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CT 2017 Team Preview : South Africa

Abdul

ODI Debutant
Joined
Jul 1, 2015
Runs
9,212
It's time for another major limited-overs tournament. The perennial underachievers on the big stage, South Africa, are currently ranked #1 in the ODI format. Will they turn it around this time and shed the unwanted tag of being 'mentally weak' and 'chokers'?


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It all started when South Africa tied against Australia in the semi-final of 1999 Cricket World Cup. Afterwards, they were labelled as ‘chokers’ and they’ve had to live with that tag; time and time again, the South Africans fall short at tournament during the knockout stages. Will a star-studded lineup finally rid the Saffers of distressing tag? This exact question arises whenever they enter any major tournament. As a matter of fact, South Africa have won only one major tournament in their entire cricketing history, which coincidentally happens to be ICC Champions Trophy (in 1998).

Since the 2015 Cricket World Cup, they've a very good record in ODI cricket. They've played 39 games and won 25 out of those. Faf du Plessis has been the most prolific run scorer having scored 1667 runs in 33 innings at an average of 61.74. He will be vital to South Africa's chances in the upcoming tournament.

AB de Villiers is bound and determined to win at least one trophy for his nation before he fades off into the sunset. It was a rather unpleasant sight to see him in tears after South Africa’s exit from 2015 Cricket World Cup after their loss against New Zealand. Many of his critics say that his nerves get the better of him in crunch situations but this is his chance and he’ll be itching to prove them wrong. Although it’s time he moves up the order for betterment of his team.

They’ve got a lot of quality cricketers in their side who can keep the things steady when required and they can also bully the bowlers in the last few overs. AB de Villiers, Faf du Plessis, and Quinton de Kock are the prime examples of this.

If you like watching batsmen, Quinton de Kock will be your main man who’s rated by a lot of experts. He is the next Proteas superstar who is blessed with the natural ability to play shots all around the field. He started off his career batting down the order at #7 but was eventually promoted and he’ll be taking up the opening duties along with Hashim Amla which speaks the volume of his ability. He tends to rely on hand eye coordination and is a smart cricketer. Ranked at #6 in ODI rankings, he is not behind many.

On to bowlers, it’s going to be exciting to see how Kagiso Rabada performs against the best in business. This’ll be the first chance for Rabada to shine with the whole world watching as this will be his first global tournament after having debuted in July 2015. He’s a complete bowler who can swing the ball as well as generate awkward bounce. His pace is just the icing on the cake. The top-ranked ODI bowler in the world, Imran Tahir, operates brilliantly in the middle overs and almost always finds a way to get amongst the wickets; his performances will be key to the Proteas' ambitions in the tournament.

At the bottom, they have an insanely good hitter in form of David Miller who can take on the bowlers and put South Africa in a good position to win the game. They're pretty much covered up in all aspects of the sport as their fielding is also top notch. Faf du Plessis is probably the best in the world when it comes to taking excellent catches.

The Saffers don't have a lot of weaknesses other than being mentally weak. As we've seen in the past, their cricketers usually bottle it when the going gets tough. Their lack of quality all rounders may also hurt them as there's no name which really stands out in particular.

Strengths

One name : AB de Villiers

Weaknesses

Mentally weak and a reputation to choke which they need to address in this tournament

Verdict

Likely to be semi finalists

South Africa Squad

AB de Villiers (C), Hashim Amla, Quinton de Kock, Faf du Plessis, JP Duminy, David Miller, Chris Morris, Wayne Parnell, Andile Phehlukwayo, Kagiso Rabada, Imran Tahir, Dwaine Pretorius, Keshav Maharaj, Farhaan Behardien, Morne Morkel
 
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Lmao love the weakness :))

In all seriousness, they are the best team on paper. Only problem is that weak lower order and tail
 
Weakness-ROFL . I think their bowling is bit overrated apart from imran and kagiso there is not any threatening bowler.
 
They need to play Morne instead of rubbish like Waleed and after their top 4 they simply have no quality in their batting to win them matches. They are nowhere near being the best team even on paper.
 
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Duminy and Miller are very inconsistent and unreliable.

Dwaine Pretorius is a bits and pieces allrounder who bowls at the pace of Rahat Ali and his batting is not better than that of Amir. A waste of space. Frankly I prefer Behardien over Pretorius

I think that only the top 4 can cope against a quality bowling attack
 
They need to play Morne instead of rubbish like Waleed and after their top 4 they simply have no quality in their batting to win them matches. They are nowhere near being the best team even on paper.

Waleed is an all-rounder and his competition is Morris. Morne needs to come in for Pretorius/Phelukuyawo (not sure I spelt that right).

Duminy and Miller are pretty average but South Africa have the strongest top four in the whole tournament so it evens out.
 
Waleed is an all-rounder and his competition is Morris. Morne needs to come in for Pretorius/Phelukuyawo (not sure I spelt that right).

Duminy and Miller are pretty average but South Africa have the strongest top four in the whole tournament so it evens out.

White bowler cannot come in place of a black bowler . This is SA we are talking about . They have to fill their quotas. And Morris has bowled better than Parnell so that means Parnell will have to sit out for Morne.
 
White bowler cannot come in place of a black bowler . This is SA we are talking about . They have to fill their quotas. And Morris has bowled better than Parnell so that means Parnell will have to sit out for Morne.

South African are only required to field 4 players of colour in their national team.

Amla, Tahir, Dumminy and Rabada are automatics choices. This means that there spots for 7 white players

Morne Morkel was not dropped because he is white. The Headingly wicket flat and was not ideal for Morkels style of bowling.

Waleed Parnel and Andile Phehlukwayo were selected because they are allrounders
 
Lmao love the weakness :))

In all seriousness, they are the best team on paper. Only problem is that weak lower order and tail

how are they the best team on paper?

lower middle order is weak and inconsistent

bowling leaves a fair bit to be desired

Aus, Eng are better
 
how are they the best team on paper?

lower middle order is weak and inconsistent

bowling leaves a fair bit to be desired

Aus, Eng are better

Yes, their bowling isn't good. Parnell, Morris, Phelukwayo, Maharaj, and Pretorius are all mediocre at best. Rabada and Tahir can go for runs as they just did against England.
 
Duminy should be sent back to South Africa. Miller is a fine player for no.6 position. They need a clutch batsmen at no.5.
 
A strong batting line up , Rabada, Tahir, and Morkel provide wicket taking options in the bowling department. They have always been a strong fielding unit , that shouldn't change in this tournament.

There main issue seems to be a mental one, somehow they always sucombe to the pressure of the event.

Think this is a lot of these players last chance to win a tournament, as there are a lot of 30 plus players and in 2 years time they will be 2 years older.
 
This choker tag is a horrible one for these guys - hope they win something!
 
how are they the best team on paper?

lower middle order is weak and inconsistent

bowling leaves a fair bit to be desired

Aus, Eng are better

Plus the 800 pound choking Gorilla in the team is their biggest problem...They could not make 10 runs in last two overs yesterday, with two set batsmen, both of them remain not-out after those 10 deliveries :facepalm:

AUS/ENG are teams to beat, India is next in line, they are also very consistent in last few years, really don't have slip up games....
 
South Africa are coming into the tournament with one of their most well balanced and dangerous ODI teams in a long long time. Provided they don't choke, i see them going all the way. Keeping them behind Australia and India still for lack of tourney winning experience.
 
This choker tag is a horrible one for these guys - hope they win something!

One day everything will click in a final and it will be something to behold.

Unfortunately, the real possibility exists of losing a final after trying to reach one for so long.
 
The Standard Bank Proteas will have a fully fit squad from which to select for their opening ICC Champions Trophy match against Sri Lanka at The Oval in London on Saturday. Imran Tahir and David Miller passed their respective fitness tests on Friday, and are available for selection for the Group B clash.

Captain, AB de Villiers, welcomed the duo’s return, particularly Tahir who is the Proteas’ highest wicket-taker in the last year with 35 scalps at an average of 24.37. While Tahir is a straight pick, De Villiers says finding the perfect balance with the ball will be important against the sub-continent team.

“Imran is fit and he's our No. 1 bowler, our No. 1 spin bowler,” he said at his pre-match press conference at The Oval on Friday. “Keshav (Maharaj) understands his role when it comes to that. There might be a time in the tournament where we might use a different strategy, if we play against a certain opposition or on a certain field. But for tomorrow, Imran is our top spin bowler and the No. 1 pick.

“That is a difficult decision, especially for a game like tomorrow's,” he said of selection. “We know that we have an opportunity and the ability to bowl the Sri Lankan side out. It's a matter of getting that combination right and getting the right players on the park to do so. To me it's really important to get your top three-four bowlers in there. Not that the all-rounders can't take wickets but I'll probably be leaning towards getting our best bowlers in to make sure we have our best chance to bowl them out and to get ten wickets in the game.”

The tournament will be a chance for De Villiers and his men to reap the rewards of the hard work and progress they have made over the last 18 months, and will also be a glimpse of the future looking ahead to the ICC Cricket World Cup in 2019.

“I think it will help a crazy lot if we can win this one for the 2019 World Cup,” he said. “It's again here in England. If you can do it once here, you can definitely repeat it. There is a lot of focus on this tournament. It's a short tournament, so it's not quite the same as the World Cup, not the same kind of challenges. But if you do get your rhythms right in this tournament and you get going, and if we do that, I think we'll be difficult to stop.”
 
And so it ends...

THE Standard Bank Proteas crashed out of the ICC Champions Trophy when they were outclassed by India by 8 wickets with 12 overs to spare in their final Pool B match at The Oval in London on Sunday.

India are now almost certain to top the Pool and be joined by the winners of tomorrow’s match between Sri Lanka and Pakistan in the semi-final round. The other teams to qualify are hosts England and Bangladesh.

The Proteas, who lost the toss and were sent into bat by Virat Kohli, started well enough when Hashim Amla and Quinton de Kock put on 76 for the first wicket and De Kock and Faf du Plessis a further 40 for the second.

But two catastrophic run outs of AB de Villiers (a carbon copy of what happened in the 2011 World Cup quarter-final against New Zealand) and David Miller sparked a horrendous collapse that saw the last 8 wickets (3 run outs) falling for 51 runs.

De Kock top scored with his side’s only half-century (53 off 72 balls, 4 fours).

The India bowlers retained good control throughout with the Proteas unable to put them under pressure at any stage. Jasprit Bumrah was named Man of the Match for his figures of 2/28 as the Proteas were only able to bat for 44.3 of their 50 overs.

Morne Morkel created early hope for the Proteas when he claimed the wicket of Rohit Sharma but that was quickly snuffed out by the second-wicket stand of 128 between Shikhar Dhawan (78 off 83 balls, 12 fours and a six) and Kohli (76 off 101 balls, 7 fours and a six).
 
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