Off to the Cape, with good hope
The soles of the trainers Rassie van der Dussen wore at
Newlands on Wednesday were studded with purple and turquoise rubber pebbles -
which made it seem like he was walking on two flavours of bubblegum. Keshav
Maharaj favoured a similar colour scheme, even on his uppers, albeit, minus the
pebbles; he is a smoother operator. Orange flames and blue smudges on a white
background was Vernon Philander's footwear preference. Quinton de Kock is
unarguably the most outrageously talented in this company, but he wore the most
understated shoes among them: blue-grey marl knit with off-white soles.
Mere weeks ago, South African cricket was divided along as
many lines as a stretch of crazy paving. The biggest cracks are still there -
hello? Cricket South Africa's (CSA) board? When are you going to resign? - and
none of the major faultlines were in the team. Even so, to have all those
contrastingly-clad feet happily pointed in the same direction in the afterglow
of victory in the first men's Test at Centurion seems miraculous.
It's just one win, and the team is far from the only aspect
of the game in this country that desperately needs fixing. That success,
however, and the manner of its achieving, hints at what awaits if more of the
remaining problems are resolved.
In the wake of a failed World Cup campaign and five
consecutive Test defeats, the only way was up. But that doesn't take away from
the shining truth that the appointments of Jacques Faul as CSA's acting chief
executive, Graeme Smith as acting director of cricket, Mark Boucher as coach,
and - for the summer - Jacques Kallis and Charl Langeveldt as batting and
bowling consultants have had the desired effect.
For Rassie van der Dussen, who was among South Africa's more
reliable batters at the World Cup and became the first man to score a
half-century on debut in all three formats (when he made 51 in the second
innings at Centurion), the change for the better was striking.
"The work ethic was something that I've never seen
before, and the intensity at training," he said of preparations for the
first Test. "It's a new dawn for South African cricket. We were desperate
to regain the public's [good] opinion of us and of [CSA]. You have that
responsibility towards the fans - to put in a good performance and to win
matches. Last year wasn't the best for CSA and the Proteas, but the fight the
guys showed - Anrich Nortj e 's innings showed what we're about as a team -
means we're committed to giving our all."
South Africa were 62/4 when Nortj e , playing his third
Test, joined Van der Dussen as a nightwatch on the second evening. He survived
16 balls before stumps and another 21 the next day, in all batting for more
than two hours for his career-best 40 and sharing a stand of 91 - South
Africa's best of the match and just one run shy of matching the partnership
England openers Rory Burns Dom Sibley put on in the second innings as the
biggest overall. What the South Africans saw on the field, Van der Dussen said,
was an expression of what was happening beyond the balcony.
"There's a different atmosphere in the changeroom.
Boucher and Kallis have brought the really hard mentality that you need in Test
cricket. It's a high pressure environment; it's strenuous out there on the
field. You need that hardness and toughness. That's why Graeme Smith brought in
a guy like Mark Boucher - to be a fighter and feisty character. We have those
characteristics, but Boucher really brought it out in us."
Maharaj was adamant that, even through the bad times,
"the passion has always been there". But his own giddily raucous
reaction to bowling Ben Stokes off the bottom edge on Sunday said plenty,
especially as he isn't the most demonstrative player on the field. "We've
come off a difficult Test season, so to get the win meant a lot to the
guys," Maharaj said. "From where we were, in a disruptive period, to
where we are now, we were always going to celebrate each others' successes and
the victory that came with that."
Philander made his Test debut at Newlands in November 2011
in a team that included Smith, Kallis and Boucher. So he knew who he was
dealing with: "When you have guys who have played at the highest level, it
makes it easier. You can really feed off them. Having the credibility of the
guys in the changeroom now, who have been there and understand what it takes to
get back up again, has made a big difference."
Langeveldt's influence was apparent at Centurion, where
South Africa's pace attack relied on more than the muscle and aggression that
has been their plan A. Suddenly, they had skills and a willingness to bowl a
fuller length.
"'Langes has also been around," Philander said.
"Between him and myself and a couple of the bowlers, we try and get to the
answer quicker, [rather] than feeling our way into a spell and then starting to
realise [what to do] halfway through."
For De Kock, the proof of the pudding was in the reinvention:
"The guys are very focused at the moment. I'm not saying they weren't
focused before, but the confidence was down. Now, with this win, the confidence
is very high. We've got a great team environment, and we're bringing that onto
the field."
There was even room for a joke in this brave new dressing
room. The first half of it was told at Centurion by Boucher, who said he was
happy he didn't have to get 11 De Kocks to straighten up and fly right. To De
Kock fell the pleasure of delivering the punchline: "I'm sure his coaches
were happy not to have to deal with 11 Mark Bouchers. I guess sometimes I can
be a handful, but we get on well. He's probably just giving me some lip anyway.
I don't know what I've done wrong. Yet."
Having won by 107 runs with four sessions to spare at
Centurion, South Africa will hope to take their rekindled self-belief, and
more, onto the field with them when the second Test starts at Newlands on
Friday. They could do worse than look at their firmly-grounded feet, realise
that the shoe fits, and wear it.

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