Posted on
August 11, 2021 by
Ken
Proteas coach Mark Boucher has acknowledged that the strains of bubble life and the worries of seeing civil unrest back at home have been consumers of energy for his team, but he implored them to make one last push for the final three days of cricket they have in Ireland, starting with the first T20 in Dublin on Monday.
It has generally been a very successful tour of the West Indies and Ireland, with all the series won except for the ODIs against Ireland, which South Africa were forced to share after the first match was rained out and their shock defeat in the second game.
But that historic 43-run loss came at the height of the riots back in South Africa and Boucher said his team had struggled for focus on that day.
“We just weren’t there the other day, the awareness and intensity were way down. But we can’t afford to make excuses, we need to be up for every game. What’s happening back at home is affecting us, and every South African. A lot of adrenaline and energy has gone into chats about it, and that equated to low energy on the field. Plus we’ve been one-and-a-half months on tour.
“We’ve talked a lot to get the emotions out and some of the players have families that have been personally affected, so they feel quite emotionally drained. But we have three days of cricket left and we showed in the last ODI what we can do when we play with good energy. But Ireland will certainly be no walkovers and we found out in the second ODI what happens if we don’t rock up for the T20s,” Boucher said.
With the IPL carnival set to scupper South Africa’s hopes of playing a T20 series against India, the Proteas have these three T20s in the coming week and three more in Sri Lanka to prepare for when the global T20 pageant is held in the United Arab Emirates from October. Assistant coach Enoch Nkwe stressed on Sunday that they now need stable plans.
“We’re not yet where we are supposed to be at, but we will be making sure we give ourselves the best chance of mastering the processes we have in place. We would like to see different personnel in different roles to see how they respond, so those opportunities will be created. We need to look outside the frontline players to see if they can do the job.
“The players need to trust the formula we are working on, no matter the conditions. We only have six games left before the World Cup but we believe we’re on track. We need confidence in our death bowling, where we have clear plans that the bowlers just need to commit to 100%, and we need to get our top-order as stable as possible as soon as possible,” Nkwe said.
Tags: acknowledged, back, bubble, but, civil, coach, consumers, cricket, Dublin, energy, final, first T20, for, home, implored, Ireland, last, life, make, Mark Boucher, one, Proteas, push, seeing, starting, strains, team, them, three days, unrest, worries
Category
Cricket, Sport
Posted on
August 11, 2021 by
Ken
Given the scant opportunities Janneman Malan has had to play for the Proteas, one could forgive the 25-year-old opener for being anxious when he did get the chance against Ireland. But the eventual Player of the Series just looked completely calm and in control during his two innings, and to have that sort of composure and temperament is like gold for an international batsman.
Malan top-scored in both ODI innings for South Africa, stroking 84 off 96 balls in the second game and then a magnificent 177 not out off 169 deliveries in the third and decisive match. With the first game washed out, the Proteas won the final ODI by 70 runs to level the series 1-1.
“At this level, you don’t know how many games you’re going to get, so to help myself mentally I just tell myself that if I am going to miss the next match then I must go out on my own terms. I back myself and I don’t want to play out of desperation to keep my spot. I just let go and do my best, and if that’s not good enough then I can deal with that.
“I wasn’t thinking of Gary Kirsten’s record 188 not out, I was just in the zone, in the moment. By then I was in that flow-state, just watching the ball and playing every ball on its merits. And I really enjoyed batting with Quinton de Kock, my Cape Town Blitz partner. He seems to bring out the best in me and if I’m selected going forward then he would be my ideal opening partner,” Malan said after sharing a brilliant first-wicket stand of 225 in 36 overs with the wicketkeeper/batsman.
Coach Mark Boucher agreed that batting with De Kock, who stroked a masterful 120 off 91 deliveries, would finance a great deal of learnings for young Malan, who has played just seven ODIs but has scored a world-record 483 runs in that time.
“Janneman has been waiting on the sidelines for quite some time, but now that he’s got some opportunity and a taste of international cricket, he’s really done well. So our depth pool is getting quite big and he has certainly taken his opportunity. Batting with Quinny, he would have learned a helluva lot, and in the end he was smashing it all over the park.
“He’s given the selectors a good headache, it’s a good thing. It’s tough because all the guys in contention are quality cricketers and ideally we’d want them all to play. We have thought about upskilling someone to bat outside their normal position, something Aiden Markram has done at franchise level. But the competition for places is good,” Boucher said.
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Category
Cricket, Sport
Posted on
August 11, 2021 by
Ken
Bulls coach Jake White believes the Springboks will take away more game-time and conditioning from the SA A team’s weekend loss to the country’s top franchise, but the result should not have any impact on their Test series against the British and Irish Lions.
The Bulls snatched a 17-14 win over the SA A team in Cape Town, which would have left Springbok coach Jacques Nienaber with much to think about ahead of the first Test against the Lions next Saturday. But White does not believe it will drastically change the national team’s plans.
“You have to take the game into its context, it’s like the British and Irish Lions losing to SA A in midweek. Morne Steyn came into our changeroom after the game and said it was exactly what the Springboks needed, they needed us to front up physically and play a different way against them. We managed that and we did some different things to what we normally do as well.
“But I don’t think it provides any indication for the Test series. The Boks needed a hit-out and some more game-time and next week it all starts from zero again. The result of the Stormers against the Lions is also meaningless in terms of the Test series. No-one is going to remember the warm-up games, but the Tests and who wins the series is what they are quite rightly focused on,” White, the Springbok coach from 2004 to 2007, said.
White praised the efforts of his pack, many of whom are fresh out of the ranks of junior rugby, and flyhalf Johan Goosen, who dominated the final quarter and won the man of the match award.
“Johan is an unbelievable rugby player. It’s the first time he’s played with this team, so two scrumhalves and two outside backs he’s never played with before and yet he was still the general. He breaks the line, he’s quick, he defends well. When you have a really good flyhalf then you can start really playing, it means you can vary your game. We didn’t just maul and scrum, we were able to move the ball around.
“And our young pack really fronted up nicely. It’s a young pack, most of them are not seasoned players, a lot of them have just come out of our junior ranks, which is fantastic for us. It’s about creating some depth and we were able to play a different game to what we’ve done before. The guys did not back down on the physical contest,” White said.
Category
Rugby, Sport
Posted on
August 10, 2021 by
Ken
Springbok coach Jacques Nienaber admitted that a lack of dominance by the SA A pack in the set-pieces and the gainline battle concerned him after their shock 17-14 defeat at the hands of the Bulls in Cape Town on Saturday.
The Bulls fielded a young pack with only three experienced players in captain and flank Nizaam Carr, prop Jacques van Rooyen and replacement loose forward Arno Botha. But they matched the SA A team blow-for-blow and their lineout dominance was especially damaging to the opposition’s cause.
The Bulls played with great passion and physicality, and Nienaber admitted that they simply wanted to win the match more than his charges. And that is a damning assessment a week away from the first Test.
“Yes, I definitely expected a better performance from the pack, especially better ball from the set-pieces. We didn’t get a proper platform to launch our attacks from. The Bulls are the best franchise in South Africa and hats off to them. Obviously their desperation levels were through the roof. The first fingers point at myself and management because we obviously did things wrong in the build-up.
“Sad to say, but the Bulls were more desperate than us. And that’s even though there are places up for grabs in the Test team, but you can’t take a lot of positives from a performance like that, except that we got game time into a lot of guys who needed it. I’m quite emotional after a performance like that, as a team the performance was just not there,” Nienaber admitted after the game.
The Springbok coach did not want to discuss individual performances, but suffice to say he probably thinks his gran could have played with more intensity and fire than some of the SA A team.
“Any comments I make about individuals will be emotional. Maybe some individuals did well, but it did not come out as a team. But we got a lot of answers over certain players, we needed questions asked of them under pressure. Which is exactly what we wanted, but not the loss, that’s not what we hoped for,” Nienaber said.
Scrumhalf Cobus Reinach, eighthman Kwagga Smith, fullack Aphelele Fassi and solid flyhalf Elton Jantjies were probably the only players to have advanced their Springbok cause.
Tags: admitted, after, and, battle, Bulls, Cape Town, coach, concerned, defeat, dominance, gainline, hands, him, Jacques Nienaber, lack, pack, SA A, set-pieces, shock, Springboks
Category
Rugby, Sport