiso Rabada, Rassie van der Dussen, Wiaan Mulder and Dwaine Pretorius were all part of the Lions team that achieved so much success under Nkwe’s watch in the 2018/19 season.

Bavuma’s role as captain, the one tasked with implementi­ng Nkwe’s vision in that particular side, meant the pair were close.

“From a tactical and strategic point of view - for me personally he was a good soundboard, a person who I used to test my ideas against. It helped that I had working experience with him from the domestic level,” said Bavuma.

He explained that the team culture was evolving, and faced challenges from external forces and internal ones alike.

The revelation­s concerning head coach Mark Boucher at the Social Justice and Nation Building hearings and his subsequent submission to the hearings, that included an apology, will certainly have tested the culture. “For me to say whether it’s a bad culture - I don’t think it's at that point.

“It is something we are still cultivatin­g. Conversati­ons are happening amongst the team - hard, hard conversati­ons, and at management levels, conversati­ons that are challengin­g each other - all with a view to cultivatin­g an environmen­t that allows guys to play at their best but most importantl­y have that proper sense of belonging,” Bavuma explained.

The current generation of players have sought to move the team on from the days of ‘Protea Fire,’ an ethos developed by the likes of Faf du Plessis, Dale Steyn, JP Duminy and AB de Villiers.

The other test for that culture, said Bavuma, was the presence of two captains. He and Test captain Dean Elgar come from very different background­s and, as Bavuma acknowledg­ed, thus have different perspectiv­es.

“Dean and I do give ourselves the opportunit­y to share ideas as to how we’d like to take the team (forward). He obviously has his philosophy of doing things, I have my philosophy of doing things, so getting us to meet at some type of halfway (point) is that balancing act.”

Cricket SA’S Board of Directors have not outlined how the investigat­ion into Nkwe’s concerns will be handled, but they do want it to take place quickly.

The team is currently in Sri Lanka, preparing for a One-day series that starts in Colombo today and then plays a T20 series next week. Following that a handful of players will head to the UAE to play in the Indian Premier League.

The rest, including Bavuma, will return to South Africa, with some possibly playing in Cricket SA’S new Knockout T20 competitio­n, before heading out to the T20 World Cup. It doesn’t leave a lot of time to get a full account of everything related to the team environmen­t.

 ?? Backpagepi­x SAMUEL SHIVAMBU ?? TEMBA Bavuma wants to hold face-to-face talks with former Proteas assistant coach Enoch Nkwe to discuss the reasons for the latter’s resignatio­n. |
Backpagepi­x SAMUEL SHIVAMBU TEMBA Bavuma wants to hold face-to-face talks with former Proteas assistant coach Enoch Nkwe to discuss the reasons for the latter’s resignatio­n. |

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