Ford keen to see Donald and Rhodes return against Aussies
DURBAN - South Africa cricket coach Graham Ford hopes fast bowler Allan Donald and batsman Jonty Rhodes will return from retirement for the two, three-Test series against world champions Australia at the end of the 2001-02 season
Reuters
13-Jul-2001
DURBAN - South Africa cricket coach Graham Ford hopes fast bowler Allan
Donald and batsman Jonty Rhodes will return from retirement for the two,
three-Test series against world champions Australia at the end of the
2001-02 season.
"I'd love to have both available, of course. They are players of proven
international ability and they are both match winners," Ford told
Reuters here on Friday.
"It is also obvious how much respect they command from the opposition."
The problem for Ford and South African cricket is that both men have
retired from the Test arena to play exclusively in one-day
internationals.
Donald and Rhodes are determined to stay fit for the 2003 World Cup,
after which both plan to retire from the game.
However, because the United Cricket Board of South Africa (UCBSA) does
not have separate contracts for one-day and Test players, both men were
asked to be "technically" available for the two versions of the game
when they signed new contracts in April.
"I'm not accepting finality either way," Ford said.
"There is a lot of time before the two series against Australia and a
lot of cricket to be played between now and then.
"If we have to play Australia without either of them, then we'll support
their replacements and still back ourselves to win."
Ford's caution about their respective return to the Test arena was,
however, not matched by his predecessor as South Africa coach, former
England and Kent all-rounder Bob Woolmer.
Woolmer believed Donald would almost certainly return to Test cricket,
particularly with the lure of the home-and-away series against world
champions Australia.
"His decision to play one-day internationals was based, I believe, on
frustration at not being able to finish a Test without injury and not on
a burning desire to give up the five-day game," Woolmer told Reuters.
"When the going gets tough against Australia, which it inevitably will
do, and a place opens up in the bowling line-up, and Allan is fit, I
expect he'll be desperate to help beat the Aussies in a Test series,"
Woolmer said.
South Africa play three Tests in Australia over the Christmas and New
Year period before both teams fly to South Africa for three more Tests
next February and March.