South Africa face new dawn

On Thursday, 11 men will emerge from the Member’s Stand at Newlands to usher in a new era: an era of change, an era of growth and hopefully, an era of progress

Firdose Moonda in Cape Town12-Oct-2011Thursday, October 13 is the day that South African cricket will start again. After more than six months of lying curled away in hibernation, 11 men will emerge from the Member’s Stand at Newlands, in unsponsored green and gold, to usher in a new era: an era of change, an era of growth and hopefully, an era of progress.In some ways, it will be a false dawn, because it was AB de Villiers, not Hashim Amla who was supposed to look out to the east and see the rising sun. An ill-fated finger injury has forced de Villiers out of his first series as captain and Amla, the supporting actor who has never wanted to take center stage, will have to take the lead role.Once a man who avoided the spotlight even as it pursued him, Amla is now forced to stand in it. He is trying to do it with the humility that has turned him into one of the sport’s most beloved players. “AB is still the man for the job,” Amla told ESPNcricinfo. “I am only captaining because he is injured.”Such a modest statement could make Amla seem like a nothing more than grateful heir who has obtained riches beyond his imagination. But, there is a deeper side to his stand-in captaincy and it’s something he is taking very seriously. “We started something in the team, just before the World Cup, at the World Cup, that we want to continue, not performance-wise, but in terms of team culture, and hopefully I can continue in the same vein, with AB’s vision,” he said.The World Cup brings back memories of underachievement, potential unfulfilled, heartbreak, but now that there has been time to separate the team from that dark day in Dhaka, Amla believes they should revisit it. “You do get over things, I don’t think we needed five months to get over it, there were many good experiences,” he said. The performances of individuals like Robin Peterson and Imran Tahir were some of those, but it was the development of a team culture that focuses on being thoughtful that is the biggest positive many national players can identify.From Faf du Plessis to Lonwabo Tsotosbe, from Dale Steyn to Jacques Kallis, the South African team has spoken about being selfless, caring, passionate and understanding throughout the winter, and that’s not just to their better halves. On the face of it, they appear to have bought in to a strategy that will connect them to each other and whether it is a gimmick or not, it’s a method that Amla believes in.Fortunately, it’s also a method his predecessors endorse, which can only make things easier for Amla. Of the 10 players who will follow him onto the field, Graeme Smith and Johan Botha stand out as two that Amla will need to back him, having both enjoyed successful runs as captain of the side. He said the pair have embraced and helped him in his new role and that he regards their advice as key to his time in charge.”The way Graeme has conducted himself now that he’s not captain has been a huge benefit to everyone around in the sense that he’s basically one of the blokes,” Amla said. “We’ve also got Johan Botha in the team who’s a largely successful captain in his own right. Every captain has a few guys who he bounces ideas off and those two will probably be it for me.”

“I’ve learnt that you can’t take everything on your shoulders. Gary Kirsten is extremely well organised and I think the structures he’s put in place take a lot of pressure off the captain”

Amla last captained in the 2004-5 season, when he took charge of the Dolphins as a 21-year-old. It was an experience that left him disillusioned with leadership, because he felt it affected his own game. Now, the thinks he is a better place to cope with it. “I’ve learnt that you can’t take everything on your shoulders,” he said. “Gary [Kirsten] is extremely well organised and I think the structures he’s put in place take a lot of pressure off the captain, so I’ve been fortunate to have a few days to work on my batting and a few other things around the captaincy.”And that is the other side of South Africa’s anticipated metamorphosis – the introduction of a new coach, who is a nationally respected player and has won the World Cup. Gary Kirsten’s magic touch has been missed in India since April 3, but he has yet to show if it has been successfully transferred to his homeland. He had a low-key winter, preparing for the birth of his third child, having the occasional strategic chat with new bowling coach Allan Donald and, for four days at the Arabella Golf Estate, meeting the men he is responsible for.The running joke in South African cricket circles has been the nonchalance with which Kirsten has answered questions about his new role. “Haven’t got a clue,” Kirsten said in response to questions relating to how he would handle more than one captain, working with players he shared a dressing room with, and coping with the chokers tag. But Kirsten’s carefree attitude could well be what South Africa need to get over some of their lingering insecurities and play like the team they so often threaten to be.It’s the delicate touch that Amla thinks will work well. “His [Kirsten’s] style is not to impose, it’s to let players grow and I think that might work well, especially with the lack of preparation,” Amla said. It seems strange that after their longest break in 14-years, South Africa can complain about running out of time but the Champions League Twenty20 gave them just three days together before their first international of the season. “It’s not ideal,” Amla said. “But the guys have been at the Champions League so their skills are up, others have been part of the SuperSport Series, so it’s just a matter of connecting.”If any more motivation is needed for South Africa, it’s that rebirth is on the horizon against a country they would relish a second coming against. Australia are the best test they could have had, in the current context, and Amla says they are ready. “We know that perhaps the Australians are going through a rebuilding process. Our team has been much more settled than their team has been,” he said. “But, even though they may have a younger team, players that are not well known and not as experienced, they still play a competitive brand of cricket.”Come October 13, South Africa will show if they are competitive enough too.

Four consecutive sixes, and a quick recovery

Plays of the Day from the match between Kolkata Knight Riders and Somerset in Hyderabad

Abhishek Purohit in Hyderabad25-Sep-2011The collective effort
Bowlers step aside, modern fielders hunt in packs too. But sometimes, even three of them aren’t enough to prevent an overthrow. In the third over of Somerset’s chase, Rajat Bhatia threw at the stumps from mid-on and missed but there was a packed off-side field to fall back on. The ball first beat the diving fielder at extra cover and then slipped between men at cover and point. It was finally pulled back in style, though, with a slide and a relay throw to round things off.The weak wave
A decent crowd had built up for the night game but with the Kolkata KnightRiders finding scoring tough initially, the fans were kept relatively quiet.The DJ tried his best to bring the crowd to life, exhorting them to startthe Mexican wave. The crowd reluctantly obliged, but after aboutan attempt-and-a-half, the wave died quickly.The voice-giver
The crowd was brought to life a few overs later by Yusuf Pathan, whodecided to make Somerset pay for bringing on their fourth left-armspinner, Arul Suppiah. Coming on strike for the second delivery, Yusufgave the crowd its voice as he launched it over long-on. Each of the next three deliveries disappeared into a sea of delirium between long-on and deep midwicket. The lowest-priced ticket today was Rs 100, and it had already been worth it many times over for the fans.The recovery
With the Knight Riders reeling under the onslaught of Roelof van derMerwe, Shakib Al Hasan induced a high mis-hit from Peter Trego that swirledin the air over mid-on. Shakib settled under it but the ball was coming over hisshoulder and he grassed the catch, tumbling on to the ground. Instead offretting over the lost opportunity, however, he recovered quickly and,while still on the ground, fired a direct hit at the striker’s end tocatch Trego short.

'The game will be a little poorer without him'

A selection of tributes to India batsman Rahul Dravid, after he announces his retirement from Test cricket

ESPNcricinfo staff09-Mar-2012″Jam was a great character to have in the dressing room. He was someone who loved challenges; whatever was thrown to him throughout his career, whether he was asked to open, whether he was asked to keep wicket. He had a long contribution to Indian cricket. He had a great career. Someone who will definitely be missed.”

“We’ve always had some good battles. He is a very quiet and kind man. I had the good fortune of playing with him at the IPL and he was a man that worked hard on his game. He set high standards for himself and for India. What he has achieved in the game is incredible. He had one of the best techniques in the game and was always a prize wicket to get. The game will be a little poorer without him but I wish him well in his retirement.”

“‘I’ve been very lucky to have a really good association with Rahul. He’s probably the nicest guy – no he is the nicest guy – that I’ve met in cricket. He’s a phenomenal man. He loves the game with so much passsion, it’s in his blood and in his heart. He is certainly going to be sorely missed by the Indian public and the cricket loving public as well. I suppose I’m lucky that he’s my captain for Rajasthan, so I’ll continue to talk cricket [with him] as much as I possibly can, because I do love talking to him. He’s got a lot of knowledge to be able to share.”

“There was and is only one Rahul Dravid. There can be no other. I will miss Rahul in the dressing room and out in the middle. I have shared the best moments with him. Our many century partnerships are testimony to the hours we spent together in the middle. For someone who has played 164 matches and over 13000 runs, no tribute can be enough.”

“He was a perfectionist. His determination, technique and commitment towards the game was something special. It’s really tough to become another Rahul Dravid. It will not happen overnight. It has taken him long to get here; one has to go through a lot of hardships and commitment.”

“Everyone knows he is a legend of the game. He has been a great motivator and we all looked up to him. The manner he prepares for each and every Test match, it was a lesson for all of us.”

“[He’s] A constant friend and colleague I depended on for advice. An inspiration and a role model. Among Karnataka’s finest cricketing sons.”

“It will be a big hole to fill.”

“We have been privileged to see one of the finest cricketers India has produced. He is the kind of person who cannot be matched, he is actually irreplaceable. None of us want to see such players go away, we like to think they are permanent. It is a sad day. I have watched him grow from playing cricket in Chennai, there is hardly anything [left] for him to achieve. Thank you Rahul, thank you for what you have given to Indian cricket.”

“Dravid is not only a great cricketer but also an ambassador of the game, a role model and a gentleman. Runs apart, he is a cricketer who should be emulated by the youngsters.”

Jacques Rudolph's second coming

A demotion to No.6 in a stop-start career was one last chance for Jacques Rudolph to revive his Test career. In this Test, he has grabbed his opportunity

Firdose Moonda in Dunedin10-Mar-2012When Jacques Rudolph was recalled to the South African squad, it felt as though the sheer volume of voices speaking out in his favour was what carried him back in. In reality, the statistics probably provided the louder motivation – he was the leading run scorer in South Africa’s first-class competition, the SuperSport Series, in the 2010-11 season – by some distance. Awash in runs, he also seemed to have completely recovered from the crash of confidence he suffered towards the end of his first stint when a long, dry spell cost him his place.Rudolph has found sympathy which often translates into support from South African fans after his Test debut was denied twice. In November 2001, Rudolph was in the playing XI in the match was stripped of Test status because of the Mike Denness affair. Two months later in Sydney, he was listed on the South African team sheet but was removed at the request of Cricket South Africa’s then-president Percy Sonn, who insisted that Justin Ontong – a coloured player – play instead. On his eventual debut, in April 2003, Rudolph scored an unbeaten 222 against Bangladesh, confirmation for many that he deserved his debut both times before.A 14-month successful stint at the top soon whithered away. Rudolph’s technique was tested by the rampant Australians in 2006 and Sri Lanka the same year. His habit of playing away from the body saw him get few too many edges and his insecurities grew.When he was dropped, he took a decision to leave South African cricket altogether and accepted a Kolpak contract with Yorkshire, where his career blossomed. With fewer eyes on him, Rudolph had the freedom to develop and by the time he returned to his homeland he had more confidence in himself. He forced his way back into the national frame and was included under a weight of runs and popular opinion in the squad to play Australia and Sri Lanka.Expectation was massive. When he didn’t score enough, they were obvious concerns. His approach in five home Tests was out of sync with his approach as a cricketer to his personality outside of that. Rudolph was uber-aggressive, trying to score as quickly as he would have done in a one-day game. He played at everything, took needless risks and tried to impose himself on the game without reason.Rudolph flattered to deceive in seven innings at the top of the order. In every one he got a start, a quickfire clump of runs that teased the eye, promising more but never delivering. He was out to careless shots, a top edge from an attempted swing over mid-wicket, a pull that he couldn’t keep down off Thisara Perera. Rudolph admitted that in haste to prove himself once again, he made mistakes he should not have and he emphasised on shot-making, rather than time at the crease.Another failure of sorts awaited him. With almost as many voices calling for him to be dropped, in light of Alviro Petersen’s resurgence, Rudolph was dangerously close to the axe again. What happened was nowhere near as bad but it was still a defeat in a sense. He was moved down the order to No. 6, a position that is not his preferred one but he recognised it was a chance to continue playing international cricket. “It was a new challenge for me. I’ve been batting in the top three for 95% of my career and in South Africa, the wickets were not always easy to bat upfront,” he said. “I was given a lifeline batting at No. 6 and I took it.”Whether it worked could not immediately be assessed. Rudolph’s first opportunity to bat in his new home was on the flattest pitch the South African line-up had seen all summer. By the time he was able to test it out, Jacques Kallis was on his way to a double-century and when he was dismissed AB de Villiers came in to blitz away at his end. The friendly conditions and a weak Sri Lankan attack helped Rudolph work his way to a calmer half-century.Bigger tests would come and they would start in New Zealand. Unlike most of the South African side, he had been to New Zealand before and was the batsman with the highest average in the country. “My game suits these wickets, they are a bit slower as well,” he said.In the first innings, he came in with South Africa in a tricky position, on 90 for 4 needing consolidation. He gave himself time to assess the barrage of short balls, before pushing a wide one through the covers. He squeezed out the yorkers and waited for the boundary ball, showing patience on a tricky pitch. He survived an lbw shout off Doug Bracewell, only because the bowler had overstepped when he was on 38.Similarly in the second innings, Kallis convinced him to review a decision off Bracewell that replays showed had pitched just outside the leg stump. After that early wobble, the rest of Rudolph’s innings was chanceless. He drove particularly well, timing his shots carefully on a sluggish outfield and took advantage of a vacant third-man region. Most importantly, he showed a patience that had been lacking from his game since his comeback.”You’ve got to try and stick with one simple game plan,” he said. “As soon as you start going after the ball, you will get yourself into trouble. You don’t get good value for your shots. I had a checklist I wanted to go through and then also, it was important to leave well.” The mental shift, something Rudolph feels he did not quite get right since his comeback, particularly against Australia at the Wanderers in November, has now kicked in and Rudolph hopes it can help establish himself in his new position for the foreseeable future. “I would never turn down the chance to open but right now, six is where I am comfortable.”

Striking stumps, helmets and sixes

Brett Lee provided cricket fans with plenty of highlights during his 13-year international career. ESPNcricinfo presents a selection of five of Lee’s most memorable moments

Brydon Coverdale13-Jul-20121999: Rattling Ramesh
There is no bigger stage for an Australia cricketer to make his Test debut than Boxing Day at the MCG. That’s where Lee wore the baggy green for the first time, at the age of 23, and was already being spoken of as a bowler with serious pace and menace. When he was given the ball for the first time by captain Steve Waugh, it took him only four deliveries to have an impact. Lee rattled the stumps of S Ramesh, the India opener, with a delivery that angled across him and straightened back to take the inside edge. Ramesh didn’t quite know what had struck him. Lee finished the innings with five wickets, and a fine international career was under way.2002: The fall of Tudor, et al
This was not the first, and certainly not the last, time that Lee struck a batsman on the helmet. But it was arguably the most memorable. Alex Tudor, the England fast bowler, was a more than capable batsman whose best Test score was an unbeaten 99. He wasn’t capable, though, of handling a Lee bouncer at the WACA. Tudor misjudged the length of the ball and ducked into it, copping such a blow to the head that he was stretchered from the ground. Plenty of better batsmen also struggled against Lee’s short ball. Shivnarine Chanderpaul was knocked out by a Lee bouncer during a 2008 Test and lay flat on the pitch for a period, before he staggered to his feet and went on to score a century. Jacques Kallis was done by the old one-two during the 2005 Boxing Day Test, when he was hit on the helmet trying to hook Lee and was bowled next delivery by an inswinging yorker. And Adam Parore suffered the indignity of being out hit wicket during an ODI in Dunedin in 2000 when a Lee bouncer hit his helmet, which fell off his head and hit the stumps.Alex Tudor had to leave the field on a stretcher after a tangle with Brett Lee’s bouncer•Hamish Blair/Getty Images2003: An ODI hat-trick
Yes, it was against Kenya, but a hat-trick is a hat-trick. In the fourth over of a World Cup match in Durban, Lee reduced Kenya to 3 for 3 with a display of fast bowling that was simply too good for his opposition. He was fortunate to take the first of the three wickets, when Kennedy Otieno tried to leave a rising delivery outside off stump, only for the ball to ricochet off his elbow onto the stumps. Otieno went down writhing in pain, and as was always the case in such situations, Lee was the first man on the scene to check if the batsman was okay. The next ball was edged to slip by Brijal Patel, and the third was a fast yorker that whizzed under the bat of David Obuya and broke the stumps.2005: A batsman vanquished
Not all of Lee’s most defining moments came as a bowler. Arguably the most famous image of Lee is that of him squatting on his haunches being consoled by Andrew Flintoff at the end of the 2005 Edgbaston Test, one of the most famous matches in modern Ashes history. Australia began the fourth morning at 175 for 8, needing another 107 for victory. It appeared to be a hopeless situation. But Lee and Shane Warne, and then Lee and Michael Kasprowicz batted, and batted, and batted, and pushed Australia to within sight of what would have been an incredible win. Except that it wasn’t. Only three runs remained for victory when Steve Harmison caught the glove of Kasprowicz and the ball looped to the wicketkeeper Geraint Jones. Lee remained unbeaten on 43. In his retirement speech, Lee reserved special mention for this Test.Brett Lee celebrates taking a hat-trick in the World Cup against Kenya•Getty Images”That’s still one of my favourite Test matches to play in because of the way it was played, [in] the spirit of the game,” Lee said. “You don’t always have to get a five-for or a hundred for it to be a wonderful match.”2005: A ball that vanished
A happier batting memory came later that year, when Lee struck what can only be described as one of the biggest sixes in Australian cricket history. It came in a Gabba Test against West Indies, when Daren Powell put a ball right in the slot for a monstrous pull from Lee. The connection of bat on willow echoed around the ground and players, spectators and commentators seemed uncertain of exactly where the ball had ended up. The answer was over the grandstand and, as Wisden reported, the ball “landed near the feet of Carl Rackemann, the former Test fast bowler, shortly after he had passed through the turnstiles with his wife and young daughter”. There were no half measures with Lee, whether bowling or batting.

'I don't have a favourite Aussie'

The latest Bracewell in international cricket may be named after a star from across the pond, but Australians aren’t quite top of his list

Interview by Sharda Ugra23-Apr-2012Which Doug are you named after – your uncle Douglas William Bracewell or Doug Walters?

Doug Walters. My dad was a huge fan and knows him quite well, and he’s come out to NZ a couple of times and helped on my Dad’s academy. Dad’s loved him as a cricketer and a good bloke and he’s named me after him. The last time he came out to New Zealand and saw us when I was in high school, I was about 16 – about five-six years ago.Did he call you after Hobart to say well done?
No. I haven’t heard from him for a while.Is he your favourite Aussie?

I don’t have a favourite Aussie.Is there any man in the Bracewell clan who hasn’t played cricket?

There’s only one – Uncle Richard. He hasn’t had much sporting background. The others have played rugby and cricket. My uncle Mark played first-class rugby, and also my Dad. I played rugby until high school and I had to choose.How come you chose cricket?

Well, in high school I liked rugby more. But I broke my ankle, which ended my rugby season, and then in cricket I got selected for my associate and I started getting paid, so rugby kind of fell off the list.How many Bracewells have played in a match together? All six at any time? At any level?
No, never. My uncles played against each other a couple of times. There’s good stories there. I played with my cousin, who is my age, at the Under-19 World Cup. Two of my uncles played on the same rugby team, I think.Where were you when the All Blacks won the World Cup?
In Zimbabwe on a cricket tour. We could only see the first half because we were on the bus – we stopped and watched the first half and then had to leave. One of the guys was Skype-ing his girlfriend and she had her computer up to her TV, so we were watching that. There was a bit of shouting in the bus, and we were very happy. A couple of guys were asleep and tired from the night before, but most of the boys were watching.What was the hardest exercise at your Dad’s academy?

There were a few. There was a park – my Dad called it “Get Hard Park” – it was down the road from the academy and he would make us do sprints up a very steep hill. Good for you, but tough. That was the hardest.

My biggest weakness is probably fast food. Pizzas. I’ve eaten about 20 here already

Tell us about your tattoo. Does it mean anything?

The one that’s on my forearm doesn’t mean anything – it’s just a design I like. The one that goes up my shoulder is all family-oriented, all my brothers and sisters, mum, dad, nephews and nieces. It’s just family and where I was born. It is called is the closest to a butter chicken, isn’t it?The closest to a butter chicken is about half a kilometre from the Kotla.

Well, I do like a good butter chicken. The food here is definitely more spicy. I don’t do well with spicy – mild medium is enough for me. But I’ve had a lot of hotel food, and the curries are very, very good at the ground.Who’s going to win the Under-19 World Cup this year?
New Zealand.

'Amateurism endures, and mightily'

Gideon Haigh’s speech at the Bradman Oration in Melbourne, during which he spoke about the the importance and pleasures of club cricket, and the impact it has had on Australia as a country

Gideon Haigh24-Oct-2012I need hardly say what an honour it is to deliver the tenth Bradman Oration. I won’t say it’s daunting. That would be unfaithful to the spirit of perhaps the most dauntless cricketer who ever lived. But it is a privilege and an onerous one.Last year, Rahul Dravid delivered perhaps the best and certainly the most-watched of all Bradman Orations, a superbly crafted double-century of a speech on which, I remember thinking at time, it would be hard to improve.Now I find myself coming in after Rahul, a job so huge that India has traditionally left it to Sachin Tendulkar. By that marker, I can really only disappoint. All I have in common with the Little Master is that we are both grimly staving off retirement – although, of course, the potential end of Tendulkar’s career is a matter of moment to 1.2 billion Indians, while the potential end of mine concerns only my wife who would then need to find something for me to do around the house at weekends.I’m a cricketer. The game is the longest continuous extrafamilial thread in my life, and I’m attached to it as tightly as ever. I started pre-season training in April. I own a cat called Trumper. And while it’s hardly uncommon to have a cricket bat in the house, not everyone can claim to have one in the kitchen, one in the living room, one in the bedroom and one in the outside dunny.I represented my first club, the St James Presbyterian under-12Bs in Geelong, when I was 9; I played my first game at the mighty Yarras in 1993, and I’ll play my next one this weekend. The rest of my life has been contoured accordingly. I married my wife during a Christmas break; we became parents during the next Christmas break; on neither occasion did I miss a training [session], let alone a game. We delayed our honeymoon until it was a bit more convenient. Until an Ashes series in England, anyway. certainly thought it was convenient.They do say that the first step to dealing with addiction is admitting you have a problem. Okay, here’s my problem. I’m no bloody good. Oh, I’m not terrible. But, I mean, you can be terrible in a hilarious and companionable kind of way. Me, I’m just mediocre in a hanging-on-for-dear-life-oh-God-let-it-end-soon kind of way, one of those park cricketers who answers to the designation ‘allrounder’ because I basically do nothing very well, everything equally badly.The ineptitude, moreover, is now exacerbated by physical decrepitude. I don’t even need to playing now to be reminded of my age. This was brought home to me a few years ago when the Yarras were joined by a gangling youth, [by the] name of James Harris. Following my time-honoured philosophy that the lamest and most obvious nickname usually has the best chance of sticking, I naturally dubbed him Rolf – which I quickly regretted, as a look of incomprehension crossed his face.Anyway, I’m hanging in there. Sir Donald’s contemporary Ernie McCormick once said that the moment to retire came when you took off one boot, then the other 15 minutes later. I’m stable at around about 10 minutes.And, you know, lack of ability can add something to one’s cricket experience. When Michael Clarke hits one through the covers, he’s simply doing what he and everyone else expects; me, I’m getting a pleasant surprise. The top level player inhabits a world of pitiless absolutes; for me, and the likes of me – for we are legion – we’re in the realm of the relative, where ‘not-so-bad’ is good enough.That’s particularly so because of what I might call the compensatory pleasures. A few seasons ago, I broke the Yarras’ games record – a triumph of availability over ability if ever there was. On doing so, I was forwarded a spreadsheet of all the guys I’d played with in that time: about 400 of them. A few brought back no memories at all – that’s another function of getting older. But so, so many brought back happy memories, of shared struggles, shared gags, moments of joy, of disappointment, of relief, of redemption. There were a couple of d**kheads in there too – no club is without them, I dare say. But the proportion I’ve encountered at the Yarras has been vanishingly small.And, well, as we also know, that a club d**khead might be a d**khead, but he’s your d**khead. I’ve always liked a remark by Freddie Jakeman, who played for Nottinghamshire in the 1950s. He said: “Out of every hundred cricketers there’s probably two sh*ts. And if the 98 of us can’t look after those two, we’re a poor bunch.”I’m sure you understand what I mean. The club. We all have one. We might not see it much any more. But it’s like a first love – never forgotten.As a junior cricketer, I always took for granted that there would always be a game for me. As a senior, the most rewarding parts of cricket have been keeping the show going at a club that’s mainly had moths in its trophy cabinet and IOUs in its till.For grassroots cricket in the twenteens, I can tell you, is as precarious as it ever was. It’s not so long since we had a $3500 utilities bill turn up when we had $50 in the bank. Could we, wondered the president, become the first club to operate without electricity? Really, added the treasurer, the most profitable option would be to play no games at all, and simply to hold barbecues. The secretary rather liked the sound of this, having himself been unanimously elected at the annual meeting while on his honeymoon in Bali, and still to evolve an exit strategy. Alas for him anyway, we dug deep and found a way, which you tend to over time.Clubs are dependent on the goodwill of sponsors, who ask for little, offer much, and deserve whatever exposure you can give them. And I think everyone gains from knowing that the friendly staff at the Windsor Community Bank can assist with all your financial needs, that the calamari at the Union Hotel is delicious, that Lachlan Fisher at Fisher Cricket Bat and Willow is a prince among men … and that FlosFlorum is not only tops for flowers but lent us their van so we could retrieve our new bowling mats. Of course I may be wrong about that, but when you’re personally in charge of your club’s sponsorships you have to be a bit shameless, don’t you think?Clubs are likewise dependent on the good offices of their local council. Sometimes these remind me of an old gag. How many council recreation officers does it take to change a lightbulb? Answer: none because it’s no longer their job to change lightbulbs; there’s an independent contractor for that, but his tender was so low that you’ll get a candle only if you ask nicely. Actually that’s not an old gag – I made it up. But it sounds like it resonates with a few people.Mainly, of course, they’re dependent on people, and it’s often where you find those people at their best, because they are putting others’ interests first, and giving the gift of time, in which we generally these days feel so poor.I find the generosity of people towards their fellow man and woman through the medium of cricket deeply moving, and motivating. Behind the apparently ordinary individuals who volunteer their aid to the cause of sport, furthermore, unsuspected gifts can also lie.I like that story that Tony Greig tells about arriving in Adelaide for the Rest of the World tour in 1971, and being met at the airport by this dowdy, bespectacled old chap whom he took as some local association gofer there to carry his bag. When they had a bit of a chat, the old codger seemed to know a thing or two about the game. (South African accent) ‘Play some cricket, did you, old man?’ Greigy asked. (Reedy voice) “Oh, y’know, a bit,” said the old bloke. Just then Garry Sobers arrived and headed straight towards Greigy’s companion. “Hello Sir Donald,” he said.Sir Donald’s epic career, in fact, was bookended by administrative roles. Some of you will know that his first job at Bowral Cricket Club was as the first team scorer; I dare say that his books added up too. He was picked for his first game as a 12-year-old, in the time-honoured tradition, when the XI was a man short.When Sir Donald’s playing day was done, the master of the game became its foremost servant. While everyone revels in 6996 and 99.94 – and we were never going to get through the evening without an invocation of those totemic numbers – a stat love is that he also attended, for nothing, 1713 meetings of the South Australian Cricket Association. I also love the fact that someone bothered to make that into a stat.We inhabit a modern world in which vast and minute attention falls on a very thin layer of highly paid, wildly promoted and hugely glamourised elite athletes who regard the attribute of ‘professionalism’ as the highest praise. I mean, wants to be a professional nowadays: to do a professional job, to obtain professional standards, to produce work of professional quality, to exhibit professional pride. The porn star Randy Spears has explained that he manages to work up some lust for 30% of the women he has sex with in X-rated movies; the rest of the time, he is “just being a professional”.Yet even now, amateurism endures, and mightily. About a quarter of Australians participate in a sport organised by a club, association or other organisation each year. What proportion are paid for it, do you think? Probably closer to 0.1% than 1%.Club cricket remains our game’s biggest participation sector, with 3820 clubs in 570 associations enumerated at the most recent cricket census. And I suspect there’s something about battling through and totally ar*eing everything, just scraping teams together and barely making books balance, that becomes part of the pageant. You’re aiming to keep petrol in the roller, beer in the fridge and change in the till. But you’re maintaining a preparedness to laugh when, due to a breakdown in communication, it ends up that there’s change in the fridge, the till’s full of petrol and the roller’s full of beer.We like our clubs to be successful, of course, but maybe not so successful that they become big, rich, complex, impersonal. That might become a little too much like everyday life – from which, when we take the cricket field on the weekend, we are usually seeking some distance. There’s an interesting contrast, I fancy, between those groups we form ourselves, for our own enjoyment and beneficiation, and those formed for us, for maximum economic efficiency. The modern corporate world has developed to a fine art the act of building empires of strangers. For our own parts, we seem to prefer environments where it remains possible to know everyone’s name, where we’re connected by the intangibles of friendship and mutual reciprocity rather than by the formality of titles, ranks, reporting lines and organisational matrices.I’d go further. This is something Australians have historically been good at. The theory and practice of forming cricket clubs is in our blood and in our history. Within two years of this city’s settlement, citizens had founded the Melbourne Cricket Club, dedicated by one of its founders to ‘men of all classes, the plebian mingling with the peer, in respectful feeling and good fellowship’ – a character which it’s arguable it has maintained … assuming you can wait 20 years to find out.Melbourne’s first significant rival was Brighton Cricket Club, still prospering, 170 years young. Tasmania’s oldest surviving clubs date from round the same time, South Australia’s oldest surviving clubs from about a century and a half ago. They are older, therefore, than a majority of Australia’s legislatures, an overwhelming number of our municipalities, and all but a tiny handful of our commercial enterprises.

This is something Australians have historically been good at. The theory and practice of forming cricket clubs is in our blood and in our history

The overwhelming proportion of clubs, of course, do not endure anywhere near so long. They rise and fall because of geography, demography, availability of participants, accessibility of organisers, facilities and funds. But the habits they instil are those that build communities: of giving and sharing, of volunteering and responding, of balancing interests, nurturing culture, respecting history and generally joining in common purpose. Grassroots cricket can even, I fancy, claim an influence on the foundation of the Australian commonwealth.Cricket has always taken a certain pride in having provided an inspiriting example to the inchoate nation, the idea of a unified Australian team pre-empting that of a unified Australia. But there’s more to this. When you focus on the political actors in the period around federation, it is striking how varied and how deep were their cricket connections.Four key figures in federation, George Reid, Edmund Barton, Charles Kingston and Thomas Playford, also served as at least vice-presidents of the cricket associations in their respective states. Whilst a 22-year-old assistant accountant in the colonial treasury, Reid was elected delegate to the New South Wales Cricket Association by the Warwick Cricket Club – the same club, incidentally, as Dave Gregory, Australia’s first captain.After nine years, Reid became association treasurer, and he continued serving as association president whilst he was the premier of New South Wales, resigning only in the year before he became prime minister. Reid was not himself a noted player although he might have made a handy sight screen, being roughly as wide as he was tall, and he certainly sledged like an Australian cricketer. Once while addressing an audience from a hotel balcony in Newcastle, he nonchalantly propped his belly on the balustrade. “What’ll you name it, George?” called a heckler. Reid replied: “If it’s all p**s and wind as I expect, I’ll name it after you, young feller.”Consult the NSW Cricket Association annual reports in Reid’s time, furthermore, and you’ll find three future premiers, James McGowen, Joseph Carruthers and John Storey, acting as delegates for their clubs, Redfern, University and Balmain respectively. Carruthers and Storey, interestingly, were born rivals: Carruthers a hot-shot lawyer and dyed-in-the-wool conservative, Storey a state-school-educated boilermaker and a self-described ‘evolutionary socialist’. What made them unlikely lifelong friends was representing the same parliamentary XI. As Carruthers wrote in his memoirs: ‘There were other men of different shades of political belief in the cricket team, and I can say of them as I say of Storey and myself, that the bitterness of party strife disappeared during contact with one another in the cricket field.”In this city, around the turn of the century, the presidents of the St Kilda, East Melbourne, Richmond and Prahran Cricket Clubs were respectively also Australia’s first treasurer (Sir George Turner), Melbourne’s first federal member (Sir Malcolm McEachern), and the local members for their suburbs (George Bennett and Donald Mackinnon). Again, cricket exerted a surprisingly broad appeal: Turner was a stolid bookkeeper, McEachern a bold entrepreneur, Bennett a radical Catholic from Banffshire who championed the eight-hour-day, Mackinnon a silver-haired Presbyterian educated in classics at Oxford, later to become both president of the Victorian Cricket Association and Australia’s wartime director-general of recruiting.Admittedly, the era’s foremost political figure, Alfred Deakin, professed no great love for cricket. But when he wanted to describe Australian politics in the era of its split between Labour, free traders and protectionists, Deakin deployed a famous cricket metaphor: it was, he said, like a cricket match featuring three XIs – an idea so outlandish that it has not even occurred to Mike McKenna yet.In Deakin’s ministry, meanwhile, was a Queenslander rejoicing in the name Colonel Justin Fox Greenlaw Foxton, who in cricket rose highest of all: he was simultaneously chairman of the Australian Board of Control and Grand Registrar of the United Grand Lodge of Queensland after nearly 30 years in local and federal politics.While researching this oration, I dug out press reports of the Athenian Cricket Club which Foxton helped to found in Ipswich in the 1860s when he was a teenaged articled clerk. There obviously wasn’t much happening in Queensland a hundred and fifty years ago, because Brisbane’s gave extensive coverage to the Athenians’ inaugural annual meeting, held in Ipswich’s Church of England schoolroom in March 1867, where Foxton, then just 17, presented the treasurer’s report, which was deemed ‘most satisfactory’.The report continued: ‘There has been a decided improvement in the play in the last 12 months both on account of the accession of new members and the natural result of practice. It is to be regretted that practice is not more numerously attended; the ground has not been in good order and this has rendered play unsteady.’ Colonel Justin Fox Greenlaw Foxton would not have recognised what cricket has become today, but he would have been right at home at the Yarras committee meeting I attended last week. Ground’s a bit rough – tick. Attendance at training a bit spotty – tick. Unsteady play – big tick. Otherwise, ticking over well.Cricket and politics have never interpenetrated in this country as deeply as in others – thankfully so. But there is something significant, I think, about club cricket having loomed so large in the lives of so many involved in the early fashioning of this nation. As I observed previously, in order that everyone bats, bowls and fields in club cricket, some must get organised, elect officials, hold meetings, weigh interests, manage finances, and delegate responsibilities – skills readily transferable to wider fields.We can couch this more generally too. For numberless millions of Australians since, a sports club has been their original and most tangible experience of day-to-day democracy, and their greatest means of investment in civic amenity. The historian John Hirst has called Australia’s a ‘democracy of manners’. Australia, he observes, is short on inspirational rhetoric where democracy is concerned: our constitution is silent on citizenship; our curricula have no great tradition of civic education. What we have instead, says Hirst, is a way that ‘Australians blot out differences when people meet face to face’ and ‘talk to each other as if they are equals’. In no environment has this tended to happen more spontaneously than when individuals band together in pursuit of a sporting goal. Club sport remains, I would argue, the most inclusive, evolved and constructive means by which Australians express their instinct to associate.Better yet, our clubs are distinguished to this day by actually working. In our daily lives we are regularly beset by institutions that leave us feeling powerless, voiceless, helpless. Government institutions. Commercial institutions. Financial institutions. Religious institutions. Media institutions. It’s easy to think: What does it matter what I do? What influence can I possibly have? At the little sporting institutions we make for ourselves, we aren’t powerless; we can and do make a difference; we can put a shoulder to the wheel and feel the thing move.It’s a sorry reflection on the times that so few, outside an immediate circle, seem to grasp that. As if the thrall of the television remote and the atomisation of the working week were not enough, community sport has suffered gravely from the climate of financial stringency and sterile users-pays philosophies.’But we subsidise sporting clubs in our community,’ complain local governments, oblivious to the way sporting clubs subsidise local governments by mobilising free labour and local expertise, contributing to social cohesion and civic texture. In fact, the minuscule funding support local sport receives has colossal multiplier effects. And if this can’t readily be ascertained by economic models, then the answer is new models, because the old ones aren’t working any more.But I can’t hold local governments wholly responsible. I also fear that from time to time a sort of mechanistic view of grassroots cricket prevails within cricket itself. It is regarded simply as kind of squeaky and unpainted front gate to one of those glorious ‘pathways’ one hears so much of – ah, the pathway, paved with gold, strewn with primrose petals. ‘New markets’ is the clarion call; but what of the old? All we’ve got to recommend us is that we love the game – and we wonder, from time to time, whether the game still loves us.Some of you would have seen the figures of the recent Australian cricket census, which were touted as showing cricket to be the country’s biggest participation sport at the same time as it disclosed a 3.5% decline in the club cricket population.We don’t have the advantage of exist interviews, of course, but I wonder how many of those individuals passed out of the game because they don’t like the way it is run, and promoted, and headed. I don’t wish to spread alarm, but this would not wish to be remembered as the cricket generation that grew so obsessed with flogging KFC and accumulating Facebook likes that it let its core constituencies fade away.Tomorrow, an annual meeting of Cricket Australia will finally phase out the system by which it has been governed since 1905, under which its board has been composed of the nominees of state associations drawn from the delegates of their premier, district and grade clubs. It’s a system that has had a lot of critics, me among them, and I’m not about to mourn its passing. But it has always exhibited one particular virtue – that of recognising the integral role of the club in the cricket of this country, and the value of the volunteer in a sporting economy that could not otherwise function. And it would be remiss of cricket if it simply marched into its corporatist future without a backward glance, or a sideways acknowledgement of cricket’s hardiest faithful.In that spirit, I’d like to close this speech the old-fashioned way, by proposing a toast. To the club. It’s the beginning of us all. To your club. For all that it has done for you; to all that you have done, and might yet do, for it.Ladies and gentlemen: to the club.

Bosisto and Turner quietly do the job

William Bosisto and Ashton Turner, who have played together at school and then in age-group cricket for Western Australia, have been critical to Australia winning three out of three games in the Under-19 World Cup

George Binoy in Townsville18-Aug-2012Australia captain William Bosisto and offspinner Ashton Turner, two of four players from Western Australia in the Under-19 World Cup squad, have not made headlines yet. Those have gone to the fast-bowling group and the more aggressive batsmen but the duo’s contributions have been critical to Australia winning three out of three games in Group A.Bosisto’s only made 78 runs in three innings, but is yet to be dismissed in the tournament. His unbeaten 35 against England steered Australia through a testing period of the chase and helped secure victory. His contributions, and his ability to not give away his wicket, have not escaped the coach Stuart Law’s attention. He said there was “no nonsense” about Bosisto.”I’m really pleased with the captain, the way he’s handled himself on the field, and with the bat he’s yet to be dismissed,” Law said. “He just goes about doing the same thing all the time, and to be a consistent international cricketer you’ve got to stay pretty much the same all the way through, no matter what the situation. He’s done that brilliantly.”In Australia’s third game, Bosisto faced 84 balls for his unbeaten 36 against Ireland, showing patience even though the target was only 130. “I think that’s my role in this side, we’ve got a lot of aggressive players who like to get moving and get the scoreboard ticking over,” Bosisto said. “So I think my role is to rotate the strike and get those blokes on strike so they can score quickly. And then when it comes to the end of the innings, I can score quickly too.”Law was also impressed by Bosisto’s captaincy during the group stage. “When he’s had the opportunity to really attack, he’s done it,” Law said. “He’s probably been too aggressive and that’s not a bad thing, that’s a great thing. If you can teach captains to be aggressive and set fields to take wickets rather than set fields to stop a bad ball getting hit for four, it’s amazing how many good balls are bowled.”Shane Warne always emphasised the importance of a good rapport between a captain and a spinner and Bosisto has that with Turner, who became Australia’s first-choice spinner after Ashton Agar broke a finger. While a four-pronged pace attack has been the spearhead of the bowling unit so far, Turner’s managed to take the most wickets, seven in three games.Bosisto and Turner go way back, having played against each other at school and then with each other in age-group cricket for Western Australia. Turner reckons he’s played more than 100 games of cricket with Bosisto.”We get on really well, he knows my game really well, he knows how I bowl in certain situations,” Turner said. “He’s very good at reading the game and knowing when he wants the spinner to come on. When I feel like it is time for me to bowl, I generally look over and he’s already thinking about it and he gives me the nod and I’m ready to go.”The feeling is mutual. “It’s quite easy captaining blokes who know the fields they want,” Bosisto said of Turner. “He’s a smart cricketer himself so he knows how he’s trying to get the batsman out and restrict scoring. I think we work quite well together. We kind of know how the other thinks.”Coming into this World Cup from Western Australia, Turner’s had to get used to a couple of things he wasn’t quite familiar with. “I haven’t played too much cricket in Brisbane or Townsville so it’s sort of new for me as well. [The pitches are] quite hard, they are not really suitable to spin bowling, but I’ve been able to get a bit out of it, so it’s pleasing.”The three-match series against Pakistan on the Gold Coast before the World Cup warm-ups was also the first time Turner played a 50-over game with a new ball at either end. He’s enjoyed bowling with a ball that is about ten overs old. “I find it really easy to grip and obviously it drifts quite a lot, especially because it’s so hard,” Turner said. “I think it offers a little more variation, because if it hits the shiny side, which is harder, it does skid on a bit. The seam is hard still so some spin and some slide on.”Turner’s chosen a craft in cricket that is quite easy to be average at but difficult to master, and few finger-spinners in Australia have had long international careers. He knows the importance of developing into an attacking bowler rather than a largely defensive one. “I like to read the play and know that when the situation suits I can be attacking,” Turner said. “It’s not always about being attacking every ball, but when I feel like I have built pressure, and pressure is coming from the other end, I can slow the ball down and I can try and drift it a bit. I can really put some revs on it and try and spin it as much as I can.”As the pitches wear during the latter stages of the World Cup, Turner’s role in the Australian attack could be more prominent. And when this tournament is done, he and Bosisto will return to Western Australia, where they both have rookie contracts for the coming year.

Afridi sinks South Africa, and Sri Lanka's new tricks

Our reporters look back on their favourite World Twenty20 matches

George Binoy16-Sep-2012

Pakistan v South Africa, 1st semi-final, World Twenty20 2009

Shahid Afridi was in full flight at Trent Bridge•Getty ImagesThe warm-up: The first semi-final of the 2009 World Twenty20, in Nottingham, was contested by sides that played cricket in extremely different ways. South Africa were military: scarily fit, precision drilled, disciplined and in prime form. They looked like a team from a more advanced future and, having blitzed most opponents to enter the final four unbeaten, were favourites.Pakistan were more familiar. They had dropped two games in the group stages, defeats caused by errors characteristic of a team that relied more on raw talent than any sort of method. The only strong side Pakistan had beaten was New Zealand. Younis Khan, the captain, had even made this bizarre comment after the loss to England: “It’s not a disaster for Pakistan if we fail to qualify for [the] Super Eight round because this Twenty20 cricket is all about fun, though its an international but it’s all a fun game.”And so it began, the semi-final between a team that was destined to be at Trent Bridge and a team that had somehow got there.The match itself: South Africa did not choke. They were overwhelmed by a spirited Pakistan led by their most visceral, natural player – Shahid Afridi. Batting at No.3, he began by lofting his first ball, off one of the tournament’s best bowlers Wayne Parnell, over mid-on for four, and continued to choose his moments well. There was no mad slog that been the end of so many Afridi innings. After hitting Jacques Kallis for two fours, Afridi blew him a cheeky little kiss. He tore into Johan Botha, hitting him inside out for three consecutive boundaries before cutting for the fourth in the over. Afridi made 51 off 34 balls and contributions from Shoaib Malik and Younis Khan led Pakistan to 149 for 4.South Africa started smoothly, reaching 40 in the sixth over before Graeme Smith fell. Afridi came on in the seventh and ripped a leg break past Jacques Kallis’ bat. Two balls later, Herschelle Gibbs played for the legspin but the ball skidded into him and through his defences. Afridi, Saeed Ajmal and Shoaib Malik slowed South Africa down and, even though Jacques Kallis made 64, no one batted around him. They were contained and fell seven runs short.Highlight: In the over after he bowled Gibbs, Afridi produced a legbreak that found an outside edge from AB de Villiers. Kamran Akmal dropped it. The next ball was a slider; de Villiers tried to cut it but played on. Afridi stood mid-pitch, legs splayed, chest thrust out, right arm pointing skywards, drawing his team-mates like a magnet, exuding machismo.Few cricketers can get a crowd going like Afridi can. The sizeable number of fans that had turned Trent Bridge into a home venue for Pakistan had already been stirred into frenzy by Afridi’s innings, and his twin strikes only amped up the atmosphere. The DJ indulgence his audience, playing and the fans sung passionately in unison. They partied hard during the game and long after, jamming the roads around the ground, clambering on top of cars and blaring horns during deliriously happy celebrations. Those Pakistan fans were a credit to the competition.The aftermatch: Pakistan covered themselves in glory at Lord’s, with Afridi playing another starring role against Sri Lanka in the final. Their victory brought joy to fans in Pakistan, who would not be able to watch international cricket at home for years, following the terror attack on the Sri Lankan team bus only a few months ago. Younis Khan promptly announced his retirement from the Twenty20 format at the post-match press conference.South Africa were easily the best team in the tournament until that point and were left fielding questions with the C word. But it wasn’t a choke, it was Shahid Afridi.

****

Sri Lanka v West Indies, 11th match, World Twenty20 2009Tillakaratne Dilshan’s Dilscoop was a new phenomenon in the World Twenty20 2009•Associated PressThe warm-up: Sri Lanka, West Indies and Australia were pooled in Group C of the 2009 World Twenty20 in England. And because of Chris Gayle, Andre Fletcher, Lasith Malinga, Ajantha Mendis and Tillakaratne Dilshan, Australia had already been eliminated by the time Sri Lanka and West Indies met, so their contest at Trent Bridge was merely to decide which team would top the group.The match itself: Chris Gayle missed the game because of a knee injury sustained against Australia and so it was Sri Lanka’s left-hand opener, a much older Sanath Jayasuriya, who put on a show. Thriving on the width given to him, Jayasuriya cut and drove like he did in his heyday, and whipped balls off his pads when the line was too straight. His innings was a blur of boundaries square of the wicket and he dominated most of the early scoring.However, when Dilshan hit his first boundary, he did so with what was later christened the Dilscoop, chipping Kieron Pollard over the wicketkeeper’s head. The shot and its variants are common now but at the time the world had onlyseen it once, when Dilshan had played it against Australia. Two balls later he cracked Pollard over the point boundary and Sri Lanka were firing from both ends. The opening partnership was a thundery 124 by the time Jayasuriya fell in the 13th over and Sri Lanka eventually made 192 for 5. Both openers had faced 47 balls: Jayasuriya made 81, Dilshan 74.West Indies’ chase began swiftly too, through Lendl Simmons and largesse from Sri Lanka’s bowlers and fielders. They were 70 for 1 in the seventh over when Muttiah Muralitharan and Ajantha Mendis (M&Ms they were called) struck three times in eight balls, reducing West Indies to 73 for 4. The run-rate had to reduce thereafter but Dwayne Bravo kept his team in the game with a half-century. His dismissal in the 18th over – caught off Malinga – was what swung the game decisively Sri Lanka’s way. They won by 15 runs and topped the toughest group in the tournament.Highlight: Acrobatic feats on the boundary have proliferated over the last couple of years, but they were a rarity in 2009 and Angelo Mathews’ pioneering effort at Trent Bridge will still rank among the best. Ramnaresh Sarwan lofted Ajantha Mendis towards the long-on boundary, where Mathews back-pedalled to take a well-judged catch while still on the move. Realising his momentum was going to take him over the rope and result in a six, Mathews lobbed the ball up in the air and then stepped over the boundary. He whipped around quickly to see that the ball was descending over the boundary and showed incredible presence of mind to leap into the air and forehand the ball back into play. The whole act was done in a couple of seconds. He hit the non-striker’s stumps directly from the deep as well, by which time the batsmen had run three, and after endless replays the umpires decided that Mathews’ brilliance in the field had indeed saved Sri Lanka three runs.The aftermatch: West Indies finished second in their preliminary group and were second in their Super Eights group as well, by beating England and India, and losing to South Africa. They faced Sri Lanka once again, in the semi-final at The Oval, and lost by 57 runs. Dilshan plundered 96 and Mathews took three wickets in the first over to destroy the West Indian chase.Sri Lanka won all three Super Eight group matches and beat West Indies in the semi-final to set up a summit clash against Pakistan at Lord’s. It was a match between two teams that had been part of one of cricket’s worst days – the terror attack during Sri Lanka’s tour to Pakistan a few months ago. In the final, Dilshan was dismissed for a duck, and Sri Lanka were kept to 138, which Pakistan chased with eight wickets in hand and eight balls to spare.

Entertainment guaranteed with Test mace on the line

South Africa and Australia have consistently produced high quality, exciting Test cricket when playing each other recently. Will the battle for the title of world’s best throw up another classic series?

Brydon Coverdale in Brisbane08-Nov-2012First it was 2-1 to South Africa. Then it was 2-1 to Australia. Next it was 1-1 in a pitifully short series last November. The battles between Graeme Smith’s men and Australia over the past four years can be bracketed together, such has been the shared narrative running through the contests, and the two teams will walk out on to the Gabba on Friday locked together at 4-4. There has not been a draw or a dull match among them. Now it’s time for the decider. A grand final spread over four weeks and three cities.Of course, it is not strictly correct to call this the tiebreaker, for they meet again in South Africa in 2014. But by then the teams from those 2008-09 encounters could be those of a bygone era. Should Ricky Ponting and Michael Hussey retire after next year’s back-to-back Ashes – if they make it that far – Michael Clarke and Peter Siddle may be Australia’s only remnants of that first 2008 series. South Africa have also lost a few veterans and by 2014 may have said goodbye to Jacques Kallis, although he appears so indestructible that he might still be around when Pat Cummins retires.Victory by any margin in this series for either team will give them a lead in their head-to-head, as well as the ICC’s Test championship mace – the latter perhaps only briefly though, as England’s results in India could shuffle the table again. The fact that the No. 1 ranking is up for grabs, as it was when Australia under Ricky Ponting toured South Africa in early 2009, is an indication of how little separates these teams. This time it’s Smith’s side that holds top spot, but given the troughs Australia have been through over the past four years it’s difficult not to think South Africa should be further in front.Have they made the most of this period of South African strength, an era in which Dale Steyn, Morne Morkel and lately Vernon Philander have clinically dissected batting line-ups all over the globe? Do they have the killer instinct required to stay on top, and to increase the gap between themselves and the rest of the world? It is notable that over the past four years, South Africa have won less than half the Test matches they have played; Australia have won more than half of theirs, despite two Ashes debacles.But enough numbers. To reduce these contests to a set of statistics is like describing the Mona Lisa as oil on poplar, 77cm x 53cm. Over the past four years, the meetings between Australia and South Africa have been as remarkable as modern Test cricket gets. They have been eagerly anticipated by fans from all over the cricket-playing world. If every Test match was as gripping as the eight put on by these two sides, day-night cricket wouldn’t be necessary because fans would skip work to watch it.

Over the past four years, the meetings between Australia and South Africa have been as remarkable as modern Test cricket gets. If every Test match was as gripping as the eight put on by these two sides, day-night cricket wouldn’t be necessary because fans would skip work to watch it.

Think of Mitchell Johnson breaking Graeme Smith’s hand in Sydney, and the spine-tingling sight of Smith walking down the SCG race late on the final afternoon, barely able to hold the bat but determined to give his team every chance of salvaging a draw. Think of Johnson’s blood-on-the-pitch spell in Durban, where his bouncer struck Kallis under the grille, leaving his chin wounded and forcing him to retire hurt. Remember the twin tons Phillip Hughes scored in that match, his second Test.Think of South Africa’s near world-record chase of 414 at the WACA, when the debutant JP Duminy showed poise beyond his years to score an unbeaten half-century, and the 166 he scored the following week in Melbourne, where he and Steyn humiliated Australia’s bowlers with a four-hour tail-end partnership. Think of Marcus North’s debut hundred and Johnson hitting catches into the crowd as Australia won with three debutants at the Wanderers. Think of poor Bryce McGain, Australia’s 37-year-old rookie, being belted out of Test cricket in Cape Town, where Johnson’s thrashed 123 in a losing cause.And, of course, remember the day at the same venue last year when Australia were 21 for 9. Yes, . They scrambled to 47. On a day of carnage, parts of all four innings took place, only the third time it had happened in all of Test history. And on either side of the massacre, the greatest innings Michael Clarke has ever played, and a pair of match-winning hundreds from Smith and Hashim Amla. And finally, think of Pat Cummins, 18 years old and barely out of school, resurrecting Australia’s hopes with a match-winning display full of youthful joie de vivre at the Wanderers a week later.There is no reason to expect any less of this series. It is a battle between the world’s best pace attack and a bowling group with a bright future ahead of them. In the role of Cummins this year is the 22-year-old James Pattinson, whose swagger and skill make him irresistible to watch. Pattinson bowls with the speed and the outswing of Steyn. He doesn’t yet have the same consistency, but he is unquestionably the man to watch in Australia’s attack.The pace-friendly pitches at the Gabba and the WACA should help make this another series to remember. How will Amla handle the Australian conditions? Will David Warner’s bite match his bark? Will AB de Villiers be a shadow of the batsman he once was, now that the wicketkeeping duties are on his mind as well? Will Ponting be able to reproduce the form he showed last year against a blunt Indian attack?Does Mickey Arthur hold the inside knowledge that will end South Africa’s outstanding record away from home? And if South Africa win the first Test, can they go in for the kill?We’re about to find out. Enough talk. Let the grand final begin.

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