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Daily Maverick
4 days ago
- Sport
- Daily Maverick
The long walk to Lord's: SA's cricket comes full circle from adversity to historic victory
Scoring 69 runs with two days left in a Test match and eight wickets in hand should ordinarily be a doddle. But this was the World Test Championship final on the greatest cricketing stage in the world, Lord's. And this was our Proteas' fickle batting line-up without any of the superstars of former years and who had collapsed for 138 in the first innings. And it was an ICC event and so naturally the 'choker' epitaph was already being written. X and social media have been alight for the past few days. While most of it was good and predictable for this medium, some of it has been toxic and divisive. People were 'bringing receipts', that dreadful X-speak for being proven right or someone exposing themselves for who they are — or something like that anyway. And then the tweets about our incredible victory stating: 'This is for…(followed by names of players who had gone before).' Dare mention a white Proteas player and one is excoriated, usually followed by a list of black players only. Shallow reasoning for a shallow platform. Before we know it, we are down into a cesspit that is a mixture of racism, victimhood or plain foolishness. But social media is no place for debate or properly constructed thought processes. As Kyle Verreynne and David Bedingham ended up at the crease on day four with Verreynne scoring the winning runs, just two Wynberg Boys' High kids living the dream, it was hard to think of the long and arduous road that had preceded this moment of sheer joy. Perfect storm For the past decade and more, South African cricket experienced 'the perfect storm' with the retirement of key players between 2014 and 2020, inter alia, Jacques Kallis, Graeme Smith, Hashim Amla, AB de Villiers, Morné Morkel, Ashwell Prince and Vernon Philander, to name a few. It was, as with any sporting code, a sort of natural progression. Yet, continuing to grow cricket's post-readmission roots was more complex than many like to think and was stymied, in large part, by South Africa's unique affinity for self-inflicted wounds. Cricket South Africa (CSA) found itself beset by what is now familiar in most of South Africa's institutions; dysfunction, corruption, maladministration and self-interest. When then minister of Sports, Arts and Culture Nathi Mthethwa intervened in cricket at the end of October 2020 and appointed an interim board, he did so as a last resort. His intervention represented the final opportunity for CSA to fix governance issues or risk complete decline. The crisis had been brewing since the Members' Council had failed to course correct and implement the recommendations of Judge Chris Nicholson in 2012 for a governance clean-up after the 'Majola bonus scandal'. Then came Thabang Moroe's tenure first as acting CSA CEO in late 2017, and then permanently, which was nothing short of disastrous. The corruption and maladministration of this period has been well documented in the Fundudzi Report, which covered a 48-month period from 2016 to December 2019 investigating 'various governance issues and allegations relating to possible failure of controls and insufficient executive oversight within CSA'. While this was happening cricket withered on the vine, sponsors became agitated and threatened to withdraw given the chaotic state of administration. Internationally, South Africa's status has been eroded both on and off the field. Eventually the Interim Board managed to put a new governance model in place. Improving the administration remains a work in progress and a new governance model — like democracy — is imperfect, but the independence rooted in it is for the greater good of the game. Insipid leadership Within the new Board there is cricketing knowledge, but not enough, with some insipid leadership, but the corruption has been cleaned up. Some unions remain with their snouts in small troughs but the Board is working to ferret this out. The role of the South African Cricketers' Association, representing the players and dealing with player welfare, is a crucial part of the accountability puzzle. We are still paying the price for past wrongs. Working on broken trust between administrators, the board and players remains an ongoing challenge. Bavuma himself has been clear eyed in his assessment of the administration of the game and has been an astute champion of his players' needs. It is therefore easy to see how we lost our place at the top table of the ICC, how we took our eye off the ball — in this environment there was little space for the development of the game, especially at the club level. But it is not the role of CSA alone to develop a future pipeline of young players, particularly black players. Schools have a role to play, but they can only do so if properly resourced by the government. That requires money and partnerships. It also requires a focus on the importance of a holistic education, thus building a healthy society in which talent is recognised and nurtured. So, successive ministries of Sport, Arts and Culture cannot escape accountability for the failure to see the importance of equipping schools for sport. (The incumbent minister, a dangerously clownish and unserious man, lacks the insight to do anything but sloganeer, unfortunately. Sport really does deserve better, as do the arts.) Beleaguered as the administration was and managing to lose major sponsorships (who would sponsor a corrupt sporting body intent on destroying its only asset?), enter the #SA20 with Graeme Smith as its commissioner. It is this, the proceeds of the India tour and some may say a weakening exchange rate helping CSA's revenue line that keeps cricket in South Africa afloat. While the slap bang of T20 cricket is not for the purists, it is a necessary 'evil'. This short-form, India-led version of the game pays the bills and keeps most of the lights on. It is ubiquitous and has morphed into the Tens. Other abominations will no doubt follow. Test cricket the pinnacle Even Smith as commissioner would agree with Aiden Markram, who reiterated after his epic innings at Lord's this weekend that Test match cricket is the pinnacle. Nothing is like it, nothing beats it. It is the ultimate test of concentration, skill, resilience and nerve. It's a game beautifully languid at times with each session telling its own story. It is also somewhat counter-cultural to the zeitgeist of immediacy. It is a tired point but our Future Tour Programme only has a local Test match on home soil in 18 months time. A travesty. So, as ICC chairperson Jay Shah stood on the podium this weekend, there was no love lost. Led by India, the ICC with Australia and England in tow have made Test match cricket the preserve of wealthy cricket boards. This has exacerbated South Africa's already problem-riddled position. But CSA now has a unique opportunity to leverage Saturday's victory for the good of Test cricket. Will the administrators be able to step up to the plate with the appropriate gravitas required, garner support from other countries and stare down the behemoth that is India (and The Other Two)? Now may well be our narrow window of opportunity. Finally, we cannot write about this victory without speaking about the ever-present narrative of race in our country and in sport. It always hums softly in the background. As Bavuma lifted the mace — who could not be moved — this diminutive black man, so often disparagingly called a quota player, finally had the better of the naysayers. This weekend Kevin Pietersen was full of high praise for the Proteas. It was Pietersen who left South Africa because he could not be guaranteed a place in the Proteas team by then CEO of CSA, Ali Bacher. The height of white privilege, some may say. Pietersen went on to play for England, insulted our country as a 'good place for cheap holidays' and in 2016 said of Bavuma, 'I don't know who that kid is who bats six, (Bavuma), I don't know why he's batting in that line-up…' Presumably Pietersen now knows who 'that kid' is. To have a thoughtful discussion of race and cricket requires more than the often-performative Social Justice and Nation-building (SJN) process that happened during the tenure of the Interim Board of CSA, a process inherited from the previous Board under the unwise stewardship of then CSA director Eugenia Kula-Ameyaw. Sloppy It was poorly led by Dumisa Ntsebeza and shed more heat than light. There is little need for the detail to be traversed here, save to say that the process, to a large degree, eschewed complexity. The final report was sadly sloppy. Past traumas are unresolved and they are manifest within the game, its culture and how we hold memories. When one wanders the corridors of the Western Province cricket club at the iconic Newlands Stadium, for instance, it is awash with portraits of past teams and players. One is drawn again to the injustice of the past. When we hear Shukri Conrad, the current Proteas coach so unashamedly rooted in the Western Cape, speak we know his appointment was questioned in some quarters, as was his cricketing pedigree. Many are unaware that Conrad's father was a legendary cricketer in his own right and that he has been steeped in cricket since before he was born. His father Dickie Conrad was one of the finest players of that great generation of cricketers. So, for Conrad to hold the mace aloft at Lord's was a moment when life truly came full circle. Much of this Western Cape history is detailed in The Blue Book: A history of Western Province Cricket (1890-2011) (Jacana) by Andre Odendaal et al published in 2012 as well as Cricket and Conquest: The History of South African Cricket Retold: 1795-1914 (HSRC Press), first published in 2016. Odendaal has written several other authoritative books on race and cricket, including Pitch Battles: Sport, Racism and Resistance (2021) (with Peter Hain). The Blue Book was the first real attempt to consolidate the statistical history of Western Province cricket and the Cape Cobras franchise over more than 120 years. The book was a serious attempt to move away from the 'official' statistics of Western Province cricket that encompassed only the records of white players. In fact, as the book points out, there was a rich tradition of cricket in coloured, Cape Malay and black African communities in the Western Cape. Some part of that history was written a few years ago by Mo Allie in More Than a Game, but many stories remain untold, many heroes still unsung. As the book notes, 'the cricketers who played on the wrong side of the colour line in the old days inhabited deep cricket cultures'. It immediately therefore puts paid to the notion that cricket is 'the white man's game'. Boycotts and rebel tours The book traverses the colonial years, the Basil D'Oliveira saga, the 'stop the tour' boycotts and of course the rebel tour eras and the subsequent years of unity. All have their place in the difficult tapestry that is Western Province and, indeed, South African cricket. Important, though, as the book points out, is that those who played then were not merely 'passive victims of an oppressive system', they were 'characters who, through cricket, said yes to life itself'. In 1959, the WP Cricket Board (representing 'coloured' players) was formed and competed inter-provincially with the board players dominating the winnings for four seasons between 1963 and 1970. And it was during those years too that some board players found their way to playing in the English leagues: Cecil Abrahams, Coetie Neethling, the Abed brothers, Rushdie Magiet, my own father Des February and Dickie Conrad. Some remained abroad, most returned, while others like Owen Williams emigrated to Australia. The Blue Book tells us that in Langa and Gugulethu, cricket had been played for decades — William Magitshima, Cannon Ziba, Ashton Dunjwa and Ben Malamba were but a few names that made their mark in the late 1960s. This is part of Bavuma's rich history which has also been retold in Tengo Sokanyile's book, iQakamba eKapa (Cricket in Cape Town). This is a necessary retelling, not only for those of us who love cricket, its eccentricities and statistics, but also for anyone interested enough in understanding our country's past in a way that is constructive and paradoxically, despite its pain, affirming. And so, when we talk about cricket and race, we tend towards an insular focus on the post-1990s and the experiences of black players. But there were many more black players who were consigned to make their own way and give up their dreams. They did so with a lack of bitterness and dignity which Bavuma, in his captaincy and the way he conducts himself, epitomises. He is a tribute to our country and all those who went before. To use the language of 'X', therefore, this victory was for them too. DM


BBC News
5 days ago
- Sport
- BBC News
Yusuf thanks Durham after first SA Test call-up
Codi Yusuf has thanked Durham as he cuts short his stint with the county to join up with South Africa's Test originally signed for six Championship matches, but he is leaving early after being picked for the World Test Champions' two-match series in Zimbabwe, starting on 28 right-arm fast-medium bowler impressed with 17 wickets in his four Durham games at an average of just over 20."It's been an unbelievable experience, and there's been a lot of growth for me," he said, external."There's a lot I can go into this first Test call-up with." South Africa have rested five of the team that beat Australia at Lord's for these two games in Zimbabwe, including new-ball bowlers Kagiso Rabada and Marco puts Yusuf in line for a Test debut, and after a strong domestic summer, he has done well in in to cover an injury crisis on a recommendation from fellow Durham and now South Africa team-mate David Bedingham, he took six wickets on his Durham debut against Worcestershire as the team won two and drew one of those four Championship games."It's been phenomenal," he said. "Starting in Worcester was a lovely introduction to county cricket for me, and I carried on from that."If Durham ever give me a call at some point down the line, I'll take it in a heartbeat to make sure I'm back playing here."


News18
5 days ago
- Sport
- News18
Markram Leads South Africa Stars With Huge Gains In Test Tankings After WTC Win
Aiden Markram climbed to 11th in ICC Men's Test batting rankings as David Bedingham and Lungi Ngidi also improved their rankings. Right-handed opener Aiden Markram is among the South African players who have seen an improvement in the ICC Men's Test rankings after winning the World Test Championship (WTC) at Lord's. Markram, who scored a match-winning 136 off 207 balls in the chase of 282 against Australia, has climbed seven places to eleventh in the men's Test batting rankings. He is now only two points behind New Zealand's Daryl Mitchell, who is in 10th place with 725 rating points. Markram, who also took a couple of crucial wickets for South Africa, has been significantly rewarded in the all-rounder rankings, rising a remarkable 44 places. David Bedingham, who was at the crease when South Africa secured the famous win, has ascended 17 places in the batting rankings to 40th, alongside Australia all-rounder Cameron Green. South Africa fast bowler Lungi Ngidi, who delivered a blistering spell during Australia's second innings, has moved up seven spots to share 37th place in the bowlers' rankings with fellow quicks Lahiru Kumara and Naseem Shah. His teammate, pace-bowling spearhead Kagiso Rabada, has maintained his second place among the bowlers, next to India's Jasprit Bumrah. For Australia, left-arm pacer Mitchell Starc, who took five wickets and scored a fighting half-century in the second innings, has climbed to 10th spot in both the bowling and all-rounders' rankings. All-rounder Beau Webster, who was Australia's top scorer in the first innings, has risen 13 places in the batting rankings. Australia will begin their three-match Test tour of the West Indies later this month, with matches scheduled in Barbados, Grenada, and Jamaica. Meanwhile, the championship-winning South African players and support staff will return home on Wednesday. They will address a press conference upon arriving at the OR Tambo International Airport, before taking a break and regrouping for a two-match Test series in Zimbabwe. (With inputs from IANS) About the Author Ritayan Basu First Published: June 18, 2025, 15:03 IST


Times of Oman
14-06-2025
- Sport
- Times of Oman
South Africa seal historic ICC World Test Championship triumph
LONDON: South Africa ended 27 years of hurt by beating Australia at Lord's to win the ICC World Test Championship 2025 on Saturday. Aiden Markram's majestic 136 led the way as the Proteas sealed a five-wicket victory to lift this trophy for the first time and end a drought stretching back to the 1998 Champions Trophy. Australia did not give up without a fight, claiming the scalps of Temba Bavuma and Tristan Stubbs before Markram was caught at mid-wicket with just six runs required having taken his side within touching distance. It was left to David Bedingham and Kyle Verreynne to complete the job and spark joyous scenes from the sizable South African contingent inside the Home of Cricket, Verreynne hitting the winning runs to seal a memorable triumph. South Africa resumed on 213 for two, needing 69 more to seal the deal, and would have been pleased to see the early morning cloud give way to sunshine when they took to the field in North-West London. But Australia began in typically determined fashion and claimed the early breakthrough they required in the third over of the morning, Pat Cummins finding Bavuma's edge when the Proteas skipper had added just a single to his overnight score of 65. The incoming Stubbs survived an Australian review for lbw when the ball was shown to be missing leg stump, with Markram dispatching the next ball to the mid-wicket boundary to take the runs required to 50. Australia's bowlers continued to steam in and gave themselves a sniff when Starc delivered a beauty which cleaned up Stubbs and left South Africa 241 for four. The same bowler soon struck Bedingham on the pads and Australia again went upstairs. Replays showed the impact was outside the line of off-stump, however, and the 2023 champions found themselves out of reviews. Markram and Bedingham played sensibly to inch South Africa towards their place in the history books. The pair rotated the strike effectively and played with a calm which belied the pressure of the situation, Bedingham driving Cummins gloriously down the ground to move the target within 20. Australia took the new ball with 14 required and Markram greeted it dismissively, whipping Hazlewood through the leg-side for four from the first delivery of the 81st over. That brought South Africa to the brink but Markram was unable to finish the job he had played such a key role in orchestrating, chipping Hazlewood to Travis Head. Verreynne joined Bedingham and the wicketkeeper struck the final blow in the 84th over, driving Starc through the off-side to begin the celebrations and ensure these 11 names will be etched into South African cricketing folklore for generations to come. Scores in brief Australia v South Africa – ICC World Test Championship Final 2025, Lord's – Day Four Australia 212 all out in 56.4 overs (Beau Webster 72, Steve Smith 66; Kagiso Rabada 5/51, Marco Jansen 3/49) and 207 all out in 65 overs (Mitchell Starc 58 not out, Alex Carey 43; Kagiso Rabada 4/59, Lungi Ngidi 3/38) South Africa 138 all out in 57.1 overs (David Bedingham 45, Temba Bavuma 36; Pat Cummins 6/28, Mitchell Starc 2/41) and 282/5 in 83.4 overs (Aiden Markram 136, Temba Bavuma 66; Mitchell Starc 3/66, Josh Hazlewood 1/58)


The Independent
14-06-2025
- Sport
- The Independent
Aiden Markram helps South Africa beat Australia in World Test Championship final
Aiden Markram's century led South Africa to an emotional five-wicket victory over Australia in the World Test Championship final. Set 282 to win, 70 more than had been scored in any of the first three innings at Lord's, Markram and captain Temba Bavuma put on 147 to break the back of the chase. Bavuma fell early on Saturday morning for 66 and, though Markram was dismissed six runs short of the victory target, his 136 was the crucial innings and allowed David Bedingham and Kyle Verreynne to finish the job. It ends a series of agonising near misses for the five-time World Cup semi-finalists and 2024 T20 World Cup runners-up and marks the Proteas' first global trophy since 1998, when they won the Wills International Cup – the precursor to the Champions Trophy – and the Commonwealth Games.