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Ken Borland



Big news: no dramatic changes expected to SA side 0

Posted on February 18, 2014 by Ken

Convenor of selectors Andrew Hudson: 'Massive selection changes will not sort out the problem'

The news from the national selectors in the wake of South Africa being massacred by Australia at Centurion is that the debate over the balance of the side has been reopened but Proteas fans should not expect widespread changes for the second Test starting in Port Elizabeth on Thursday.

“From a personnel point of view, we have no doubt that the 15 chosen for the series is the right group of players. Massive selection changes will not sort out the problem, which was application – by the players’ own admission they did not play as well as they could,” convenor of selectors Andrew Hudson said yesterday.

“There may be a change, a tweak from within that squad, but it’s unlikely we’ll bring anyone in from outside that group. We weren’t unhappy with Ryan McLaren, but it has just reopened the debate about the balance of the side. Do we play seven batsmen or a spinner, it’s about the balance for Port Elizabeth.”

While McLaren can quite rightly protest that he performed the role expected of him with the ball, while there were glaring failures all around him, it seems the selectors are toying with the idea of following Australia’s gamble of only playing three seamers and a frontline spinner.

“Australia went in batting-heavy and played three seamers and a spinner. Perhaps we’ll play a batsman at seven and then have three quicks and Robin Peterson.

“But that does leave you hanging a bit if the spinner gets hit out of the attack or there’s an injury. That’s the dilemma: having the all-rounder at seven as insurance or backing four bowlers to do the job like Australia does,” Hudson admitted.

Australia’s march to victory was very much achieved on the back of Mitchell Johnson, however, and the South African batsmen played the other touring bowlers with relative comfort. South Africa don’t have a Johnson and the Australian batsmen have already shown a liking to Peterson, which could leave their attack incredibly vulnerable.

Hudson also admitted that JP Duminy, who successfully blocked out Johnson in the first innings and then fell to an extraordinary catch at short-leg off his bowling in the second innings, would come under discussion.

“JP’s place in the team – we’d need to chat about that and whether the top six are doing what we expect from them. JP hasn’t had great form but he is a quality player and he’s done well against Australia before. There’s no doubt he’s a class player,” Hudson said.

 

How to tame the ferocious Mitchell Johnson 0

Posted on February 15, 2014 by Ken

 

South Africa’s cricketers were able to survive a close encounter with a lion during their trip to Hoedspruit to support Mark Boucher’s rhino conservation efforts, but Mitchell Johnson proved an entirely more ferocious beast at SuperSport Park on Thursday to leave the Proteas in tatters at the end of the second day of the first Test against Australia.

Johnson claimed four wickets, three of them in a sensational opening burst of four overs, to send South Africa limping to stumps on 140 for six, still needing 57 just to avoid the follow-on.

How to play Johnson is probably the most common question in international changerooms these days as the left-armer took his record in his last six Tests to a phenomenal 38 wickets at an average of just 14.15.

While one should praise the South African batsmen’s efforts to get into line against the most fearsome fast bowler in the game, technically they were far too eager to get bat to ball when Johnson dug the ball in short.

Barry Richards, Peter Kirsten and Kepler Wessels were all prolific run-scorers in county cricket, where they faced the best generation of fast bowlers – the West Indians – day in and day out. Wessels also played eight Tests against the Caribbean dominators (seven for Australia) and averaged a highly-creditable 44.66 against them. So that trio of great South African batsmen certainly know a thing or two about playing fast bowling and their advice had a common theme of either getting out of the way or making sure you drop the hands.

“It’s about handling the intimidation and the pace, around 147km/h, and you’ve also got to look out for the in-swinger. The key is keeping your balance, keeping your head still and don’t get your right foot too far across.

“The batsmen also need to get their hands down quicker and bob and weave more. You’ve got to choose the right time to pull, but they were good balls to Smith and Du Plessis,” Kirsten, a diminutive batsman but high-quality player of pace, said yesterday.

Richards said the key was not getting yourself in a bad position.

“There wasn’t a lot of swing out there, so it was all about the bounce, the short ball. You need to get out of the way, make sure you don’t get caught in a bad position. Like Graeme Smith did – he’s a tall and imposing batsmen and he tried to ride with the bounce, but it got big on him and he had nowhere to go.

“It’s not easy, but if the ball is short, you’ve got to sway or duck out of the way,” Richards said.

The former Hampshire opening batsman had many epic tussles with fellow South African Mike Procter, another awkward fast bowler with an unusual action.

“Proccie had this big in-swinging bouncer that used to follow you. So you had to go the other way, but it’s not easy to duck your head towards where the ball is coming from!” Richards said.

Wessels, who has served as a batting consultant for the South Africans in the past, said accepting that getting hit was likely was an important part of successfully playing fast bowling.

“You have to get in line and drop the hands and if you’re going to take it on the body then just accept that you’re going to get hit,” Wessels said.

It takes bundles of courage to face truly fast bowling like Johnson’s, but Wessels said it was important to still remain positive.

“You need to have one back-foot scoring stroke and just evade the other balls. The West Indies had four guys of Johnson’s pace and initially I just tried to survive. But then after two hours you’d just have 15, so I decided to attack them.”

The South African batsmen have also obviously not faced someone as fast as Johnson for some time, which Wessels said meant they would need some time to adjust.

Proteas coach Russell Domingo said no matter how well prepared they were, “you can never replicate the pressure and intensity of Test cricket like that”.

“It’s what we expected of him, but the challenge is with his action, you don’t know which ones to leave. He’s skiddy, which makes him so dangerous, whereas someone like Morne Morkel has a high arm action and gets more consistent bounce,” Domingo said.

Johnson admitted that the inconsistent bounce of the Centurion pitch had him licking his lips.

“There are a few cracks and I felt when I was batting that there was something there, just back-of-a-length. Smith’s dismissal was one of those good balls that took off and the ball to Faf took off a bit as well. It surprised him and it surprised me too. I do enjoy bowling on these sort of pitches,” Johnson said.

Spectators enjoy watching Johnson in action and the way he went about his business on Thursday was much like a lion kill. The South African batsmen were probably feeling a bit like the unfortunate impala last night.

 

 

Fleming now mentoring Morris 0

Posted on May 23, 2013 by Ken

New Zealand captain Stephen Fleming pulled some wicked stunts on a 25-year-old Graeme Smith when they clashed in a Test series, but then became something of a mentor for the Proteas skipper and the cerebral Kiwi is once again helping the growth of another potential South African star of the same age in Chris Morris.

Spinner Aaron Phangiso may have won the man of the match award for his brilliant two for 17 in four overs when the Highveld Lions beat Fleming’s Chennai Super Kings in the Champions League at Newlands last October, but it was Morris who turned the coach’s head.

Morris took one for 24 in four overs, halting a blazing start to the game by CSK, and also helped seal victory for the Lions with an important 12 not off seven balls at the death, including a massive six.

“I bowled well against Stephen’s team in Cape Town and I also hit a six when I was batting. I then happened to bump into him in a restaurant and spoke to him. He pulled me aside and said he was very impressed with my bowling and said I should keep in touch. It’s funny how things go in cricket … ” Morris told Sapa at the Wanderers on Tuesday.

Three-and-a-half months later, the Super Kings paid a head-spinning $625 000 [R5.5 million] to sign the all-rounder for this year’s Indian Premier League and a dazed Morris can still hardly believe how things have turned out.

“I’m still a bit speechless after going for a price like that and it’s mind-blowing because I modelled my captaincy at school on Stephen Fleming, he was my hero, the ultimate captain with a great cricket brain. And I’ll also be playing alongside people like Mike Hussey, a schoolboy hero of mine too, and Ben Hilfenhaus, who I really enjoy watching bowl,” Morris said.

India is probably not top of the list of places pacemen want to bowl in and the Super Kings are based in Chennai, a particularly spin-friendly venue, so Morris knows the IPL will be hard work.

“I hope I catch a game but it’s going to be a very different environment and pitches, plus there’s the heat. Conditions will be tough but it’s going to be a massive learning experience and a big test of my skills.”

But for now, Morris has to focus on the final cycle of four-day domestic series fixtures, with the Lions needing to beat the Warriors in Port Elizabeth to overcome a 9.66-point deficit behind the Cape Cobras in order to win the title.

Morris has been in top-class form with the ball, taking a superb 26 wickets in five matches at an average of just 16.73 and Lions captain Stephen Cook praised his bowlers for doing “a terrific job”.

“Someone has always stepped up, most of them have 20-odd wickets at a low average. When we played the Warriors in PE in a one-day game, the pitch seamed around a bit, but we have Imran Tahir too if the wicket is low and slow,” Cook said.

The weather has bought some breathing space for the Cobras at the top of the log as the Lions have had two matches washed out in the last three weeks, but coach Geoff Toyana, who has enjoyed considerable success since taking over from Dave Nosworthy at the start of the summer, remains positive his team can still win the trophy.

“The boys are in good spirits, although they are disappointed about the last three weeks, and if we play well enough we might be champions. I trust in the guys that they can do their skills and if we play to our full potential then we can come through,” Toyana said.

The Lions will be at full strength with current internationals Alviro Petersen and Quinton de Kock returning to the line-up and considerably boosting the batting.

Successful Younis stresses positivity 0

Posted on May 08, 2013 by Ken

Younis Khan has posted three centuries in his last four Tests against South Africa and, on the eve of the daunting task of taking on the Proteas at the Wanderers, the 34-year-old veteran says the key for Pakistan’s batsmen is to remain positive.

Practically everyone, from the pundits and the bloggers, to those who comment online, agrees that Pakistan’s fortunes in this three-match series will rest on how well their batsmen cope with South Africa’s formidable pace attack and, given all the hype, there is the danger that the touring batsmen will become inhibited, switch to survival mode and ultimately allow the bowlers to dominate.

Younis is a cavalier strokeplayer at heart but he has also played several notable rearguard innings during his 79-Test career, but in a short interview he gave this week he stressed the word “positive” no fewer than six times in two minutes.

“We are very positive, we know that to win against South Africa we have to play with a positive frame of mind and play some positive cricket. If we play like that we have a good chance against South Africa.

“If we play to our potential then we can provide them with some good competition. South Africa know from when we played them in Abu Dhabi and Dubai that we played some good, positive cricket, they know how we play.

“South Africa are the number one team and are doing a very good job these days in both departments, batting and bowling. They have a very balanced team, so I wish Pakistan plays some positive cricket against them. We have some younger players as well, who are also very positive, so I think this is a good chance for those youngsters as well,” Younis said as he surely channelled Norman Vincent Peale.

Captain Misbah ul-Haq concurred on Thursday.

“Being positive is the way to go, we have to back our ability. We need to be aggressive, put the bad balls away and always think positively – it’s the only way to compete against the top sides.”

But Pakistan batsmen are not particularly well-known for assured footwork and that, combined with them being used to flat sub-continental tracks and the Wanderers being renowned for the moving ball,  both swing and seam, will bring Dale Steyn and Vernon Philander into the contest in a big way.

Steyn has taken 36 wickets in seven Tests at the Wanderers and has claimed five in an innings there on three occasions and 10 in the Test against New Zealand in 2007. He thrives on the pace he gets off the hard surface and the late swing he is able to generate.

Philander has played just one previous Test in Johannesburg and almost bowled South Africa to victory over Australia with five for 70 in the second innings of their 2011 encounter, and his ability to move the ball into or away from the batsman from a tight off-stump line will make him a handful on a pitch that traditionally sports some grass.

While seam and swing are two of the Wanderers’ best attributes for pace bowlers, the pitch also provides steepling bounce and that will interest both Morne Morkel and potential Pakistan debutant Mohammad Irfan.

There has been plenty of hype around Irfan, mostly due to the fact that he is over seven feet tall, but his candidacy as a match-winner for the tourists will surely be undermined by his lack of experience.

Although he is 30 years old, he has played just five ODIs and two T20 internationals, and has an underwhelming four wickets to his name.

As Morkel pointed out, being that tall makes it imperative that the bowler finds the right length to bowl.

“It’s obviously an advantage to get bounce, but you have to get a fuller length over here, especially at the Wanderers, where it’s the key. Otherwise a lot of batsmen will just leave you on length.

“But sometimes when you try to get the ball fuller, you just put the ball there. Irfan won’t have any experience of these pitches and their extra bounce, so it will take some time for him to adapt,” Morkel said.

South African captain Graeme Smith, who will become the first cricketer to captain in 100 Tests, was being feted by Sports Minister Fikile Mbalula on Thursday for his ability to rise above adversity. “He has the spirit of never surrender and is the paragon of human perfection,” was the high point of the razzmatazz, but his team have normally felt very comfortable at the Wanderers and it’s a venue they know and understand well.

“We have good experience of playing at the Wanderers and on the Highveld there’s usually more swing and good pace and bounce. We understand what we need to do and we just have to be clinical,” Smith said.

South Africa’s batting was clinical enough against New Zealand, with four centuries in the two innings they had in the two Tests, but the quality of the Kiwi attack was nowhere near what Pakistan will bring to the contest.

Left-armer Junaid Khan is well-equipped to also take advantage of the conditions in Johannesburg, but South Africa’s batsmen have handled Umar Gul and spinner Saeed Ajmal well in previous Test meetings.

There is, of course, a celebratory mood in Johannesburg as one of the city’s favourite sons achieves what no one else has managed in the great history of Test cricket, and on his birthday too, but Smith is confident both he and the team will be able to keep their emotions in check come 10.30am on Friday.

“Tomorrow I’ll wake up and turn 32 and lead South Africa for the 100th time in a Test, so that will be one of the proudest moments in my life. It won’t be easy to maintain focus, but I had a taste of it when I played my 100th Test at the Oval and we were able to be successful.

“But that was in a foreign city and I was able to create a bit of space, but here in South Africa there has been such an outpouring of love, it’s been very special and I’ve been walking around in a buzz.

“The team training has been tough, though, and there’s a good maturity in this group and I can feel the energy in the way we’ve prepared. We just need to go out and put it into play and hope for a good day one,” Smith said.

Pakistan will probably line up on Friday with two debutants in opening batsman Nasir Jamshed (Taufeeq Umar has a shin stress-fracture and is going home) and Irfan, while many of their squad will be experiencing the Bullring for the first time.

If anything, they might be the ones who find themselves distracted by the atmosphere.

http://www.dailymaverick.co.za/article/2013-02-01-positive-pakistan-yes-we-kahn/#.UYpnfqJTA6w

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