The Star Late Edition

Tough season ends well for Bavuma

Controvers­ial figure proves his white-ball critics wrong with brilliant batting

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

AN already long 2019/20 cricket season for Temba Bavuma was made to feel even longer by the drama that unfolded when he was dropped from the national team for the New Year’s Test against England.

“There was a lot of controvers­y,” Bavuma admitted yesterday. None of which was of his making.

It had already been a long and testing year; the struggles in India, the rumpus with Cricket SA’s administra­tion and then the highprofil­e series with England.

The controvers­y about his axing stood in stark contrast to his previous involvemen­t with England in a New Year’s Test four years earlier. Then he was the toast of the nation, jumping and raising his arms to celebrate his maiden Test hundred. Bavuma admits he didn’t pay the adulation much attention.

“I was quite oblivious to the importance of the milestone, I just saw it as a young player scoring his first hundred, getting a sense of what being comfortabl­e at internatio­nal level is. Obviously the country saw it differentl­y, from a bigger point of view and gladly so.”

Bavuma was in the squad for the first two Tests against England, but played no part at Centurion due to injury and then for the Newlands game was dropped. His axing unleashed a cacophony around transforma­tion that could have been unbearable for many players. Bavuma found a different perspectiv­e.

“I never like speaking or commenting on things that have to do with race and transforma­tion,” he remarked yesterday. “But I really had to confront it and find a way to deal it. What helped during that period was that I tried to stick to the cricketing merits of it all, to accept the fact that I’d been left out of the team because I hadn’t been good enough, hadn’t performed as well as I should have.

“It wasn’t going to help me if I allowed myself to drown in all the other sideshows. When I went back to the Lions, I knew I had to perform if I wanted to get back into the Proteas team and fortunatel­y I was able to do that.” Bavuma would make 180 for the Lions, forcing his way back into the Proteas Test squad and playing the final match of the series at the Wanderers.

“I accepted the fact I was dropped. It was easy to accept, because I wasn’t the first player to be dropped nor will I be the last. All players go through periods where they don’t score runs, that gave me soberness in my mind. It allowed me to look a bit more deeply why I wasn’t performing in four-day cricket as I normally can.”

One major reason Bavuma found was the imbalance that arose with his batting as he’d started to achieve more success as a limited overs player. For most of his profession­al career, Bavuma was viewed as a ‘red ball specialist,’ something that didn’t sit well with him.

“I’ve tried to expand my game a lot more, which involved playing with more risk, so in turn you’re not as tight as you used to be.”

Part of becoming more expansive was to push for a spot in the 2019 World Cup side, something he didn’t achieve. However what really grated with him was that it appeared that selectors and coaches believed he wasn’t suited to playing the limited overs game.

“There was the element of wanting to prove to people that you can play white ball cricket ... if you keep hearing the narrative that you’re just a red ball cricketer, when you know you’re not, at some point in time, it does get to you,” he said.

Successful campaigns for the Lions in the 2018/19 Momentum Cup and then the now defunct domestic T20 Challenge revealed that more attacking player to the public and last season he produced his best innings for the Proteas in the One-Day and T20 Internatio­nal series against England.

 ??  ?? Temba Bavuma
Temba Bavuma

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