The Star Early Edition

‘Relief ’ after season of growth

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

TEMBA Bavuma admits he was glad to see the back of the 2021/22 summer, in which he and his Proteas teammates dealt with more drama than all five seasons of The Wire combined.

“I can’t lie, I was relieved. It felt like a very long season,” Bavuma, the Proteas captain in the limited-overs formats, said yesterday.

In his first home season as captain, he had to deal with the consequenc­es of Cricket South Africa’s new board’s directive that players kneel to show support for the Black Lives Matter movement; the fallout from Quinton de Kock choosing not to do so at the T20 World Cup; the Social Justice and Nation-Building hearings that erupted around coach Mark Boucher; direct qualificat­ion for next year’s ODI World Cup, which has not been secured yet; his own form with the bat, which was admittedly good; a raucous Test series against India; a tough tour in New Zealand; biobubbles, and, at the end of it all, a broken finger.

“Ja, when that last Test finished, I was really looking forward to my four to five weeks off,” Bavuma said.

Bavuma hasn’t looked at his bat since.

It was a season that tested him both physically, mentally and emotionall­y. On reflection, the 32-year-old said everything the team had to deal with provided opportunit­ies for growth.

“I don’t look at it so much in terms of performanc­es – and much of our performanc­es were good – but I think the relationsh­ips between the guys are a lot tighter, deeper; there’s authentici­ty behind it and guys really go out there and play for each other,” he said.

“The guys are now in a situation where they understand different perspectiv­es, each other’s background­s, and all those things that sway their thinking. There is a lot more empathy behind everything we do. I believe the team achieved growth out of that.”

It was by no means easy. There were lots of difficult conversati­ons behind closed doors and more was put on Bavuma’s plate than a lot of other captains have to deal with.

“The off-field drama surroundin­g

the team and the coach particular­ly, that was hard. It was hard for the coach, it was hard for the players

... what helped in those situations was the conversati­ons we had. We had situations where we sat in a room (together) and guys could speak. If there were any difference­s, if guys felt any type of way they had the opportunit­y to voice them. That was between players, between management, those kinds of conversati­ons helped us to navigate I guess the off-field drama that was surroundin­g the team.”

Bavuma said his relationsh­ip with Boucher, who last week saw racism charges made against him by CSA withdrawn by the organisati­on, remains good.

“I think our relationsh­ip has grown over the last year. My role, with the drama that was happening was still to keep the team together and focussed on cricket,” Bavuma said.

“The guys were there to support the coach in whatever he needed. That is another aspect that has grown within the team, the relationsh­ip between the coach and myself.”

Bavuma said the way in which he handled the controvers­y created by De Kock choosing not to kneel at the T20 World Cup and subsequent­ly withdrawin­g from the team just minutes before SA’s match against the West Indies, and the compliment­s he received from many quarters, helped his own growth as a leader.

“It was a challengin­g time,” Bavuma chuckled.

“From a confidence point of view, it did me a world of good.

The feedback from people after that event, and specifical­ly how I handled that issue, was very positive… I think as a team we came out of it better.”

 ?? | BackpagePi­x ?? TEMBA Bavuma.
| BackpagePi­x TEMBA Bavuma.

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