Mluleki Nkala - a short biography
MAJOR TEAMS: Matabeleland; Zimbabwe (1998/99); CFX Academy (1999/2000)
John Ward
17-Feb-2000
FULL NAME: Mluleki Luke Nkala
BORN: 1 April 1981, at Bulawayo
MAJOR TEAMS: Matabeleland; Zimbabwe (1998/99); CFX Academy (1999/2000).
KNOWN AS: Mluleki Nkala. Nickname: 'Psych' - for his ability to pysche
out the opposition
BATTING STYLE: Right Hand Bat
BOWLING STYLE: Right Arm Fast Medium
OCCUPATION: Student at CFX Academy
FIRST-CLASS DEBUT: Still awaited
TEST DEBUT: Still awaited
ODI DEBUT: 27 September 1998, v India, at Queens Sports Club, Bulawayo.
BIOGRAPHY (February 2000)
Of all the young black cricketers trying to break through to the
top level in Zimbabwe, Mluleki Nkala is the one on whom, perhaps
more than any other, even Henry Olonga, cricket lovers and
administrators in Zimbabwe are pinning their hopes. He is the
first black cricketer of genuine all-round talents to appear on
the scene and, all things being equal, he may be considered
likely to be Zimbabwe's first black cricket captain at some time
in the future.
Fortunately certain elements of the local press, which have in
the past shown themselves eager to press ungrounded charges of
racism against the Zimbabwe Cricket Union, have not yet got hold
of him as their latest champion to add an element of political
pressure to the situation. Fortunately also, Mluleki is a very
mature and well-balanced young man who is unlikely fall easy prey
to manipulation by the unscrupulous. Although naturally
ambitious, he is content to take his career one step at a time
and has not been adversely affected by the honours to have come
his way so far during his brief but illustrious career.
Mluleki comes from a family of 14 children, having eight brothers
and six sisters. His six older brothers, who attended Whitestone
School in Bulawayo, developed an interest in cricket there, which
they brought back home to their house in the suburb of Kumalo and
the young Mluleki tried to join in, at the age of about six. As
he persevered, he was slowly allowed to play more of a part in
their games at home, and quickly developed a personal passion.
In those days television in the afternoon only started at around
four o'clock, giving the boys time on their hands before then
during which they had nothing else to do but play sport! Some of
them at least were at home each afternoon, and they used a
dustbin as the wicket and old pieces of wood for bats.
In Grade 2 Mluleki became a boarder at Whitestone and was able to
use the sports facilities there. Presumably because he showed
talent, he was allowed to join practices, which was not usually
permitted until Grade 3, and he used to play in the nets with the
brother closest in age above him. In Grade 4 he progressed to
the Colts team to join his brother. In his first match the team
was bowled out for a total of nine runs, Mluleki himself falling
second ball, but he did take two wickets with his bowling. He
did well enough over the next two years to be sent to
Matabeleland primary schools trials, with most of the boys there
being two years older than himself, and only just missed
selection; he remembers being bitterly disappointed.
At various times during his early years Mluleki's skills as a
batsman and a bowler developed at different rates. In his
earliest years at Whitestone he was considered to be more of a
bowler, but his batting came on when he was promoted to the
school senior team, and when in Grade 6 he was selected for the
Matabeleland team to play in the Zimbabwe primary schools week,
it was purely as a batsman. He scored his first century at this
cricket week, against Harare Schools, and impressed the selectors
enough for them to put him in the national side. He scored three
more centuries for Whitestone the following year, when he opened
both the batting and the bowling, but remarkably he played for
the Matabeleland and Zimbabwe Under-13 teams that year mainly as
a bowler and had little batting to do! He took his best bowling
figures, eight wickets for seven runs, in a match against Milton
Junior School that year. For the Under-13 team he took seven for
24 against Boland in the South African week.
During his early years at high school, Falcon College, bowling
was his stronger suit. Falcon he says was a very important stage
in his development, with a couple of the teachers there really
going out of their way to look after him and help him, especially
in cricket terms, notably Dave Grant, his housemaster, who had
also coached him at times at Whitestone, and the head coach Dave
Fleming and Richard Harrison. They also made sure he played
other sports as well, notably rugby and athletics. He progressed
to the Matabeleland men's athletics squad and the Zimbabwe
Schools rugby side; he also used to play tennis and squash, but
has now given up these sports for cricket. He does play golf as
a recreation.
Falcon had a very strong side during Mluleki's years there, and
at one time no fewer than eight of their team were in the
national schools side. Batting low in the order, he scored a
couple of centuries for junior teams there, despite being
regarded mainly as a bowler, and during his Form Two year he was
dismissed only once in inter-school matches. His batting began
to slide when he played in the school first team, though, for
which he never scored a century. As he became more noticed on a
national basis, he began also to miss matches through these other
commitments. In an internal house match over 25 overs at Falcon
once he hit 163, at present his highest score in any class of
cricket, and in a school game his highest was 149 against St
George's College of Harare when in Form Two.
Mluleki was already regarded as captaincy material, not an easy
achievement for those without strong parental guidance. From
Form One he captained his school age-group teams, and also the
national Under-16 team in their World Cup. In Form Four he
toured England with the Under-19 team, and the following year
captained that side, which he also did at the 1999/2000 World Cup
immediately after leaving school.
It was actually not until he came under the influence of Andy
Pycroft on the England Under-19 tour of 1997 that he began to
realise that he could reach the top as an all-rounder, although
even now he tends to consider himself more as a batsman who can
bowl. Andy encouraged him to take his batting more seriously
rather than simply 'floundering around and enjoying it'; he urged
Mluleki to concentrate, continually affirming that he had the
ability to become a successful batsman in his own right.
Mluleki's most memorable performance of the tour was his 71,
although in a losing cause, in the second innings of the first
unofficial international against England Under-19s at Edgbaston,
Birmingham. He batted for three and a half hours, the longest
time he had ever spent at the crease. After this he was promoted
from number seven to number five, and celebrated with a powerful
century at Northampton, on an admittedly flat pitch on which five
centuries were scored in four days and neither side had a second
innings.
After this came the Under-19 World Cup in South Africa, which
was, he says, 'a great tournament for the whole team', as they
won through to the second round, the super league. He did not
reach any great height with the bat, but did well with the ball,
with five for 51 against the West Indies being his best
performance.
After this the selectors decided to blood him at a higher level,
giving him a couple of matches for the Zimbabwe Board XI, where
he did reasonably well but without any notable performances.
During the off-season he had a spell at the Australian Cricket
Academy, mainly under Dennis Lillee who looked after his bowling.
Such was his obvious promise and potential that he was selected,
in September 1998, to play for Zimbabwe in the second one-day
international against the touring Indian team, despite the fact
that he had as yet played no first-class cricket or even club
cricket. There was a spate of injuries to pace bowlers, just
after the Commonwealth Games, and it was in this role that he was
actually selected. A good game against the Western Province
tourists earned him a place in the squad, and then he was plunged
into the team for the match at Queens Sports Club. Andy Pycroft
had just taken over as convenor of selectors, which no doubt
helped his cause.
At the age of 17 years and 179 days, he was by almost two years
the youngest player to represent Zimbabwe in an official
international match. It was a nerve-racking experience for him,
but 'there is no sensation like it', he says. He was happy to
play in Bulawayo, his home town; his parents came to watch a
cricket match for the first time, as well as his brothers, and it
was this which started his youngest brother's interest in the
game - Mluleki is certain that he too will become a good player.
He was aware of them all cheering for him on the by during the
game, along with many of his friends from school.
Zimbabwe batted first, and Mluleki was originally down to bat at
number nine, ahead of Andrew Whittall and John Rennie. At the
end of the Zimbabwe innings, though, Agarkar came on to bowl
reverse-swinging yorkers, which Mluleki had seen on television
before but never faced. The decision was made to send the more
experienced Whittall and Rennie in ahead of him, and as the
innings closed with seven wickets down he never got to bat. "I
wasn't too disappointed," he says.
When Zimbabwe fielded, defending a total of 235 for seven,
Mluleki went to field on the fine-leg boundary. Sachin Tendulkar
turned the third ball of the match in his direction, and he
fumbled it and sent in a poor return, but then settled down until
he was called on to bowl with the score on 44 for no wicket.
It was a sensational beginning. "Some people have those days on
their first time out," Mluleki says modestly. "I was just lucky.
The first ball I bowled was a yorker, and Tendulkar blocked it;
I could see he was just sizing me up, to see where he was going
to hit me. Then Alistair Campbell [the captain] came over to me
and said, 'Psych, it's no use holding back here; you've just got
to give it your all.' It was all or nothing.
"The next ball I bowled was short and wide; he smashed it, and I
just turned my head, and saw Craig Wishart [at backward point]
dive and catch it. Joy would be the understatement of the year,
I think! My mum had been saying the night before, 'You've got to
get this guy out; I know you can do it.' I just said, 'Yes, mum,
yes!' That was a brilliant start. But it was a very flat pitch
and I didn't bowl that well after that, and Ganguly whacked me
quite a bit. But it was a great experience." His eventual
figures were 32 runs off five overs for his one wicket.
This remains at the time of writing Mluleki's only full
international match, mainly because of school commitments and the
need to give full attention to his A-levels. A mutual decision
was reached about the extent of his cricket between the Zimbabwe
Cricket Union, the headmaster, his parents and Mluleki himself,
which in effect kept him from representative cricket during his
final school year. Looking back, he wisely feels that it was
good for him to get away from big cricket for a while and all the
hype there was concerning his career. He studied English,
business management and maths, and at the time of writing is
still awaiting his results, but whatever happens is preparing to
give the year 2000 over entirely to cricket. After that he is
considering taking a Bachelor of Commerce degree, or perhaps
Business Science, by correspondence.
At the end of 1999 he went down to South Africa for this third
South African Schools Week, but admits he has never done well
there, often suffering from injuries. After that he went to his
second Under-19 World Cup in Sri Lanka, this time as captain. It
was very different from the previous World Cup in South Africa,
he recalls. "Sri Lanka is a very different and hard place to
tour, especially when you're young," he says. "You struggle to
adapt to conditions, the surroundings and the general country.
We lost to the West Indies, who were a good team and really fired
up, as you could see, for the tournament. Then we beat the
Americas quite easily, but then had a heart-breaking loss to
England. We just didn't make it into the Super Sixes.
"It was a great match to be in but we were very disappointed to
lose. It was a lesson. At one stage we were down and out, then
we got back, and the game was won, but we still managed to lose
it in the last two overs. It was a heart-breaking loss, and we
missed the Super Sixes, which would have been a great opportunity
to put our might up against the best. Then we went to the Plate,
but we weren't playing that well; you could tell that the
motivation wasn't quite there. We were getting tired and having
injury problems with my ankle; it was a difficult tour, but
definitely a very good experience. Especially for me, as I
missed half of the tour with injury. It was very disappointing
as captain to be watching half of the games. But it was a great
learning experience, and I came back hopefully a better cricketer
and person."
Since his recent injuries, Mluleki has had to be very careful,
going to physio-therapy and doing all the exercises he has given,
but expects to be back to full fitness very shortly.
As a batsman, Mluleki feels his main strength is his
concentration. He enjoys playing the cut and the sweep, rather
than the straight-bat shots often prominent in tall players. His
preferred position in the batting order is number six; he does
not like to go in any higher as he finds if he has bowled earlier
it interferes with his batting. Rather like Gary Sobers,
perhaps, as is also his statement that if he doesn't bowl well he
always bats well, and vice versa! He laughs at the comparison,
though: "I don't think quite in that class, no! When it comes to
batting and bowling I put maximum effort into both, but my
attitude has been that if my batting doesn't come off one day I
really have to put 120% into my bowling. It's nice being an
all-rounder because you always feel you have a second chance to
redeem yourself."
As a bowler, he feels that his main strength is his accuracy and
consistency. Even in his younger days when he strove for pace
alone he managed to retain his accuracy. He is basically more of
a seam than a swing bowler, although he has been practising his
inswinger in particular and is trying to learn how to swing the
ball more. As a fielder he rates himself at present as no more
than 'fairly good', preferring the covers or midwicket areas.
Of the opponents he has met so far in his brief career he has
most respect for Andy Flower and Saurav Ganguly as batsmen,
Flower in particular striking him as a batsman who always seems
in calm control and never likely to get out. He cannot name any
bowlers with confidence at present, feeling that his batting has
not been tested at the top level; so far he has faced 'nothing
too frightening'.
Regarding his ambitions, Mluleki says, "I don't like looking too
far into the future, but step by step. I'm just looking at my
next matches, the Logan Cup, and showing people what I can do."
He is not prepared to speculate on a place in the Test team yet,
although given fitness that is likely to come by the end of 2000.
He must be aware of his future as a potential 'FZC' (Future
Zimbabwe Captain!), but wisely has put such thoughts to the back
of his mind, prepared to take one step at a time.
Mluleki says his main hobby is watching movies on television, so
it was clearly a very good thing when he was young that
television only began at four in the afternoon! He also enjoys
sports and music channels.