Pollock was the permanent, long term captain in the aftermath of Hansie for years, and captain for a couple of years after Hansie before Smith even debuted. The Hansie scars fall on his captaincy, not Smiths. Whether he was good or not, I can't tell you, but he got results.It's not about results , I am talking about the context of SA cricket ..That scandal and his death had a huge impact on the Sa cricketing landscape ..Pollock filled in but he was never viewed as a great leader that the public yearned for, who was not tainted by scandal.
.Also the WC is very important, Pollock got sacked as captain of both the test and odi team as a result of that exit to Sri Lanka.
Without that Graeme Smith does not become captain when Sa tour England in 2003 ..
Smith had a lot of doubters that he could be the next great leader in SA cricket at 23.
As for the quota system the mere presence of it has agitated players ever since its introduction, Charl Langeveldt and Justin Ontong were among the first rumored to be politically influenced selections, these were good players no doubt but it doesn't help for team dynamics on and off the pitch when there is official policy in place that places value on colour.
Captains get removed all the time for failure of some sort. Smith is hardly unique in replacing a captain, but he did have the advantage of inheriting a team that was winning a lot.
The Ontong quota thing happened under Pollock, not Smith. When he played under Smith much later, it was on the back of some monster domestic form IIRC.
Langeveldt got onto the team off some excellent ODI form. At a time when Nel was one of the main bowlers, and even Hall had got a lot of games. He obviously was a poor pick, but I don't think we can say he wasn't a merit one, especially not debuting with Hash, Gibbs and Ntini already exceeding the quota numbers they were asking for at the time.