South Africa down but not out after loss that will help them ‘keep learning’
Don’t read that as South Africa’s way of pacifying themselves or playing down what is another disappointment but rather as a more realistic and rational assessment of what is a bridging exercise between the last World Cup and the next one. Since the 2023 World Cup and prior to this event, South Africa played no matches with a full-strength ODI team and used the format development exercise. Over 15 months, they saw it as a place to bring in new players (and they handed out 14 caps since the end of the 2023 World Cup) and experiment with combinations. And at least one of those has really worked.
Kagiso Rabada and Lungi Ngidi are both on the cusp of that age and proved their worth, particularly in this match. Rabada’s maiden over to Williamson early and the two overs he bowled after the 40th which kept New Zealand quiet and removed Tom Latham were, in isolation, fabulous. Ngidi’s summing up of conditions and variations even after a season where there were questions over his fitness showed what role he can play on flat pitches in future. More’s the pity, maybe, that he won’t be in operation in Dubai where conditions might have suited him. There is work to be done on Marco Jansen and Wiaan Mulder’s execution in big games but both are young and developing and their presence gives South Africa the ability to field five seamers and bat deep.
So in the resources department South Africa have good reason to be confident that their work in progress is progressing and that is how Walter assessed it. “We had guys contributing significantly with the bat. From a bowling point of view, I think our biggest development was our accuracy, and that’s something that we’ve been working really hard on. Every game we play is a learning opportunity and we just keep trying to take the little lessons. Today is a hard lesson. You feel it a little bit more because it’s the end of a campaign, but we certainly continue to keep learning.”
That could sound like South Africa are using the international stage as a classroom but the reality of scheduling clashes, player availability and regularity of ICC events has left them no choice. And they’re not doing it at the expense of competing and competing well. Remember that they only actually played three matches with a full strength side recently – the three at this tournament – and won two of them convincingly, and that as a country they have reached the knockouts of the last seven ICC events across men’s, women’s and under-19s. The men made their first final just eight months ago at the T20 World Cup. Their gains are only incremental but they are there.
There’s a danger they may be putting too much store in that and setting expectations which could backfire spectacularly but that is a problem for another day. Today, they lost a game of cricket, an important one, but actually just another game as Jansen put it beforehand and they know it doesn’t change that much.