South Africa are selecting based on character rather than just stats now
South Africa's Test captain, currently on an injury layoff, looks back at the team's memorable draw in Pakistan
Temba Bavuma
27-Oct-2025 • 5 hrs ago
Aiden Markram was thrown in at the deep end in Pakistan and came up smiling • Aamir Qureshi/AFP/Getty Images
Professional cricketers get used to missing matches through injury but it's never easy when you miss out on moments like our eight-wicket victory in the second Test, in Rawalpindi to level the series against Pakistan. You are obviously super-happy and proud of the guys and their achievements, but selfishly, as a player, you want to be there. You want to have contributed to the cause in some form.
Being out of action with a grade-two calf tear is frustrating but the interval has been enjoyable in terms of readjusting and tinkering with my training programme. Over the last few weeks I have generally started my day with a session with the biokineticist in the morning, followed by a batting session. I have then done strength and conditioning sessions with my trainer based at the Wanderers Stadium.
My rehab has been a collaborative effort between Lions and the national side. Ziyaad Mahomed, Lions' physiotherapist, and Proteas' physiotherapist Sizwe Hadebe have been administering my rehab and plenty of communication has flowed between them. Tumi Masakela, CSA high-performance strength and conditioning coach, took over from the physiotherapists once they were happy that I was able to train pain-free. I'm at that point now where everything I'm doing is pain-free whether it's batting or running.
In my absence, Aiden Markram has captained the side and led well, especially in the second Test. For us as South Africans, we are not super-accustomed to the subcontinent, so it will take us a little longer to adapt to the conditions and start getting the feel from a field-setting and bowling-changes point of view. I think Aiden had a stronger sense of that in the second Test, which was seen in the way he used his bowlers, found the balance between attack and defence, and placed fielders at the right angles. I thought his handling of the spinners, especially, which is never easy to get right, was good and they were a lot more effective for those conditions.
Keshav Maharaj and Simon Harmer were superb. Kesh is doing Kesh things and is really cementing himself as one of the best spin bowlers we've produced as a country. He is a wily character and he knows how to read you as a batter and is able to adapt his skill to what the opponent is doing. When playing against him, I feel like you have to make the play.
That is generally the case when facing good bowlers. They don't often give you bad balls and you sometimes have to score off their good balls. Kesh gets the ball to drop and angle, utilises the crease, and he is always in the game.
Simon, who took his 1000th first-class wicket during the second Test, is a silent warrior. He actually reached out to me after the Test Championship final and said that he's still available to play South African cricket. He expressed that's still his goal, and it was exciting to hear that. I then had a conversation with the coach, Shukri Conrad, to get him back involved. I'm glad he's returned to the fold, and looking at the Tests we're going to have on the subcontinent, it made a lot of sense. The partnership between Simon and Kesh will become a formidable one, especially in subcontinental conditions. I also like the competitiveness between them. We also have Senuran Muthusamy and Prenelan Subrayen to support them, and Aiden, who can turn his arm over as well.
Sen was a well-deserved Man of the Series against Pakistan. He contributed with the ball in the first Test and the bat in the second. It would have been nice for him to get to the three-figure mark, but the way he's come into the team, he's really bolstered our resources from both a batting and bowling perspective. He took 11 wickets and scored 106 runs, but he's an unassuming character; he's not loud and gets his job done. Whenever the opportunity is there, he tries to grab it with both hands. I'm sure the guys would have celebrated hard for a bloke like Sen.
What we have been able to do well and something which has served us, is selecting based on character rather than simply basing it on stats. Character is a big thing for us as a team and everything we do, we do it for each other. It's knowing you have individuals, who on their day will make the play for the team.
A great example of that came from Kagiso Rabada with the bat. We obviously all know him with the ball. But, for me, with him making a play like that, making 71 runs in the second Test, it was probably the defining moment in the game. I hear they call him "Brian Charles" Rabada now!
KG killed all energy within the Pakistani team. It was always going to be tricky for them going into their second innings and trying to play with any great deal of confidence, having suffered that at the hands of Kagiso and his bat.
South Africa Test captain Temba Bavuma, who led the team to the Test Championship title against Australia at Lord's, will share his insight and opinion across the all-format series against Pakistan