The Star Late Edition

Olivier says his move to Yorkshire ‘the best for me and my family’

- RICHARD GIBSON Daily Mail

THE PAST three weeks have given Duanne Olivier, ample opportunit­y to combat the flak flying towards him for turning his back on a Test career in his prime.

There have been plenty of South African cricketers who quit their homeland for Kolpak contracts with English counties over the past couple of decades, of course. Olivier is the 43rd.

But he is the first to be taken from the bosom of his country’s Test team declaring a desire to pull on the England sweater.

Indignatio­n in his homeland, following his rejection of a two-year central contract from Cricket South Africa for one of three in Yorkshire, has gone up a notch.

The fast bowler claimed 24 wickets and the man of the series award in a whitewashi­ng of Pakistan and was even thrust into the Proteas’ white-ball plans at the start of a year that includes a World Cup.

And so, with a 10-Test career of 48 wickets in cold storage for now, he bowled his first deliveries as a Yorkshire player on Monday in a pre-season fixture against Durham in Potchefstr­oom, 200 miles from his birthplace of Groblersda­l.

Next week, accompanie­d by his wife Casey Leigh, he will arrive in Leeds to embark on a commitment to England that he believes could see him represent England.

Olivier said: “I am a firm believer that everything happens for a reason and if you just concentrat­e on doing well that will take care of itself.

“I don’t think too far ahead. Yes, it will be a goal to play for England one day and it would be amazing but for now my pure focus is on Yorkshire.’

His salary at Headingley – approachin­g £150,000 (R3m) – is roughly three times what he would have earned with South Africa. The guarantee of an extra year was a bonus, while the exchange rate of R19 to the pound is favourable, too. Financiall­y, it was a no-brainer. As Olivier says, “every person needs security”.

Even so, purists are shocked that he has given up the lure of Test cricket plus all hope of a World Cup place. It was, as the CSA chief executive Thabang Moroe lamented, a blow for the global game.

Olivier countered: “I can understand that people are upset but I have not played a lot of one-day cricket, especially for South Africa or the A side.

“I made my ODI debut only this year and over those couple of games I think they were seeing what I could offer.

“I don’t think I would have been in the World Cup squad as they have enough bowlers.

“I wasn’t looking too far ahead at World Cup spots being up for grabs, it was just taking it day by day. I thought about everything and while sitting down with my wife we discussed the pros and cons.

“This was not about looking back and allowing external factors to influence us. It is what my wife and I feel and what we want to achieve going forward.

“Relocating is just the best decision for me and my family, for our future. I realise some people will understand and some people won’t but it doesn’t really faze me what they think. It’s about what I want to do. I feel like my cricket will improve playing county cricket.

“I don’t want to be classified as one type of bowler. It depends on the surfaces on which we play.

“If I’m in rhythm, I get that late out-swing and that’s key for me, especially on pitches in England.

“The short ball is also something I back myself to deliver well, though. It doesn’t matter if it’s a greenseami­ng top or a flat one, quick bowlers need to use the short one to keep the batsmen honest.

“For me, I don’t want to waste my bouncer because it’s one of my strengths. If I can make them play or defend it with their hands up in the air, then that’s good for me.”

Olivier’s first wicket for Yorkshire will be the 400th of his first-class career and will begin the most controvers­ial chapter in his story so far. |

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