Introducing more front-foot cricket and the establishment of a more attacking culture instead of safety first, have been part of his outlook as coach of the South African team, said Ottis Gibson.
Ontong revealed that when he was first phoned by Gibson, he thought it was as a call-up to the national squad as a playing member.
He was surprised to learn that Gibson wanted him to be part of his management team.
His whole life was devoted to be playing 50 tests for South Africa, but things did not turn out this way. When he was selected for his first test in 2001/2002 in accordance with the transformation guidelines by the president of Cricket South Africa, Percy Sonn, the Australians sledged him.
He suffered a bit of mental hurt but he recovered quite well to ply his trade for the next sixteen years, he said.
“The dressing room was a lonely place back then,” he said. “I received enormous backing from Gulam Rajah (the team manager) and my room-mate Makhaya Ntini,” said Ontong.
When he was ready to be selected in 2002 in South Africa against Australia, he got injured and Ashwell Prince replaced him. (It was the start of a very successful test career for Prince).
When Prince was injured in 2008/2009, JP Duminy replaced him and it was the start of a great international career for him.
Both the president, Beresford Williams, and chief executive officer of the Western Province Cricket Association (WPCA), hailed the contribution of Ontong to cricket in the Western Cape over an extended period which included a golden era of five titles between 2012 and 2014.
Gibson said one of his objectives in 2018 and 2019 is to prepare the team to be the fittest that they can be before a Cricket World Cup. “The team possess the talent, the class and the match awareness to win the coveted trophy,” he said.
But sometimes players are picked in the Proteas squad and they are not able to sustain the intensity needed at this level. It is something he trusts can change.
The enlarging of the pool of white ball cricketers to be available for the World Cup has started and Junior Dala, Heinrich Klaasen and Lungi Ngidi are part of the group.
“When April 2019 arrives, we will have a selection headache, which is a good thing,” Gibson added.
Gibson said sport psychologists will be part of the one-on-ones in the build-up to the Cricket World Cup in 2019.
Probed about the qualifiers for the Cricket World Cup, Gibson said he would have preferred to see more teams rather than the limited group of ten to contest the World Cup in 2019.
Gibson said Kagiso Rabada is probably the best fast bowler in South Africa apart from Dale Steyn.
“We have a strong fast bowling unit, but we need to have more control of their strength and conditioning (in the countdown to the Cricket World Cup) than what is presently the case,” Gibson said.
“We must carefully manage their work load.”