Heino Kuhn is chasing Rilee Rossouw, Dean Elgar, Stephen Cook and a piece of history, while bowlers have to pursue perfection…or punishment if they stray.
Kuhn has struck 854 runs at an average of 71.16 this season as opener of The Unlimited Titans. He is poised to become the first batsman to assemble 1 000 Sunfoil Series-runs since Rossouw (1 189 runs), Elgar (1 060) and Cook (1 013) achieved the feat in 2009/2010. The 31-year old right-hander only managed 336 runs two seasons ago at an average of 25.84.
Rob Walter, his coach, and Elgar spent hours in the nets to improve his technique. Playing straight early on, knowing where his off-stump is and not lunging at good-length deliveries on a fifth-stump line were part of Walter’s master classes to reinvent his four-day game.
“It is the best I have seen him bat,” says Elgar, who is constantly surveying Kuhn’s success from the bowler’s end as his opening batting partner.
“He is confident and much more mature.
“His game has evolved. He has ironed out a lot of weaknesses.
“Heino puts pressure on the bowlers and dismisses them when they stray wide or short. They know it. I am glad I’m playing with him (and is not opposing him),” said Elgar.
Henry Davids, the Titans skipper, says Kuhn is conservative in the first hour and might just play three different shots. His favourite is the cut, but he also pulls and drives well and can produce all the shots in the text book.
One of his greatest strengths is his ability to accelerate the run-rate by his expert running between the wickets.
“It is ridiculous. He produces runs for his batting partner and sometimes even takes two to long-off,” said Davids.
Geoffrey Toyana, the bizhub Highveld Lions coach, said he plied his trade at the Titans with Kuhn. “What I like about him, apart from his good defensive technique, is his positive intent. He is not merely intent on survival but on trying to score.”
Walter says Kuhn, at age 31, is good enough to press for a national call-up, not only in tests, but also in one-day internationals.
Morné van Wyk, who saw the Titans player smash 96 and 80 off the Sunfoil Dolphins during the past weekend, said attacks have suffered severe collateral damage at the infancy stages of the innings when the naturally attacking Kuhn pierces the many gaps in the field almost at will.