The Herald (South Africa)

Developmen­t focus for Sri Lanka tour

- Stuart Hess

Proteas Test coach Shukri Conrad weighed up the option of including more senior members of the Test squad in the South African A squad for the tour to Sri Lanka before scrapping the idea.

Instead, Tony de Zorzi will lead the side to Sri Lanka in June for a tour comprising three one-day matches and two four-day games.

“Yes, but I didn’t think about it very long,” Conrad said about the idea to include skipper Temba Bavuma and even his predecesso­r, Dean Elgar, in the SA A squad.

Ultimately, he leaned towards a younger group, feeling the importance of gaining experience for some players, and for others to re-establish their internatio­nal credential­s, held greater value right now.

Conrad said there was a possibilit­y the SA A team could play a series before the start of next season, which would provide an opportunit­y to Elgar and Buvama — should they feel they need it — to get in game time before the marquee series with India in December.

Sri Lanka will be an important marker for a number of young players hoping to feature in the Proteas next season, such as Kyle Verreynne, Keegan Petersen and Zubayr Hamza.

For young batters, such as Jordan Hermann, Dewald Brevis and Matthew Breetzke, it offers the chance to enhance their developmen­t.

“The Proteas programme is what it is,” Conrad said, hinting at the lack of Test matches on the calendar for SA.

“It is easier to arrange A series and those become important with the Proteas in mind.

“One aspect is we can give guys who are fresh in the Proteas side such as Tony and Gerald [Coetzee] an opportunit­y to continue playing against high-quality opposition and gaining experience.

“The other aspect is developmen­tal so that we increase the depth of players we can choose from.”

Senuran Muthusamy is the only spinner in the squad, which is strange when touring the subcontine­nt, but Conrad said it was done with a bigger picture in mind.

“I think Dewald’s bowling is an underrated part of his game and it is something we want to see develop more,” Conrad said of Brevis’ leg-spin.

“It is the same with Stubbo. They won’t get as many opportunit­ies to bowl and thus develop that skill in South African conditions, so this is an ideal chance to see that.

“Rob [Walter] is looking for an extra spinning option with the World Cup in India later this year and giving those two more chances opens the opportunit­y with an eye on the World Cup and maybe even the Test side in future.”

The choice of Corbin Bosch over his brother, Eathan, a standout performer in the SA20 last season, is to assess the former’s all-round ability.

“If there’d been T20s on the tour, Eathan would have gone, but he is on the books.

“We just want to see what Corbin offers as a front-line bowler, where I have seen him crank it up and the aggression with the bat in the lower order,” Conrad said.

With Sri Lanka’s A side for the one-dayers likely to feature many of the front-line ODI players to prepare for the ICC World Cup qualifiers to be played in Zimbabwe late in June, Conrad knows there will be stiff competitio­n for the SA A side he will be coaching.

“I think it’s great for us if they play their strongest team. It is a great place to tour and they are a country with many great players. ”—

 ?? Picture: SYDNEY MAHLANGU/ BACKPAGEPI­X ?? Dewald Brevis’s bowling will be under the microscope when the SA A side tours Sri Lanka in June
Picture: SYDNEY MAHLANGU/ BACKPAGEPI­X Dewald Brevis’s bowling will be under the microscope when the SA A side tours Sri Lanka in June

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