First time I read something of his. Enjoyed it.Ha ha, that was pretty good, Tom Eaton is pretty good when he writes on cricket.
I don't agree with him re: Hudders though, he was a great opener, and he was great to watch when he was playing well. His straight drives were poetry in motion.
I`m not convinced Morkel was our best bowler, think Philander was; he was more threatening more often even if he did not always take the wickets. Morkel bowled very well. My question is would he have done better than Olivier or Morris? and did he deserve to jump the queue with so little game time? Difficult choices. Morkel was not even making first choice once Rabada got in and was probably sitting behind Abbott. And for me you cannot compare Steyn to Morkel situation. Steyn is an atg... if you asked Olivier if he minded Steyn getting first dibs what would he say? And what would he honestly think about Morkel getting back in front.....If Morkel and Steyn are fit ?
Morkel arguably been our best quick on this tour.
Not convinced about Vern. He will never lose the skill and accuracy with his action but I don't think he was unlucky. It was coming - Kepler called it from match one and TT Boy before this test match. It is obvious. Our last tour to England when he won I definitely thought Vern was unlucky there though and could have bags more wickets. He had the zip to his bowling.I`m not convinced Morkel was our best bowler, think Philander was; he was more threatening more often even if he did not always take the wickets. Morkel bowled very well. My question is would he have done better than Olivier or Morris? and did he deserve to jump the queue with so little game time? Difficult choices. Morkel was not even making first choice once Rabada got in and was probably sitting behind Abbott. And for me you cannot compare Steyn to Morkel situation. Steyn is an atg... if you asked Olivier if he minded Steyn getting first dibs what would he say? And what would he honestly think about Morkel getting back in front.....
Additionally, I`m worried about Rabada`s pace, he needs a break big time, we are bowling him into the ground.
Anyone here know how the rehab is coming along ?I miss him
Steyn is on track I believe.... just crossing fingers for the best.Somebody asked on one of the threads if South Africa will be stronger if there weer no quotas - I was undecided.
The huge issue imo is when players of colour arent performing and the potential replacement happens to be white.It really hurts the team when one has to do some serious musical chairs to keep the ****ing numbers.
CSA to have 'Fikile ban' overturned? | Sport24
Anyone here know how the rehab is coming along ?
Yeah, lets hope they doI find that comment by the CSA VC reassuring, cause he admits problems with transformation... but talks about school level fixes, and correct the mistakes of how they approached the rural and township areas previously. Hopefully CSA lives up to his statements.
Yeah, I don't think our cricket would be stronger without quotas, although I'm still against them. I think they weaken our franchise stuff, but not necessarily our national side (for now).Somebody asked on one of the threads if South Africa will be stronger if there were no quotas - I was undecided.
Anyone with half a brain knows that's where you have to start. You could say that the entire XI has to be black, that's not going to lead to kids in Soweto getting cricket nets, or youngsters in Mdanstane suddenly being granted batting techniques which allow them to handle international bowlers.Steyn is on track I believe.... just crossing fingers for the best.
I find that comment by the CSA VC reassuring, cause he admits problems with transformation... but talks about school level fixes, and correct the mistakes of how they approached the rural and township areas previously. Hopefully CSA lives up to his statements.
Cook is playing early season for Durham, as is Elgar for Somerset, so caveat from the selectors should be to Cook that if he scores heavy runs, he will have the 1st test.I get what you guys are saying, but I reckon we should give Cook a go against England. Markram is still pretty young and one more season of domestic stuff and SA A games would be good for him I think.
It's not like we have no openers whatsoever and are desperate - we can afford to be patient.
That said Markram should probably be in the squad to the UK. I'm not sure what his off-season deal is, and unless he's playing for a strong English club, it would do him the world of good to tour with the Proteas when we go to the UK.
Khaya Zondo should also be there or thereabouts, and I don't think Bavuma's place is as secure as it could be. Zondo had a good season, and he deserves a call-up, especially after the fiasco in India, with his previous national call-up.
Yeah Rob Houwing is a bit more level headed than some...
I know but I guess as a cricket supporter supporting a team who has had relative dominant success for 25 years since re-admission you just know the current team is far from good enough for potentially tougher tests that lie ahead.
JOHANNESBURG - Aiden Markram admits that talk about him slotting into the Proteas side is frightening.
“I struggled with it at the start,” Markram said at SuperSport Park on Wednesday after the Titans’ lengthy training session ahead of Friday's Momentum One-Day Cup final against the Warriors.
“You might have a couple of good games and your name gets mentioned (as a candidate to play for the Proteas) and you don’t know how to deal with it. It’s quite scary.”
As daunting as all the chatter is, Markram’s gradually growing accustomed to it all. It helps having the likes of Mark Boucher, the Titans coach, Albie Morkel and in recent weeks, AB de Villiers, around.
“If you play for the Proteas and you come back to franchise cricket, then there’s a level of expectation if you channel it properly it can motivate you to do well, because you want to maintain that benchmark, but if you take it the wrong way, put pressure on yourself... it can also lead to your downfall.
“I did that, I put too much pressure on myself when I first saw my name mentioned, but the senior players, they’ve said ‘See it from the perspective that you’ve set the benchmark for yourself and now try and improve it’,” said Markram.
There had been plenty of talk about Markram playing for the Proteas even before he led the SA Under-19s to the world title in 2014. The volume of that chatter has increased this season, the first the 22-year-old has had at senior professional level. With Stephen Cook not establishing himself at the top of the order in the Test team, the attention on Markram has grown. Many will tune in on Friday to watch De Villiers in the final, but there will be almost as many interested in how Markram plays.
“The Proteas is the end goal,” said Markram. “You never know how close you are, you could be thinking you’re miles off and two weeks later, you get a phone call, like what happened with Lungi (Ngidi) - he didn’t expect that phone call. In the same way you may think you’re very close and then there’s actually two guys better.”
If that phone call is to come from the national selectors, Markram would prefer if it arrives soon. “The earlier you get involved in that environment it can only make you better,” he said.
Markram admits that if the goal of becoming an international player is not realised within five years, there’s only one person who can be blamed. “It will have nothing to do with anyone else, it would be (disappointment) with myself.”
Markram’s had a solid season, scoring over 500 runs in the Sunfoil Series, while in the One-Day Cup he set a national record when he made 183 against the Lions. “I don’t set my goals by numbers, for me it’s been a mental thing,” Markram said.
“Because I’m still pretty young, I’m focused on learning. There’s so much knowledge in our change-room, you can almost fast-track your career if you rub shoulders with those guys. Next season might be different, I might be playing more of a role in the side, opening the batting. But this season has been a good one.”
Having access to Boucher, De Villiers and Morkel among others, has been beneficial. “It’s unbelievable, you try and ‘sponge’ off them as much as you can,” said Markram.
Besides the 183, one of the highlights of the season was sharing some time at the crease with De Villiers, when the Titans beat the Warriors in Benoni two weeks ago. “Every ball I was out there batting with him, I had goosebumps. There wasn’t a big crowd, but the welcome he got was loud. It was really cool,” Markram said.
“It’s been a long season, but the guys are up for this game, like no other,” Markram said. “The Warriors love to scrap, that victory over the Knights showed that and we are expecting that,” Markram said.
I think he is a fast learner so he may have one or two struggles initially if we pick him possibly a year early but he will come through them. Seems a strong character like Biff was. But in style he has more aesthetics (cover-drive & particularly the mid-wicket drive) but yet a brutality as well in the cut and pull.Expecting a lot of good things from this chap, possible future captaincy candidate also
It's 8 out 8 if you don't count the T20 series against Sri Lanka, but Faf didn't play in that one.Some positivity 8 series wins out of 8 (Image : Faf du Plessis)