A few surprises in an unpredictable tour
By the end of an incredible five Tests in six weeks, there was hardly a player on either side who had not been baked half to death by the unrelenting itinerary
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Played just the one Test, but Langeveldt gets an extra mark both for his demolition of England in their warm-up at Potchefstroom, and for bowling South Africa to victory at Cape Town despite the pain of a broken hand. After their pumped-up, fight-fire-with-fire attitude in the opening rounds of the series, it took a thirtysomething debutant to remind South Africa of the virtues of line and length, and most of all, patience. As Hoggard later demonstrated, Langeveldt's absence at Johannesburg proved to be critical.
All the best opening partnerships have involved a measure of contrast, and the Pollock-Ntini alliance is no exception. Where Pollock is all guile, Ntini is pure rampage - an indefatigable gallop to the wicket and a limb-flailing launch, which more often than not gets its rewards. Until Andre Nel appeared for the final Test, Ntini and Pollock shouldered an incredible burden, and did so unstintingly as well. They deserved better.
A constant menace, as an incredible economy rate of 2.26 would imply. Andrew Strauss likened him to a bowling machine, but that would be doing his guile a disservice. Bowled more overs than anyone else on either side (although Ntini finished just four balls behind him) and was as much of a handful in those desperate final moments at Centurion as he had been at any other stage of the series. His batting was less visibly effective, although seeing that he was often as low as No. 9, that is unsurprising. He showed his true colours at Durban, however - a first-innings 43 to set up what must have seemed like a victory, and a second-innings 35 to stave off the prospect of a devastating defeat.
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Took a while to settle back into the side after a very public chastisement from his new coach, Ray Jennings, and he nearly blew it all over again when he was fined his entire match fee for a late-night indiscretion at Cape Town. But Gibbs works best when he is left to his own devices, and his breathtaking batting at Johannesburg demonstrated just that, as he came agonisingly close to a century in both innings. Class is permanent, as the man himself would say.
Misses out on the extra mark simply because he was unable to square the series, but Nel's in-your-face attitude masked a skilful performance that deserved better rewards. By his own admission, he has grown as a person and a cricketer since his back injury last year, although he still remains the man the crowds love to hate. His good-natured aggression is, however, good for the game.
His omission was such a talking point at the start of the series that he seems to have been present throughout, rather than just for the final two matches. His first innings back was a gritty 64, a two-fingered salute of a performance, but he had no answer to Hoggard's perfect delivery that deceived him in the second innings at Jo'burg. South Africa is stronger for his presence.
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Very much in the modern mould of left-arm spinners, Boje's contributions as a batsman were every bit as vital - if not more so - than his tight but unpenetrative bowling. His late appearance in the team, after an operation to remove his thyroid gland, instantly transformed the balance of the batting, and his quickfire 76 at Cape Town was arguably the decisive performance of the only one-sided match of the series. Constantly derided by Geoff Boycott for his bowling, but his leadership qualities were a further string to his bow.
In hindsight, Dippenaar's first-Test century was one of the worst things that could have happened to South Africa. He is indisputably one of the game's good guys, and the moment was one that he will cherish, but he has long been considered a soft touch by opponents. His guaranteed presence in the middle order ensured that the selectors were still searching for their best combination as the series reached its climax.
Raw and rapid, Steyn was an exciting prospect with which to launch the series, but he was soon discovered to be out of his depth, for the moment at least. He did, however, serve notice of his potential with arguably the finest delivery of the tour, a wicked 90mph legcutter that demolished Michael Vaughan's off stump at Port Elizabeth. Needs some more meat on his bones before he can start to live up to any comparisons with a young Allan Donald.
Looked a million dollars in net practice, but seemed out of his depth in the middle. Accidents singled him out and he has time on his side, but South Africa were a stronger side by the time they bit the bullet and cast him aside.
An unfortunate scapegoat after Port Elizabeth, he returned to the side too late to alter the result.
A late replacement at Durban. One impressive innings, but not enough to keep Dippenaar from resuming his duties.
The unwitting centre of the Boucher storm. Performed admirably and acrobatically in his primary role as a wicketkeeper, but not up to the task with the bat.
Trumpeted as the next big allrounder, but at Port Elizabeth he looked neither one thing nor the other.