'I preferred winning four-day games to T20'
Justin Kemp, who called time on a two-decade-long career at the end of the last season, looks back at his playing days

"I had a huge love for the game but it was only when I got picked for the South African Under-19 side that I believed I could actually do something with cricket and I tried to" • Getty Images
I just wasn't playing much cricket for Cobras anymore, and this past season, when I was due to play quite a big role in the 20-over competition, I got pneumonia and it meant I only played in two of the matches. By the time I recovered, the season was over. For the franchise, it just doesn't make sense to keep picking a 38-year-old anymore, and I knew I would have been keeping other guys out of the side. I had a long career and played for a long time, so I am happy with that decision.
The Cobras have a fantastic bunch of players and a lot of guys with international experience - Stiaan van Zyl, Dane Vilas and Dane Piedt. The challenge is keeping the team together and the guys grounded. Cape Town is such a cosmopolitan city and we live a really good life there, so it can be hard to have guys always on the same page. It can almost become a case of, if you win for a while, you take your foot off the gas. You forget that other teams improve, they come after you.
(Laughs) You said it!
"The challenge at Cobras keeping the team together and the guys grounded. Cape Town is such a cosmopolitan city and we live a really good life there, so it can be hard to have guys always on the same page"
It's a fine line, because I am not sure you can have guys playing until they are 45. On the other side of that argument, senior players are very important in a team, but you need to make sure they are contributing. If they're still enjoying it and adding value, then they must keep going but not at the expense of keeping a talented 24-year-old out of the team.
Absolutely. I grew up watching my grandfather and my father, and I knew I wanted to play. I was a boarder at Queens College from the age of five, and from then, I played cricket. I had a huge love for the game but it was only when I got picked for the South African Under-19 side that I believed I could actually do something with cricket and I tried to.
The professionalism got better. I think two or three seasons ago South Africa had its golden period with Graeme Smith's team, and that was all a result of what was happening at lower levels. When I first started, there were very old-school philosophies about how as a youngster you were really a junior, you had to earn your stripes and prove yourself. Back then you needed to have two to three really good seasons before you could say you were knocking on the door of the national side. Now you might only need to have two or three good games. Things change.
We were given clear mandates that we would be playing some cricket and making some money. It was money I never dreamed of. Of course I thought it was a chance to get ahead. Sportsmen's careers are short. We didn't go there to murder anyone. The first season was not on as grand a scale as the IPL was. But it was a good bunch of guys. I do regret it in some ways. I stifled my career for two years, and I was probably in the best form then.
Maybe. But you know, I was never really a massive T20 player. I never really enjoyed it. Honestly, I preferred winning four-day games. Obviously with T20, there are the crowds and the atmosphere, but it all got a little lost on me.
Mostly. I played a fair amount of South Africa, and in most major events, which was obviously a highlight. But then I also spent five years on the county circuit. I had a year at Worcestershire and then some time at Kent, and that was a very special time for me, as well as the years I spent at the Titans and Cobras when we won a lot of trophies.
I suppose so. Bowling-wise there were those times when I took five wickets but it's the batting that stands out.
Very much. I was in charge for a few seasons and I really felt that it came naturally to me. I didn't get taken in by the stresses.
"The ICL was money I never dreamed of. The first season was not on as grand a scale as the IPL was. But it was a good bunch of guys. I do regret it in some ways. I stifled my career for two years, and I was probably in the best form then"
I'm going to get into trouble here!
Australia. Domestically, I always tended to have some big battles with the Lions.
I guess so. I wish I had played more games for South Africa, but I am happy with what I achieved.
We need to make cricket decisions. I know there is a lot going on and I don't want to get into politics, but to be a top international team, you need to make the right decisions. Some of the ways things are handled make me wonder. Whoever is in charge should take a long hard look at what is being done and why, and really take a deep look at things, and then the record may speak for itself.
I have always been a huge fisherman. One of the first things I remember from growing up was that I had a fishing rod in my hand. We're very lucky to live in Cape Town, which has one of the biggest tuna-fishing environments around. Along with a friend I bought a recreational fishing boat and we are trying to make a thing to take people out to catch their own fish. We've also bought a fishing shop where we sell equipment to long liners and trawlers and we've had that for two years. I put a lot of money into it and hopefully we will start seeing some returns soon.
Not entirely. I am currently at a club in Belfast called CIYMA. I was offered a job to join them for four months as a player-coach, and with the rand at more than 1:20 [to the pound], it helps. My wife can work remotely and my daughters are still young. They are two and five, so we are home-schooling them for this period and taking the opportunity to show them the United Kingdom. I am working with young cricketers, mostly 15-to-18 years old and I am quite impressed by the standard of cricket in Ireland. This came really out of the blue, completely unexpected, but I am enjoying coaching.
I'm not sure. It might be something I look into at a later stage.
Firdose Moonda is ESPNcricinfo's South Africa correspondent