The Star Early Edition

Mental worries for Proteas

The bio bubble environmen­t is an issue

- STUART HESS stuart.hess@inl.co.za

SOUTH Africa’s men’s cricket team will enter an environmen­t very different from anything many of the players would have encountere­d when they go into a ‘bio bubble’ next week for the limited overs series’ against England.

For those not involved in the Indian Premier League, the novelty factor might energise them for the few weeks that the 50-over world champions are in the country, but it is what happens weeks and months down the line, as the Proteas catch up on their schedule, that is concerning.

“This is unchartere­d territory,” the SA Cricketers’ Associatio­n chief executive Andrew Breetzke said yesterday.

The first of three T20 Internatio­nals between South Africa and England takes place at Newlands on November 27, starting a very busy programme for the men’s national team that will include three ODIs against England, a pair of Tests over the festive season against Sri Lanka, a tour to Pakistan, a home series against Australia and a limited overs series against Pakistan next April in South Africa.

That’s a lot of tough cricket in a short space of time, all in a bio secure environmen­t that will put firm restrictio­ns on players movements and who they can interact with.

The psychologi­cal effects are something no-one can predict.

“It’s going to be a massive challenge,” said sports psychologi­st Henning Gericke, who worked with the Proteas at the 2011 World Cup.

“Some players will cope better than others, but it’s going to ask a lot of the management; they will need to be creative about how they get families involved through modern technology and ensure that there is a good balance throughout the day so that is not just cricket, cricket, cricket.”

Saca is engaged in talks with Cricket SA’s Director of Cricket Graeme Smith regarding concerns for the players’ welfare.

Initially, Breetzke said the novelty factor will mean the restrictio­ns won’t have a huge effect, but as the season unfolds and players enter one ‘bio bubble’ after another, it will be draining.

A lot of knowledge will be sourced from the England side, which played out an entire internatio­nal home season in an environmen­t in which movement and contact with people was limited. Joe Root, the England Test captain, said in a recent interview with The Cricket Weekly magazine in the UK that it wasn’t easy.

“Playing in the bubble does wear you down, being away from family, being in such a high-intensity environmen­t for such a long time,” Root remarked.

The likes of Kagiso Rabada, Quinton de Kock, Faf du Plessis and Anrich Nortje will share their experience­s of the IPL bubble with teammates.

Meanwhile, CSA yesterday announced a deal with US-based cricket broadcaste­r Willow TV Internatio­nal Inc. which will see the Proteas men’s and women’s teams’ matches broadcast across the US, Canada and Mexico.

 ??  ?? Henning Gericke
Henning Gericke

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from South Africa