Boucher: 'No love lost, just respect'
Following a fractious tour down under, South Africa's wicketkeeper Mark Boucher lets rip at all things Australian to Telford Vice
Following a fractious tour down under, South Africa's wicketkeeper Mark Boucher lets rip at all things Australian to Telford Vice
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A lot of guys have stood up. Guys like Andre Nel - it was a big tour for him. Unfortunately we lost Makhaya Ntini halfway through the tour and Jacques Kallis wasn't fit throughout. But someone like Jacques Rudolph came through with flying colours. If you look at the average age of our respective Test sides, we're four or five years younger than them. Hopefully South African cricket realises you don't throw out guys who are hitting their 30s because that's sometimes when they are playing the best cricket of their careers. We've performed better than our last tour here - we competed well. In every Test we beat them in the first innings. Then the Warne factor kicked in. He's the heartbeat of the Australian side.
Was this tour more intense and aggressive than you
expected?
Every tour I've been on to Australia, about a month
or two before, we start talking about the way they
play. We build it up way too much. Yes, they're an
aggressive cricketing nation. So are we. They're
going to talk on the field. So are we. If you talk
about it too much - about the way they're going to
sledge - you're playing into their hands. You take
your eye off the ball. The game is between bat and
ball and if you're worrying about what they're
going to say they're winning the battle before it
starts. The media overplays the sledging issue -
and the talk before a game. This tour has been
ridiculous from that perspective. Graeme Smith
hasn't said much off the field. He did talk about a
lack of experience in Australia's middle order and
they were going through a changing of the guard.
They were found out in the Ashes and that's why
we homed in on their middle order. But the press
took it out of proportion and started taking
personal digs at players. It was nasty.
Did that happen because Australians aren't used to
being taken on at a verbal level?
Definitely. They've been through a few golden years
in their sport. They don't know the other side, they
don't know how to lose. Australia were lucky to stay
alive in the Ashes for as long as they did. Except for
the first Test they were completely outplayed. I
don't think they knew how to take that. It was a
shock to their press, their past players and their
current players. The past players in particular
made a lot of comments on this tour. Maybe
they should keep their mouths shut and
focus on watching the game. Let the teams
do the talking in the middle.
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Nasty things have been said. We did share a few beers after the Test series. But a lot of guys' eyes, maybe on both sides, have been opened. I think the beers that are drunk may be just for the sake of it because that's the right thing to do. I'm not going to mention names but I have lost respect for one or two of their players. If they want to say the same thing about us, no problem. But we live in South Africa and they live in Australia - we don't have to put up with them and they don't have to put up with us. It's do-or-die on the field and hopefully we can keep the rest to a minimum.
Have racist taunts from the crowd been a factor on
your other tours to Australia?
To tell the truth, yes. I think what we've done has
shown other sportsmen, like soccer players, that
you can stand up and deem this sort of thing
unacceptable. The Australian press are trying to
say expat South Africans are the culprits. Well,
years ago Brian McMillan and I ran after a guy who
was abusing Makhaya at the SCG. He was definitely
Australian. They know what gets to us and as long
as it is within the boundaries of the expected
that's fine. Once they step over those boundaries it
is not acceptable and you have to take a stand as a
team. Obviously it's not the majority of the crowd.
It's the guys who have had too much liquor and
they're trying to be smart arses. So we understand
it's difficult to control. But we've made our point.
What will happen when the Australians tour South
Africa in March?
I hope our public give them a bit of stick because
we've taken a serious amount. In the past our crowds
haven't been too great with them but trust me, we're
not going to sit back and say, `shame, poor things'.
It must've been better playing the Sri Lankans in the
VB Series - in front of neutral crowds?
What do you mean? Then the crowd abuses both teams.
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