The Star Late Edition

Phangiso: Black players didn’t get same chances

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

AARON Phangiso told Cricket South Africa’s Social Justice and Nation Building inquiry that young black players have been let down by black officials who occupied senior positions in the sport.

Phangiso, 37, who played in 21 one-day internatio­nal and 16 T20s, explained how he was constantly given the same answer by captains, coaches and selectors when he asked why he wasn’t starting more matches for the Proteas.

“It was always, ‘your time will come, just wait your turn’,” Phangiso told the hearings yesterday.

Asked by advocate Fumisa Nqele what recourse he had when asking why he wasn’t picked, Phangiso said all he could do was ask the captain, coach or a selector.

“I would have an informal chat with the captain, and he’d say it was a selection decision. I’d talk to the coach, the same thing. Then I’d talk to a selector, and it would be a case of him telling me, ‘That is the plan for the game,’ and from there, there is no one else you can talk to,” Phangiso said.

He highlighte­d former convener of selectors Linda Zondi, saying he had expected more from Zondi given his background, and the fact that Phangiso believed he had an understand­ing of how difficult it was for black players trying to succeed.

“There are people who have an opportunit­y to make change, but when they get into these positions, as selectors or coaches, positions that have influence, then they change. When black Africans are put into these positions, sometimes they are letting us down. Instead of fighting for the right cause, they are fighting to hold on to their own position.”

Phangiso was picked for three Proteas World Cup squads – the T20 tournament­s in Bangladesh in 2014 and India in 2016, and the 50-over one in Australasi­a in 2015.

Across those three competitio­ns he played just two matches, winning a Man of the Match award in one game in Bangladesh. He held up the trophy for the commission­ers yesterday as he took them through his submission.

“In the subcontine­nt is where spinners are successful,” said Phangiso, but added that SA had always relied on fast bowlers regardless of where the team played.

At the 2016 tournament held in India, Phangiso sat out the first couple of matches, and he explained how he watched as the Proteas’ opponents adapted their styles to suit conditions, but the South Africans didn’t. “We played our first game against England, and they used three spinners, even Joe Root, who is a part-time bowler. We only had Imran Tahir and JP Duminy,” Phangiso said.

Phangiso also pointed out that despite he and Tahir having had success when playing in the same team at the Highveld Lions, it was a strategy that was never mimicked at internatio­nal level. “It was always Imran, he was their blanket. If I asked why I wasn’t playing, I was told, ‘We are going with Imran.’ I was told to wait my turn,” he said.

Phangiso said going to the 2015 World Cup as the only black African player was extremely difficult.

“The public just don’t understand. Of course I was happy to go to the World Cup, but it is extremely difficult as the only black

African player ... it was tough. The whole tournament, I got no game time, and I was getting the same excuses: ‘We are going with Imran’.”

“It was disappoint­ing. You feel you let your family down and then I get calls from the media asking how I feel ... you get into a mental state where I don’t want to call it depression, but you start to doubt yourself.”

Phangiso said black players didn’t get the same level of support as their white counterpar­ts.

“You look at Jacques Kallis. Obviously a great player, but when he started, he wasn’t averaging that much, but he was given the opportunit­y and look at the player he became,” Phangiso said.

“Many of us didn’t get those chances. We play one game and then we are benched, and when we look again, some other player has come in and starts getting a chance in front of us.”

 ??  ?? Aaron Phangiso
Aaron Phangiso

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