The Star Late Edition

Proteas have T20 batting headaches too

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

BATTING is not just a concern for the Proteas Test team, with national selection convener Victor Mpitsang saying yesterday he’d hoped to see the country’s batsmen “dominate more” in the Betway T20 Challenge.

While the Test side has to solve the problem of why it keeps suffering batting collapses, in the T20 format there are concerns about an inability of batsmen to assert themselves and show greater impetus at the crease, as reflected in a number of very low strike rates in the local T20 competitio­n that finished on Sunday.

“In those conditions (at Kingsmead) a few batsmen really struggled to adjust and adjust quickly,” said Mpitsang. “I would have wanted to see batters dominate more.”

Too often those conditions were used as an excuse by batsmen from various teams. It is not as if the nature of pitches at Kingsmead are a mystery to anyone in South Africa.

Kingsmead is no longer the green, seaming track of years gone by and in the last five years, for the most part, it has assisted spinners. Batsmen didn’t make the necessary adjustment­s to enable themselves to play better and most importantl­y score quicker there.

“Guys who adjusted quicker were the ones who were successful. But guys couldn’t dominate immediatel­y because of the surface,” said Mpitsang.

“A guy like David Miller, his strike rate was 130, he adjusted well, he felt he needed to be there at the end (of an innings), so found a way to stay in and could then hit the ball and that comes from experience.”

Of the top 20 highest run-scorers in the tournament, just five had strike rates above 130 with Miller, Heinrich Klaasen and George Linde all recently part of the Proteas T20 team. The other two were Robbie Frylinck and Sarel Erwee, and it will concern Mpitsang and the selectors who meet this week to, among other topics, pick a squad for the series against Pakistan next month, that so few players were able to formulate a plan to score quicker.

In attempting to identify batsmen who can give the Proteas innings more impetus, eight months ahead of the T20 World Cup in India, an obvious name is AB de Villiers, but Mpitsang said he is not part of the selectors’ plans for now.

“Chris Morris is still available to play for SA, he’s not retired yet, but AB has retired from internatio­nal cricket. As far as I am concerned he’s not availed himself to play for South Africa – unless he’s told someone else something different,” said Mpitsang.

“It’s fair to say, if AB avails himself, that is a different conversati­on, but as far as I know, he’s retired from internatio­nal cricket. Morris is not retired, so that is a different conversati­on.”

Mpitsang has not had a conversati­on with Morris yet either. Last week Morris, who played for Titans in Durban, failed to offer clarity on his internatio­nal future. "I will have to have that conversati­on when it happens,” he said.

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