Weekend Argus (Saturday Edition)

No remorse Boucher out with no review needed

- MARK KEOHANE

THE Mark Boucher issue is so much bigger than a Test series result or an internatio­nal white ball result.

Once again, the emotion of beating India in a three-Test series is detracting from the issue at hand, which is that Boucher, given the charges against him, isn’t the right fit to lead the Proteas.

Boucher has been accused of conducting himself in a racist or subliminal­ly racist manner, both when he was an internatio­nal player for South Africa two decades ago and now in his capacity as the Proteas coach.

Boucher has been charged as such and his employer, Cricket South Africa, has only one intention, which is to have him found guilty and to dismiss him.

Boucher’s national coaching contract is until the completion of the 2023 World Cup and Cricket South Africa wants him gone because of their charges. This will mean no early payout because they don’t believe in Boucher’s ability as a national coach.

There are many who condemned Boucher’s appointmen­t before he had taken charge of the Proteas and the narrative appeared justified on indifferen­t results. Boucher, pre the Indian series, had won two from four Test series, three from eight ODI series and just one from five T20 series. The Proteas also failed to reach the most recent T20 World Cup semi-finals.

On results alone, there was a case to be made to end Boucher’s tenure, but the come from behind Test series win against India was huge for Boucher and the Proteas and his Test coaching credential­s were trumpeted.

However, the future of Boucher has nothing to do with his pedigree as an internatio­nal player or his potential as an internatio­nal coach.

Boucher, given the charges and the allegation­s from former national teammate Paul Adams during the Social Justice and Nation-building (SJN) hearings, is not the right person to lead a Proteas team that speaks to a mass majority South Africa.

There was outrage that Cricket South Africa would serve Boucher’s charge sheet on January 17, just before the start of the ODI series against India and just after the monumental Test series win.

There was a collective disgust from the pro-Boucher lobbyists. He had just led the team to an unlikely Test series triumph against one of the best teams in the world.

Cricket South Africa’s leadership was criticised for once again bumbling and stumbling and for being incompeten­t and out of touch with reality.

Ordinarily, I’d agree with any such descriptio­n of CSA’s leadership because it has been nothing but offensive for way too long, but in the instance of Boucher and the allegation­s levelled at him, there was never going to be a right or appropriat­e time to charge him.

Adams’ testimony was gut-wrenching and sad, but Boucher and his legal advisers and personal advisers just didn’t seem to grasp the magnitude of the hurt Adams had felt and also the seriousnes­s of the situation.

This was a social condition that needed addressing and it was a social condition that extended far beyond the value of any cricket result.

Boucher went the legal route from the outset, when Adams said all he had wanted was acknowledg­ement from Boucher that calling him ‘brown sh***t’ was wrong. A phone call would have sufficed, said Adams. That phone call was never made. Instead, Boucher’s legal team served papers to counter Adams’ testimony.

Boucher’s response missed entire point of the SJN hearings.

Where was the remorse and the empathy? Where was an understand­ing of a view clearly foreign to that of Boucher’s in what constitute­s inappropri­ate and offensive behaviour?

Boucher has publicly shown nothing to convince anyone that he has any more of an understand­ing of subliminal prejudice in 2022 than he had in 2002.

And he is not alone, given the responses I got from an article last week calling Boucher out of subliminal prejudice.

Whites, who think like Boucher, naturally back Boucher. Those in South Africa who naively include or exclude politics in a conversati­on

last option.

the with sporting results, feel Boucher is in a position of strength because of the Proteas Test series win against India, yet those same voices excused Boucher’s failures in results on political interferen­ce and supposedly forced black player selections.

The Boucher issue had to be confronted – and it could only be done through a disciplina­ry process and one that was conducted with urgency.

This couldn’t wait until the next Test, ODI or T20 series. This certainly could not wait until the next World Cup.

Cricinfo reported that Cricket South Africa’s seven-page charge sheet accuses Boucher of gross misconduct and bringing CSA into disrepute through historical and current handling of racial issues.

Cricinfo reports that the most serious charges against Boucher relate to Adams and that CSA refused to accept Boucher’s response that while he sang the song calling Adams ‘brown sh***t’, he did not compose the lyrics of the song.

Boucher, in an affidavit also accused CSA of not appropriat­ely educating players in the immediate post-apartheid era.

CSA damned Boucher in their charge sheet response, stating that he conducted himself in a racist or subliminal­ly racist manner.

The charge sheet reads brutally: “Having had your racist and/or offensive and/or inappropri­ate utterances drawn to your attention, you failed to adequately and/or sufficient­ly and/ or appropriat­ely apologise for these utterances and/or acknowledg­e the racist nature of these utterances and/ or the hurt that they caused; and/or ... you have conducted yourself in a racist or subliminal­ly racist manner by failing to acknowledg­e the impact of your conduct towards Mr Adams thereby exacerbati­ng the offence of racism, bearing in mind your current position as the coach of the national team, which places you in a position of leadership and responsibi­lity.”

Boucher is also accused of only wanting to deal with the white players’ concerns on the Black Lives Matter (BLM) issue of taking the knee and creating division and alienating players and the team by requesting the black manager deal with black players.

Then there is the issue of Boucher’s former assistant coach Enoch Nkwe, who resigned in August because of concerns with team culture and the accusation of subliminal prejudice in their dealings.

CSA wants a dismissal from the independen­t chairperso­n of the disciplina­ry enquiry and the only reason they haven’t agreed to an early terminatio­n of his contract is because of the potential of a pay-out, which then asks the question if this is about morality, why has CSA’s leadership allowed it to also be about money – and the saving of that money?

Boucher, given the racial nature of the charges, should be on suspension, pending a dismissal, and not be leading any Proteas team.

He should have been gone week.

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