South African confidence high for New Zealand tour (11 February 1999)
CHRISTCHURCH, New Zealand, Feb 11 (AFP) - South Africa's cricketers, fresh from dishing out a humiliating whipping of the once-mighty West Indies, arrived here Thursday ready to take on the world's lowest-ranked test-playing nation
11-Feb-1999
11 February 1999
South African confidence high for New Zealand tour
Simon Louisson
CHRISTCHURCH, New Zealand, Feb 11 (AFP) - South Africa's cricketers,
fresh from dishing out a humiliating whipping of the once-mighty West
Indies, arrived here Thursday ready to take on the world's
lowest-ranked test-playing nation.
They received a setback however, when head coach Bob Woolmer stayed
behind to remain with his very ill father in Cape Town.
Coaching duties will be taken over by assistant coach Graham Ford
until Woolmer rejoins the touring party for the seven-week tour.
Captain Hansie Cronje admitted on his arrival that confidence among
the tourists was high after routing the West Indies 5-0 in their home
test series and winning the one-day internationals 6-1.
"There's a good feeling, but you only have to go back four months to
see how low we were after the England tour," he said.
"We realise cycles of professional sport are very short these days and
if we don't keep up our discipline and become complacent, we could
return to South Africa just like the West Indians did.
"We've often said that what's in the past is history, but we certainly
are confident. To beat a side is one thing, but to beat them
convincingly is another."
This is South Africa's first full tour of New Zealand since 1963-64
when they last visited during the apartheid era.
They played a one-off centenary test in 1995 which they easily won,
and also played in the 1992 World Cup here, where New Zealand pulled
off a surprise victory.
With the historic whitewash of the Windies behind them, it is hard to
imagine anything other than a similar result in the three tests and
six one-day matches to be played in this country.
In Allan Donald, Cronje has probably the best fast bowler in the world
at his disposal, backed by two of the best all-rounders, Jacques
Kallis and Shaul Pollock.
The attack is balanced by veteran off-spinner Pat Symcox and left-arm
chinaman bowler Paul Adams, one of three coloured or black players in
the 16-man squad.
South Africa has a powerful and experienced batting line-up led by
Cronje, Daryl Cullinan, Jonty Rhodes, Gary Kirsten and Lance Klusener.
Although ranked bottom in the Wisden rankings, New Zealand will enter
the series with rising confidence having beaten India 1-0 in a
three-match test series in the first half of the home season. They
shared the one-dayers 2-2.
Under Australian coach Steve Rixon, the Kiwis are beginning something
of a revival and are often hard to beat on their own slower, low
bouncing wickets. Last season, they had home series wins over Sri
Lanka and Zimbabwe.
Cronje said he had limited knowledge of New Zealand but thought they
had improved under Rixon.
"I think since Steve Rixon took over as coach, they have become more
disciplined and I think generally a stronger side," he said.
New Zealand allrounders Chris Cairns and Dion Nash showed they were in
good form against India while strike bowler Simon Doull ripped through
the highly rated Indian batting line-up to line in the deciding second
test in Wellington.
The New Zealand batting, led by captain Steven Fleming and the in-form
Craig MacMillan, remains brittle and Indian paceman Javagal Srinath
exposed technical shortcomings against the short-pitched ball which
Donald and Pollock will no doubt exploit to the full.
The tour begins with a one-day warm-up match against an Academy XI in
the South Island resort town of Alexandra on Saturday, followed on
Sunday by the first one-day international in Dunedin.
Source :: AFP