The Citizen (Gauteng)

Steyn embodies all that is great about sport

- @KenBorland Ken Borland

Social media was full of praise this week for the great Dale Steyn following the fast bowler’s retirement from all forms of the game.

His opponents from around the world were generous with their tributes, but perhaps the greatest accolade I can pay one of my favourite cricketers is to say he achieved what he set out to do and more.

When I asked Steyn this week how he would like to be remembered, his answer was typically honest and refreshing.

“It’s their decision how people want to remember me. But I wanted to play hard, be a fierce competitor, but also have fun. I wanted to not be slow to be the first person to buy a round of drinks at the end of the game, whether that be beers or soft drinks, because that’s important too. I wanted to meet other people, enjoy their company, and for there to be no animosity,” Steyn said.

The lad from Phalaborwa certainly ticked all those boxes.

He was one of the most aggressive and highly-skilled fast bowlers the world has seen, but off the field there was no-one more affable.

Dale Steyn was not just a great cricketer, he is a great human being, which is why he is so popular with cricketers, fans and media.

Long-time rival Jimmy Anderson simply described Steyn as “The Best”, while Australia’s Pat Cummins, who inherited Steyn’s mantle as the world’s best paceman, said “Set the standard for fast bowlers world round to follow for 20 years. No better competitor to watch in full flight”.

Proteas nemesis Mitchell

Johnson said Steyn was “overall Dale Steyn embodiethe best fast bowler who had it all through my time of playing; fire on the pitch, ripping bloke off it”.

From the raw youngster who arrived at the Titans from unfashiona­ble Limpopo with a skateboard and a shock of blonde hair – he was promptly nicknamed “Sunshine” – and the ability to swing the ball away at high pace, Steyn developed even more skills and also became a tactical genius.

Statistics can sometimes be misleading when it comes to the true impact of a player, but Steyn’s are not.

The best strike-rate of any bowler who has taken 300 Test wickets and an away average of 24, including on the subcontine­nt, were prime reasons South Africa became the No 1 Test side.

In fact, it is his performanc­es in India (long considered a graveyard for pace bowlers) that most support his claims to being one of the all-time greats: In six Tests there he took 26 wickets at an average of 21.38. His spell of 5/3 after tea on the third day of the first Test in Nagpur in 2010 is still spoken about with awe in India; it is arguably the greatest display of reverse-swing bowling ever as the home side crashed from 212/4 to 233 all.

I was fortunate enough to be there and, having just iced one of the strongest batting line-ups in the world, Steyn was typically jovial and relaxed, not wanting to focus on his own performanc­e at the end of the day.

The archetypal cool dude embodies all that is great about sport – the competitiv­eness, the high levels of skill and the determinat­ion; but also the acknowledg­ement that they are playing a game for the joy of it.

Many players find it difficult to have a good relationsh­ip with the media and they can be forgiven for that but Dale had a fantastic rapport with the media, mostly because he treated them as fellow human beings who also had a job to do, much like the opposition.

Dale Steyn lit up the cricket field, and we can now only wish him many years of fun on his new playground­s – the sea, bush, jungles and mountains that are waiting for him.

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