GRAB
First Class Debutant
Criteria: not missed out because were too old once we reached post isolation, or because of constant / career-ending injuries (Martyn, Schultz, Ngam etc.), or because chose to play for another country instead (you know which two in particular.)
1. Andrew Puttick
Got an ODI in which he made a duck, but a consistent and compact domestic run-maker who, whenever there seemed to be an opening opening, someone else appeared ahead of him - Graeme Smith out of nowhere, the reinvention of Neil McKenzie et. al.
2. Terence Lazard
Broke a longstanding record for the highest FC score for South Africa for about month at the beginning of the 93/94 season before his record was in turn broken by one DC Cullinan. Chose to move from Western Province to the less ***y Boland team, and by the time our persistence with Andrew Hudson waned, he had faded to an early retirement... I do know we tried Rudi Steyn, Gerhardus Liebenberg and several others during that time.
3. John Commins
Made a lot of unsexy runs for WP and Boland, and amassed runs for SA A. Batting with a runner because of a groin strain, he forgot to not run, worsening his injury and running himself out. He could never force his way back into the side...
4. Justin Ontong
His first test he was under unfortunate circumstances. He struggled with McGill too, I think? Got another match 3 years later then was dropped again. After that, got pigeonholed as a limited overs player, despite piles of runs for Cobras.
5. Dale Benkenstein(C)
Also pigeon-holed as a limited overs player to some extent, though once the anointed successor as captain to Cronje. He struggled for any sort of fluency batting mostly seven in a number of limited overs games, but I don't think even got as far as a test squad...
6. Zander de Bruyn
Never sure what he did wrong to be dropped so quickly, although wasn't there a change of coach at the time? You feel if Jacques Kallis wasn't in the side he may have played more, as a top six batsmen with solid back-up fast-medium swing as a second string in his bow.
7. Nic Pothas (Wk)
Richardson's successor, but after Richardson is ruled out of the '96 WC, Palframan is selected, Boucher replaces Palframan at Border, and thereafter his chances faded... Never played a test, but I think he got 2 ODI's.
8. Ryan McLaren
Regarded as a bits and pieces player, I still feel at his best his bowling was test quality. Probing lines outside off and a wobbly seam work for Philander, and McLaren could bowl over 140... Got two tests four years apart
9. Steve Elworthy
Picked for the 1992 WC but an injury saw him replaced by Tertius Bosch. A beautiful, high action and lots of wheels he had to wait 6 more years for both odi and test debuts at the age of 33. He still played the last of his four tests at 37.
10. Claude Henderson
Four of his seven tests were on the ill-fated tour of Australia in 2001, where he was, along with Pollock, our leading wicket-taker. He got two more games against Bangladesh, where he was hardly needed, and we never went back to him again; this despite being a finger spinner who, on bouncy pitches especially, could be a genuine attacking option. It always felt like our spinners were picked on batting first...
11. Charl Willoughby
Left-arm fast-medium whose style of accurate fourth-stump bowling would be emulated by rightie Philander to great success. Got two opportunities against Bangladesh and England on dead pitches. If he was ever picked at Newlands you feel his career trajectory may have been different...
BTW, looking back, that's a lot of WP/Boland players, but I'm not a Cobras fan, so...
1. Andrew Puttick
Got an ODI in which he made a duck, but a consistent and compact domestic run-maker who, whenever there seemed to be an opening opening, someone else appeared ahead of him - Graeme Smith out of nowhere, the reinvention of Neil McKenzie et. al.
2. Terence Lazard
Broke a longstanding record for the highest FC score for South Africa for about month at the beginning of the 93/94 season before his record was in turn broken by one DC Cullinan. Chose to move from Western Province to the less ***y Boland team, and by the time our persistence with Andrew Hudson waned, he had faded to an early retirement... I do know we tried Rudi Steyn, Gerhardus Liebenberg and several others during that time.
3. John Commins
Made a lot of unsexy runs for WP and Boland, and amassed runs for SA A. Batting with a runner because of a groin strain, he forgot to not run, worsening his injury and running himself out. He could never force his way back into the side...
4. Justin Ontong
His first test he was under unfortunate circumstances. He struggled with McGill too, I think? Got another match 3 years later then was dropped again. After that, got pigeonholed as a limited overs player, despite piles of runs for Cobras.
5. Dale Benkenstein(C)
Also pigeon-holed as a limited overs player to some extent, though once the anointed successor as captain to Cronje. He struggled for any sort of fluency batting mostly seven in a number of limited overs games, but I don't think even got as far as a test squad...
6. Zander de Bruyn
Never sure what he did wrong to be dropped so quickly, although wasn't there a change of coach at the time? You feel if Jacques Kallis wasn't in the side he may have played more, as a top six batsmen with solid back-up fast-medium swing as a second string in his bow.
7. Nic Pothas (Wk)
Richardson's successor, but after Richardson is ruled out of the '96 WC, Palframan is selected, Boucher replaces Palframan at Border, and thereafter his chances faded... Never played a test, but I think he got 2 ODI's.
8. Ryan McLaren
Regarded as a bits and pieces player, I still feel at his best his bowling was test quality. Probing lines outside off and a wobbly seam work for Philander, and McLaren could bowl over 140... Got two tests four years apart
9. Steve Elworthy
Picked for the 1992 WC but an injury saw him replaced by Tertius Bosch. A beautiful, high action and lots of wheels he had to wait 6 more years for both odi and test debuts at the age of 33. He still played the last of his four tests at 37.
10. Claude Henderson
Four of his seven tests were on the ill-fated tour of Australia in 2001, where he was, along with Pollock, our leading wicket-taker. He got two more games against Bangladesh, where he was hardly needed, and we never went back to him again; this despite being a finger spinner who, on bouncy pitches especially, could be a genuine attacking option. It always felt like our spinners were picked on batting first...
11. Charl Willoughby
Left-arm fast-medium whose style of accurate fourth-stump bowling would be emulated by rightie Philander to great success. Got two opportunities against Bangladesh and England on dead pitches. If he was ever picked at Newlands you feel his career trajectory may have been different...
BTW, looking back, that's a lot of WP/Boland players, but I'm not a Cobras fan, so...