What's gone wrong with Natal cricket? (3 March 1999)
What's gone wrong with Natal cricket
03-Mar-1999
3 March 1999
What's gone wrong with Natal cricket?
Ken Borland
What has gone wrong with Natal cricket?
Two seasons after claiming the double, Natal have performed abjectly
in the SuperSport Series, winning just one of their eight matches and
losing five, and even with four top players away with the national
squad for most of the season, to finish second last on the log is
clearly unacceptable to the majority of supporters.
Senior players blame a highly disruptive 1998/99 season in which they
had three different coaches guiding them and a largely inexperienced
side as hardened replacements for the likes of Lance Klusener, Shaun
Pollock, Dale Benkenstein and Jonty Rhodes were impossible to find.
Without criticising the coaches in question - Frans Cronje, Graham
Ford and Ian Tayfield - a Natal player explained to The Witness that
each of them had different backgrounds and therefore different ideas.
"There's been a lot of disruptions, especially with having three
coaches, who each tended to want us to play a different way, plus we
had two captains (Benkenstein and Errol Stewart)."
Hopefully, both these problems will have been addressed by next
season, with Tayfield finding out in the winter whether he will take
charge of the Natal team on a permanent basis, and Stewart, a
thoughtful, experienced leader, likely to be named captain from the
start of the 1999/2000 campaign.
The amazing comings and goings at the top were unfortunate and
practically unavoidable. Cronje was transferred into a more
administrative role in December, with Ford giving up his Director of
Playing Affairs portfolio to try and rekindle the spark the team had
during his first, highly successful tenure as coach.
But Ford was then offered the assistant coach's post on the national
team's tour of New Zealand, with a trip to the World Cup and Bob
Woolmer's job in the pipeline - the sort of offer one would be a fool
to refuse - and he departed overseas at the beginning of February.
Tayfield, a player in the 1970s and a long-serving selector who had
been active in the running of the Natal B team, was then rushed off to
the senior side as caretaker coach.
Having already nabbed the Natal team's crown jewels - Pollock, Rhodes
and Klusener - the national selectors began eyeing captain Benkenstein
early on.
He was sent to Kuala Lumpur and Bangladesh for limited-overs
tournaments, but no sooner was he back leading the Natal side than he
broke his finger. He played a couple of provincial games upon his
recovery, but since then he has disappeared as well, his international
career, happily, having taken off.
Tayfield, who took over for the last three SuperSport Series games,
agrees that inexperience also played a major role in the side's
troubles. "There's a lot of talent, but the players still need to
learn what four-day cricket is all about. I've been trying to show
them that it's about pressure. and patience. The bowlers need to bowl
in the right places and wait for the batsmen to make the mistakes. But
on a number of occasions our bowlers couldn't maintain the pressure at
critical times - there were too many deliveries that the batsmen were
able to score off very easily."
The team's batting was at times fragile, but this was understandable
with all the experience at the top (Watson, Bruyns, Stewart, and
Hudson) and the middle-order made up of youngsters just finding their
feet at provincial level, plus the batsmen were often shoved into the
deep end by the profligacy of the bowlers.
Various positives have arisen from the turmoil however.
Trainer Andrew Shedlock believes the side has great potential. "The
effort has certainly been there, they've all worked very hard, and I
think the fact they recently beat both Border and Northerns, the
day/night league's top two sides, shows their potential. Jon Kent,
Wade Wingfield and Grant Rowley have basically been replacing
Klusener, Pollock and Benkenstein, and for them to have done as well
as they have is really something."
The amiable Tayfield also had encouraging words about the youngsters.
"There are a lot of positives, with the youngsters, especially
Wingfield and Kent, coming through very nicely. They're all very, very
keen, and all they need now is to learn how to win. With Mark Bruyns
batting so well again and Keith Storey having really arrived as a most
reliable seamer, all we need now is an injection in the bowling
department and things will be looking good for next season."
The Natal Cricket Union will also have to ensure off-field problems,
mostly of a political nature, do not distract the players from their
work out in the middle. A Natal regular told The Witness that the
behind-the-scenes boardroom battles had a ripple effect on the
players. "It's very frustrating because we don't know what's going to
happen next."
The Natal camp is hoping they can follow the example of Western
Province, who got their house in order after also finishing second
bottom in last season's SuperSport Series. They went on to top the
day/night league, have comfortably qualified for this season's
Standard Bank Cup and will play in the showpiece SuperSport Series
final this weekend.
Final Supersport Series log
P W L D Bat Bowl Pts Border 8 5 1 2 17 32 99 Western Province 8 5 1 2 18 26 94 Northerns 8 5 2 1 12 29 91 Eastern Province 8 4 4 0 23 27 90 Gauteng 8 4 1 3 26 23 89 Free State 8 3 4 1 20 20 70 Griqualand West 8 1 3 4 15 24 49 Natal 8 1 5 2 15 23 48 Boland 8 0 7 1 8 19 27
Source :: Ken Borland