The Citizen (Gauteng)

Being a SA cricket fan can be like a sugar rush

- @KenBorland Ken Borland

Being a South African cricket fan can certainly be like a sugar rush, as demonstrat­ed this summer with their sterling deeds against India and in New Zealand.

But it can also be like the massive shot of glucose that leads to hypertensi­on and diabetes, especially when one considers all the boardroom shenanigan­s and our previous World Cup woes.

Which is why the last week has been an especially sweet one – in the healthiest sense possible – thanks to the irrepressi­ble form shown by our Women’s Proteas at the World Cup in New Zealand.

Add to that the great news that Cricket South Africa have finally found their new, permanent CEO.

And he was there all along, hiding in plain view, if you like, in the form of Pholetsi Moseki, who has been serving as acting CEO anyway for the last 15 months.

Choosing the right person, which CSA did when Moseki replaced the disgraced Kugandrie Govender, has borne fruit for the organisati­on since December 2020. I am confident Moseki will continue to be the glue that is fixing many of the cracks and wounds the organisati­on suffered in recent years.

As the saying goes: “To get the juice out of an orange you need to apply pressure”, and it has been incredible to see how Marizanne Kapp and the rest of the Proteas have blossomed when their matches have been on a knifeedge at the World Cup.

Kapp has enjoyed a phenomenal week and is displaying the sort of all-round stardom that has previously been the preserve of Lance Klusener and Ben Stokes at World Cups.

In the sterilised, rarefied atmosphere of a World Cup, the Proteas are producing the goods and, with Australia, are the only unbeaten team after four matches.

It is encouragin­g though, that with South Africa probably just one win away from the semifinals, they have not yet produced their best cricket and there are still areas of their game that need cleaning up.

The Proteas will be anxious to sort out the middle-order batting collapses that have made it necessary for Kapp to produce her late heroics with the bat, in the company of, at various times, Chloe Tryon, Trisha Chetty, Shabnim Ismail and Ayabonga Khaka.

Two key batters have not fired at all, with Lizelle Lee scoring just 28 runs in three innings and Mignon du Preez making 27 in four knocks while Tazmin Brits has been uneasy at the crease and her 51 runs in four innings have come at a strike-rate of just 40.

If a couple of those batters can click next week, then South Africa will be hard to stop as they head into the knock-outs.

Magnificen­t is probably the best descriptio­n of the Proteas bowlers, who can comfortabl­y claim to be the best attack at the World Cup.

Ismail, Masabata Klaas, Khaka and Kapp apply such consistent pressure on the opposition that the Proteas’ relatively low totals have proven to be enough.

As for the Proteas men’s side, they have their chance to once again enthral us in their series against Bangladesh. The ODIs are all on the highveld and they will be favoured to win comfortabl­y, having seen off India 3-0 in their previous 50-over series.

Victory in the Test series will have to be achieved via their reserve strength, with five regulars at the IPL.

Fact is the IPL is their chief employer, at least in financial terms, so it is difficult to criticise the players for putting their livelihood­s first.

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