Daily News

Elgar wants Proteas to man up against Aussies

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

AUSTRALIA’S series loss to the Proteas in 2018, and all the drama associated with it, may have been a chastening experience for the ‘Baggy Green’ brigade, but Dean Elgar doesn’t expect it to make the current Australian team a ‘soft touch’ in their three-match Test series.

The ‘Sandpaper affair’, which caused ructions across the sport, led Australian cricket to undertake serious introspect­ion. From prematch handshakes to ‘elite honesty’, to Pat Cummins’s toothy grin, Australia has sought to sell itself as a less boorish team.

However Elgar isn’t buying a new friendly approach from the Australian­s.

“Purely because we are playing there, I think it will still be pretty feisty,” Elgar said.

The first Test starts on December 17 at the Gabba, with the series then heading to Melbourne for the iconic Boxing Day Test and then Sydney for the New Year’s match at the storied SCG. “It’s a childhood dream of mine to experience playing in a Boxing Day and New Year’s Test in Australia. It doesn’t get bigger than that,” said Elgar.

It will be South Africa’s first Tests at those two venues in over a decade. In that time, matches between Australia and South Africa have been among the most fiery encounters in the Test arena. Often times players have oversteppe­d the mark, culminatin­g in shouting matches on stairwells and sandpaper being rubbed on a ball.

However Elgar believes enough time has passed that Australia won’t be as diffident as the team that played the Wanderers Test match at the end of the 2018 series. “Australia comes with different external pressures, off the field, regarding things you have to be mindful of. The nature of the individual­s they have in their team is that they are pretty brash and bold in-your-face kind of characters,” the Proteas Test captain said.

“We enjoy that kind of confrontat­ion, we manage it well and have calm heads around. If they want to be ‘in your face’, that is fine. I definitely don’t shy away from that, and I will be encouragin­g our players not to shy away from it, because that is when South Africans bring out their best character.”

Having won each of the last three Test series between the teams Down Under, the Proteas will be aware that Australia will be desperate to set the record straight. Coupled with the recent drama created by former coach Justin Langer’s remarks about players anonymousl­y leaking informatio­n to the media about his style, the Australian team will be looking to deflect attention. So expect South Africa to somehow have to take responsibi­lity for the sandpaper affair, Faf du Plessis’s sucking on a mint to be rekindled and even South Africa’s recent embarrassi­ng exit at the T20 World Cup to be used in an attempt to pick away at mental scarring.

For his part, Elgar wants his players to focus on the basics. “The style of cricket we have played in the last few years is tailor-made for playing over there.”

South Africa have the fast bowling to thrive Down Under, but it is the batting that remains a concern. “Playing in Oz, you have to master your basics, purely because the wickets are pretty good. We haven’t been good enough with the bat, we can’t hide away from that.”

In 12 Tests dating back to the series in the Caribbean last year, South Africa’s batters have scored only three hundreds, with one of those made by Quinton de Kock, who has retired from the Test format.

“The batters have to take responsibi­lity,” said Elgar. “At the end of the day it is their career which is in their hands. There are a lot of guys that want to play for South Africa, who are chomping at the bit. It’s up to the batters who’ve been given that responsibi­lity to take that responsibi­lity, and the accountabi­lity with regard to their jobs is something they really need to hammer now.”

PROTEAS SQUAD FOR AUSTRALIA TOUR Dean Elgar (capt), Temba Bavuma, Gerald Coetzee, Theunis de Bruyn, Sarel Erwee, Simon Harmer, Marco Jansen, Heinrich Klaasen, Keshav Maharaj, Lungi Ngidi, Anrich Nortje, Kagiso Rabada, Lizaad Williams, Rassie van der Dussen, Kyle Verreynne, Khaya Zondo

 ?? NICK POTTS Backpagepi­x ?? PROTEAS captain Dean Elgar. |
NICK POTTS Backpagepi­x PROTEAS captain Dean Elgar. |

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from South Africa