When Temba Bavuma’s understated players ‘rubbished’ the perceptions about them and stitched a dream | Cricket News


Fourth ball of the 84th over, under sparking blue skies at Lord’s, Kyle Verreynne drove Mitchell Starc between point and covers and ran the run that crowned South Africa as world Test champions, hauling the target of 282 to upend defending champions Australia by five wickets.

Emotions outpoured. On the balcony, Temba Bavuma sunk his face on his palms, hiding the tears. His teammates roared and high-fived. Keshav Maharaj’s words quivered during the pitchside interview. “It’s what the country’s about, the unity among everyone in the last five days,” he somehow managed some words. “Stuff of dreams,” Marco Jansen gathered his emotions and said. Kagiso Rabada rubbished aspersions that they haven’t faced strong oppositions to the final. Aiden Markram, whose splendid 136 orchestrated the chase, stated the obvious: I haven’t scored more important runs.”

Former captain Graeme Smith, among the commentary crew, roared in delight beside the boundary ropes. AB de Villiers, with his son, swiped the air in euphoria.

It’s the most famous and symbolic run in the history of South African cricket. South Africa have claimed the Champions Trophy once, in 1998 when it was known as KnockOut Trophy, and were twice crowned the number one ranked team in Tests. But none matched the magnitude of this feat. It ends years of hurt and heartbreaks, brain-fades and miscalculations, fallibility and freeze, tears in the rain and aches under sun, that had the cricketing public both empathise and ridicule them. In this match-winning run, the nation found catharsis. A historic stroke that wipes their painful shivers of history. A shot of liberation. A moment as momentous as Francois Pienaar raising the rugby World Cup in 1995, watched on by Nelson Mandela, both wearing a No 6 jersey.

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It is a triumph of inclusivity. Holding the mace aloft was South Africa’s first black captain, Bavuma, a figure that had polarised opinions. He was a metaphor of change in the country that once reeled in the most inhuman practice that was the apartheid. He was also projected as an epiphany of everything negative about the quota system, a reason several talented cricketers seek refuge in county cricket and Tasman shores. The moment of glory would potentially shake perceptions. The colour lines are fading.

Two other black cricketers, Rabada and Lungi Ngidi, produced star acts in the final as well as the journey to the final. Rabada, a generational fast bowler, a fusion of grace and athleticism, grabbed 56 scalps at 18.53. Ngidi’s evening burst on day two triggered the collapse that forced South Africa back into the game. Left-arm spinner Maharaj, of Indian descent, with roots in Uttar Pradesh’s Sultanpur, nabbed 41 wickets at 20.95. The white cricketers too put in stellar shifts, like Markram in the final, seam-bowling all-rounder Jansen, David Bedingham and Verreynne. The Rainbow was complete.

Festive offer

It was an antithesis to their squad for the World T20 Cup last year, which featured only one black cricketer and was promptly blasted as a backward step. Former CSA and ICC president Ray Mali termed it a betrayal. “We have betrayed the people who asked us to negotiate unity for this country. Players are mentored or monitored right from their early days up to the top, so you know which players will represent South Africa,” he told SABC Sport.

It’s a song of personal redemption for a bunch of cricketers considered as emblems of talent-dearth and drain. Bavuma was perpetually criticised for his inconsistency and “passive captaincy”, one who captains the side because of the colour of skin. Rabada was returning from a three-month ban for alleged cocaine use. The shadow of underperformance had tailed Markram, preordained to scale batting peaks, throughout his career. All of them wore match-defining roles.

It’s a victory of understated cricketers, an ensemble cast of domestic workhorses and fledgling talents. Rabada is the lone superstar in the group. Bedingham made his Test debut after a decade in domestic and county cricket, after featuring in more than 100 first-class games. Bowlers will not lose sleep over Verreynne, Wiaan Mulder or Ryan Rickleton. The batting line-up was supposedly the weakest they had fielded in recent history. The difference was stark when compared to Australia’s. Before the game, Steve Smith had 116 Tests on his ledger. South Africa’s top seven combined, excluding Bavuma, has collected only two more Tests. Smith has cracked 36 hundreds; the top seven of South Africa combined 21.

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There is a delicious paradox here, a quirk of destiny, that the undecorated bunch mustered what more gilded batting firms and dynastic teams could not. Markram has achieved what Jacques Kallis, Herschelle Gibbs, Hashim Amla, Graeme Smith and AB de Villiers could not in their celebrated careers. A World Championship title, founded on belief and bouncebackability rather than pure talent.

The victory has powers to resurrect the game in the country. The last few years have been tumultuous, what with administrative instability, premature retirements, migration to Australia and Europe, wage and contract disputes, fixation on T20 franchise circuit, besides a cloud of pessimism that the game is treading a slippery slope. June 14 in Lord’s could inspire a generation. World cricket too has emerged richer from this victory at a time when the longest format is losing their old bases. Pakistan and Sri Lanka have tethered to irrelevance. West Indies are in shambles, the growth of Bangladesh shunted like a bonsai tree; Zimbabwe retracting its steps back into the Test fold. Afghanistan and Ireland are showing little signs of upward mobility.

It’s sweeter, and poetic justice, that they defeated Australia in the final. Australia is all things South Africa aspires to be, a serial winner, a sporting super dynasty, and mentality monsters. Australia consigned South Africa to the most heartbreaking moment in their cricket history, the 1999 World Cup semifinal. It’s on Australian soil that they experienced the pangs of an asinine rain rule to deny a win that could have changed the psychological disposition of the Proteas . So even if they have won more games and series in Australia than any other side since the 1990s, beating them in a knockout game lifted their heaviest burden.

Thus, South Africa laid a fleet of ghosts to rest on the balmy Saturday evening at Lord’s.





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