The Citizen (Gauteng)

Proteas had a ‘mental block’

- Ken Borland

As a human being, Mark Boucher seems to lack the gene for a fear of failure which made him one of the most tenacious cricketers around.

But now as a coach he has admitted to frustratio­n and that is exactly the weakness his Proteas team showed as they crashed to a series loss to Bangladesh in humiliatin­g fashion in the third and final ODI at Centurion yesterday.

Choosing to bat first, South Africa’s batsmen folded meekly to 154 all out in 37 overs, with Taskin Ahmed (5/35) (below) ripping the hosts to shreds.

Bangladesh then showed them how to bat on the SuperSport Park pitch as they raced to victory in just 26-and-a-half overs with just one wicket down.

“We lacked intent, we went to sleep after a good start to our innings,” Boucher said after the loss. “We wanted to take the game forward, you do need to take some risks, but there was almost a fear of getting out.

“It was as if we were not batting to set a total, which Bangladesh showed should have been more than 300, but batting to not get out, and then we spiralled into a total collapse.

“We need to have belief in how we play, we’ve played spin very well in places like Sri Lanka but then we come back here and go back to old ways. We have to have faith to play the way we want to play.

“We wanted to be proactive, we have worked hard on shot-selection and the guys know they have the armoury. But it’s like a mental block. We need to put the fear of failure out of our minds, the fear of getting out,” Boucher said.

“In the back of their heads they probably want to get runs to prove that they belong here, and that brings in a bit of fear. Maybe they are too scared to play the way they should.

“So it comes down to a lack of form and belief,” Boucher said.

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