The Citizen (Gauteng)

Benkenstei­n finally finds his Proteas niche

- @KenBorland

New Proteas batting coach Dale Benkenstei­n’s last involvemen­t with the national cricket set-up was 15 years ago, in October 2002, when he played his 23rd and final ODI for South Africa against Bangladesh in Benoni, perhaps a suitably low-key finale to an internatio­nal playing career that promised much but was never brought to full bloom.

Those were the days when South African cricket was still recovering from the fall from grace and tragic death just four months previously of Hansie Cronje, the much-admired captain who was then exposed as a match-fixer.

Those were also the days when the World Cup curse was really starting to engulf the South African team – Benkenstei­n was watching from the change-room as a non-playing squad member when they threw away their 1999 semifinal against Australia in farcical circumstan­ces and was a spectator at Kingsmead in 2003 when the shambles over their understand­ing of the Duckworth/ Lewis calculatio­ns knocked them out of the tournament.

Benkenstei­n, having marked himself out as a natural leader with his captaincy of the SA Under-19 side, was given the reins of a star-studded Natal team at the age of just 22 and did such a great job that he quickly became the heir apparent to Cronje in the national team.

But those were also the days when there appeared to be a tendency for the existing captain to suppress the developmen­t of his closest rival. Under Cronje’s watch, Benkenstei­n was never really given a fair chance to establish himself. He would play one or two games and then be left out, or would be shifted up and down the batting order, in a manner that seemed to suggest life was being made as tough as possible for him.

Neil McKenzie, similarly,

Ken Borland

seemed to struggle to hold down a place while Shaun Pollock was skipper and it was Graeme Smith who finally ended the trend as he actively pushed for McKenzie’s return to the national team.

Benkenstei­n did have his shortcomin­gs as an internatio­nal batsman – but almost all batsmen at that level have weaknesses which they work hard on to avoid being exposed. But those very flaws help make the 43-year-old an excellent batting coach because he understand­s the dynamics of technique and the massive importance of the mental side of batting, having wrestled with those issues himself.

The best coaches are often not the former players with the best records, simply because they have empathy for the struggling cricketer, and Graham Ford, who played such a key role in the developmen­t of players such as Benkenstei­n, Pollock, Jonty Rhodes and Lance Klusener at Natal, is the prime example of that.

Benkenstei­n and the new Proteas head coach, Ottis Gibson, are former team-mates at Durham, the English county that was only elevated into top-level cricket in 1992, and it was the arrival of the Natal captain that ended years of disappoint­ment and elevated them into a force in county cricket. So the West Indian is well aware of his new batting coach’s inspiratio­nal qualities, and he and Benkenstei­n added 315 for the seventh wicket in 2006 to avoid relegation. Gibson played a major role with the ball in the trophies won thereafter.

Given that South Africa’s World Cup struggles are symptomati­c of muddled mental skills at key times, the arrival of one of the clearest thinkers on the game can only be a positive.

But one hopes that the skills of McKenzie, another ex-Protea who brings immense value to the change-room, will not be lost to South African cricket now that Benkenstei­n has taken his place in the national set-up.

The appointmen­t of Malibongwe Maketa as the assistant coach is also pleasing as the developmen­t of black African coaches is vital if the transforma­tion of South African cricket is to progress, but one obviously feels for Geoff Toyana, the Highveld Lions coach who seemed certain to be involved with the national team in some capacity.

The acquisitio­n of a few more domestic trophies will certainly keep Toyana’s name in the conversati­on to succeed Gibson in the future, however.

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