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Kallis tags Proteas as CWC dark-horses

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Andile Phehlukwayo (AFP)
Andile Phehlukwayo (AFP)

Cape Town - Former Proteas all-rounder Jacques Kallis believes every team should be wary of South Africa at this year's Cricket World Cup

Kallis, who played in five World Cup tournaments, has experienced some of South Africa's painful moments in World Cup history.

READ: 10 best ODI players never to have won a CWC

The 43-year-old was part of South Africa's 1999 infamous semi-final tie with Australia and 2003's Duckworth-Lewis fiasco against Sri Lanka in Durban, which saw the national side crash out of the showpiece event they were hosting.

The Proteas have lost four World Cup semi-finals and never won the tournament.

"Of course you're aware of the 'chokers' tag the team is labelled with after losing in four semi-finals but I think the media make a bigger deal of South Africa not having won a World Cup than the players do," Kallis wrote in column for the ICC on Monday.

"The players don't worry too much about it. You realise that when you play international sport, if things don't go well for you then you are going to catch some criticism - that's fair enough."

There's indeed a fair amount of optimism that the group coach Ottis Gibson and skipper Faf du Plessis have assembled won't be burdened by past failures.

None of Kagiso Rabada, Lungi Ngidi, Aiden Markram, Rassie van der Dussen, Andile Phehlukwayo, Dwaine Pretorius, Chris Morris and Tabraiz Shamsi have played in a World Cup before.

"From a personal point of view, I never read too much media and maybe the outside noise affected one or two guys but it certainly didn’t bother the majority of us," wrote Kallis, the Proteas' leading run-scorer in ODIs with 11 579.

Another factor counting in the current crop's favour is that the South Africans don't quite rank as one of the favourites for glory, which could allow the team to blissfully merge their youth and experience without the distraction of high expectation.

That's not a luxury Kallis enjoy during his time.

"It's probably one of the first times they've gone into a tournament not widely expected to win it, which should relax the guys and allow them to play with freedom," he wrote.

"To be clear, they are most definitely more than capable of winning this World Cup though. They've got some world-class players and when they do get it together and play some good cricket, they're capable of beating anyone in the world. In a way they're almost a dark-horse side of this World Cup and every team should be very wary of them."

The Proteas kick off their World Cup campaign on Thursday against England.

Play starts at 11:30 SA time.

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