Rob Houwing

Proteas on the precipice

2010-01-12 11:56
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Rob Houwing (file)

Get ready for a nerve-jangling rollercoaster ride at the Bullring … not that I blame the Proteas for one second for seeking something not too far off a mamba in the pitch for the final Test.

After all, they are pinned to a corner and a “guns blazing” approach has to be the recipe, under the circumstances, if they are to square the series against an England team fast developing a culture of eking out draws by a thread but striking like a snake when the chance comes around.

Graeme Smith’s side are perilously close to a horribly unpalatable “distinction”: first post-isolation South African team not to win at least one Test match in an entire home summer.

They will be a little unfortunate if this fate goes their way, of course, because they would customarily play more than four Tests in a season – in this instance all against one fellow top-tier nation – and quite often have a warm-up mini-series against a relative minnow.

By my calculation, the closest the Proteas have come before to a no-wins season on home soil in Tests was in 2005/06, when they were thumped 2-0 away and then 3-0 at home by Australia, and were “saved” by an unusually autumnal visit from New Zealand, when they claimed a three-Test series 2-0. (The final Test at the Wanderers was contested in nippy early May.)

But defeat or a draw for South Africa at the Wanderers, and there will be widespread recriminations, you can be sure.

It would represent a second home season on the trot of defeats in the headline Test series, plus stark confirmation that the Proteas are a team in reverse, considering their contrasting, back-to-front 2-1 win on English soil in 2008.

After all, if you had considered just a few months ago that England would tour without Andrew Flintoff, once their key bowling bully, that Kevin Pietersen would notably fail (at least thus far) to be an influential “dominator” at the crease and Andrew Strauss be lean in run-scoring terms as well, the host nation would have been almost overwhelmingly tipped to prevail.

I admit to going “ouch” myself because round about that time I, too, was confidently contemplating a South African series triumph -- by as many as two Tests, in fact.

Yet despite botching that forecast near spectacularly, I am still reasonably steadfast in my suspicion that, player for player and based on comparative individual career records, the Proteas remain the stronger outfit.

If I were to pick a combined Test team today to save the respective countries from sudden annexation by a squad of hostile aliens, it would probably look a little like this: Smith, Strauss, Kallis, Pietersen, De Villiers, Collingwood, Boucher, Swann, Morkel, Anderson, Steyn – a six-five split in favour of South Africa. (Yes, some wags might opt to brand “KP” a seventh Saffer!)

But if you chose a side based more strongly on form over the first three Tests of the current series, the split might well tilt slightly the other way, with once-embattled Messrs Bell and Cook coming in somewhere for Pietersen and De Villiers in the batting lineup. (Strauss stays because his captaincy has been important to the state of the series, I think.)

And therein lies the rub: as things stand, the tourists have gelled better as a unit whereas the Proteas have arguably depended too heavily, for example, on the old firm of Smith and Kallis for runs and stability among the top six.

I believe the slightly less foam-at-the-mouth critics among us will be prepared to concede that luck has been largely absent from the South African game.

What if Steyn and Kallis had been fully bowling-fit from the outset? What if the Proteas had had the better of Durban conditions, rather than the other way around? What if England No 11 Graham Onions had been knocked over at Centurion and Newlands, rather than basically having saved two Tests for them?

But then again, there is also a very compelling case for doffing our hats to England’s unusual levels of collective spirit, desire, motivation and old-fashioned “bottle” this summer.

Maybe Onions, for instance, crucially holding out at the crease on two final-session occasions was no mere fluke: had England’s No 11 of yesteryear been, say, a trembling rabbit like a Tufnell, Mullally or Malcolm, there is every chance South Africa would be going to Johannesburg 2-1 up, rather than still 1-0 down.

Even things like the resilience and mental toughness of the tail have markedly improved under England’s newest regime.

They know, broadly, their team’s strengths and weaknesses and work cleverly to them, or around them.

Strauss’s get-under-your-skin outfit have served up some sobering lessons to their opponents on this tour, both at one-day and Test level, and regardless of whether they are actually better or not.

His opposite number Smith made a remarkably honest, telling statement before the Newlands Test: “Maybe the players need to be challenged a little more in terms of training; going a little bit harder is something we could perhaps look at.”

It forcefully suggested that a malaise, in certain respects, had crept into the home camp.

If the Proteas do surrender the Test portion of England’s visit as well, a vigorous post mortem on South Africa’s team hierarchy and other departments will be fully merited.

So the stakes at Wanderers are very, very high.

An overdue, comprehensive South African win against these dogged foes might be the minimum requirement to prevent some high-profile heads rolling, or at least coming under unprecedented internal scrutiny and absolutely deafening public flak …
 

 

Your Comments

Joe Naai1/14/2010 4:19 PM
Hope the proteas prove you wrong you bunch of negative ****s
Fikile1/14/2010 9:49 AM
White commentators and reporters, experts or posers, brain trust or brainless trust. JP highest paid IPL player does not make the team. Would smith captain the team would he even make the team no Would arthur be coach no. Now tell me where the problem with the proteas are.
360Deg1/14/2010 9:33 AM
In your combined team why is Boucher ahead Matt Prior. Prior is a better keeped and a better batsman. why Graham Onions not ahead of Morkel or Styne? that would make it 7 4 England. showing that England has the superior team.
Michael1/13/2010 7:28 PM
Good read. Agree with you Rob. The Prroblem is that the Proteas dont believe in them selves going into final Test. They will try too hard or be too cautous. The Proteas are under pressure here, the weather will play a roll. The talk is that the Bull Ring suits the Proteas, well we know how history can be rewritten, my prediction is England a win in 4 days.
Nick Armstrong1/13/2010 2:17 PM
Another great read Rob! However - I have issue with one thing - and it reflects the current ill in thinking in SA cricket: The MYTH called Mark Boucher. Yes - he's had a good series - first time since when...?? His last century was vs Bangladesh in early 2008.....and before that - in 2004!! His Test ave is just over 30 (was 29,7 before the start of this series) - NOT good enough for a no. 7 wickey-batsman in a team who wants to be no. 1. Matt Prior's Test ave is around 43. As wicket-keepers - they are much of a muchness. So - Matt Prior would be the wicket-keeper. Boucher only has the dismissal records - because he has played in so many Tests. Divide the number of dismissals by the number of Tests played - and, obviously, the best record there, too, goes to the greatest ever - Adam Gilchrist. Truth is - Boucher's been dropping 'easy' catches since the late 90's (remember Donald vs Atherton in that brilliant spell in the '99 series in the UK - yes - Boucher dropped him before the infamous 'not out' off the glove). Boucher is everyone's 'pal' - a member of the inner-clique (Arthur: Smith; Kallis and now AB too) - who cannot be dropped. We will never - read my lips - NEVER be consistently no. 1 while we carry passengers in the team. AB should be our wicket-keeper coming in at 7 - ala Adam Gilchrist - who proved you CAN be wickey AND one of the best batsmen in the world! With AB at 7 - it will allow for the return of Ashwell to no. 5; with JP at 6. Then - either Alviro; Herschelle again or Andrew Puutick can open with Graeme Smith. But - alas - Boucher stays.......
Catch the Hug1/12/2010 3:06 PM
Will smith and mickey be fired when the proteas loose the final test aswell?
Centurion1/12/2010 3:05 PM
I doubt that England will be able to take 20 wickets at the Wanderers (like they did in Durban). Surely they will not doctor the ball in this test knowing that they will be closely watched.
no urgency1/12/2010 2:58 PM
First I would swop Broad or Onions for Morkel, second Prior for Boucher. Prior seems to work better with the bowlers in terms of bowler w/k combinations. Broad and Onions seem to know more than Morkel on how to aim for the wickets when it is needed. You can't criticise Smith for the declaration. 145 overs to bowl out a team is enough time to bowl out a team, especially when you had taken 3-4 wickets going into the last 90 overs of the match. Most teams on average wouldn't last for the the full 90 overs with 3-4 wickets down. The problem it seems was a lack of urgency (2009/2010 RSA problem ) or bowling penetrative ability in the last 90 overs from RSA and of course that man Collingwood, who in my opinion has been the main deciding difference of the ODI, T20 and test matches. England out thought and out prepared RSA this time round and Collingwood has been the shining star.
Smiler1/12/2010 2:48 PM
England have been better at everything this series, but especially at bowling. I think they will beat us at the wanderers. Our players don't show form, or guts, or intent at the moment. It is very dissappointing. That's sport. That's life. Good luck to whoever wins. Hope it is SA
GeePMB1/12/2010 2:47 PM
@ Houston: I agree but it wont happen, CSA and the ICC steadfastly refuse to change the start times of games where it it a known fact that bad light affects play (Durban - almost every game!!). @ Rob Houwing: Being kind to our guys is all well and good in articles, but in reality, we do not have the bowlers to take 20 wickets. It matters not that we scored oodles of runs in Cape Town, we were let down by our bowlers - again. Praising the Proteas for good play but still losing is rewarding mediocrity. We did not win. The poms may see a draw as a victory but I certainly don't. Oh and I have one word for our bowlers: YORKER!!! Look it up in a bowling manual!!
Alan1/12/2010 1:47 PM
Why has Smith not been criticised for his declarations? On both occasions he over rated the chances of England batting last, expecting world record run chases. Scared? They fell well short of the runs, and the Proteas short of the wickets. Smith got it wrong....twice.
Twisted1/12/2010 1:42 PM
A snake-pit is always a risk - but so what. Go the whole hog and play without a spinner and bring in an extra bat (and hope no bowler breaks down). Or, don't panic and concede that problem was simply that the bowlers we had couldn't bowl England out in four and half sessions on those wickets.
Bullgod1/12/2010 1:28 PM
Speaking as an Englishman, I think you've summed up the state of the series pretty well. England are an improving side after their blip post 2005 Ashes when they lost Vaughan and Flintoff variously to injury and sadly Simon Jones and Trescothick it would seem permanently. South Africa on the other hand perhaps have seen a slight decline, though they still boast 3 or 4 world class players. I also think England are hungrier and probably have a bit more strength in depth. As for your combined team, I'd swap Boucher for Prior. Pieterson and Strauss have not fired so I'd go Cook and Bell on merit for this series.
Bobby Stoop1/12/2010 1:24 PM
Since our 3rd test defeat I have been thinking about this. Why not develop a cricket bat for last day pitches. We know how batsman want the liveliest bat possible – well develop one that is so dead that if you hit the ball it goes nowhere but straight down. No bad pad inside edges i.e.
James1/12/2010 1:02 PM
@WEZO, you sound like Peter Davies. Classic comment..On day 4 Boycott said to Davies that the unpenetrative SA attack in Durban has resulted in SA being hammered in the test match. Davies to many surprised cricket past heroes suggested that Boycott was been too harsh. Suggest that supersport replace him with someone like |Cullinan.
Warren1/12/2010 12:49 PM
Alltogether too kind on the Proteas Rob. They were very very lucky to have the Poms 9 down on both occassions. Only last minute collapses made the Tests mildly interesting. With this fairly average bowling attack, Smith has to get more attacking with his declarations
WeZo1/12/2010 12:29 PM
England are lucky! there is no chance they are better than us! we were convincingly better in two of the three games even though results make it out as DRAWS!! thats a bitch!
Houston1/12/2010 12:18 PM
I hope CSA take note of the weather and start the Wanderers test match earlier from day one, say 9:30 - guarantee parts of the test match will be impacted by afternoon weather..
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