Rain threatens Proteas No 1 spot. AB must decide: spin or 4th seamer?

By Rob Houwing, Sport24 chief writer

Cape Town – The Proteas’ possible hold on the No 1 spot in the Test rankings for the end of another annual cycle looks increasingly tenuous.

Vultures are circling in the mounting hope of unseating them … and those scavenging birds of prey are Indian and Australian, the two teams respectively the nearest challengers as things stand.

England's Steven Finn (C) reacts as South Africa's AB de Villiers (L) and Hashim Amla run between wickets during the second cricket test match in Cape Town, South Africa, January 4, 2016. REUTERS/Mike Hutchings
England’s Steven Finn (C) reacts as South Africa’s AB de Villiers (L) and Hashim Amla run between wickets during the second cricket test match in Cape Town, South Africa, January 4, 2016. REUTERS/Mike Hutchings

India don’t have any further cards to be able to play for their own good ahead of the April 1 cut-off, when the ICC hands an elevated sum of $1 million (about R16.7m at present) to the premier side, as they are done with Tests for the cycle, so require struggling remaining performances from the Aussies and Proteas to steal the mantle.

South Africa have two further encounters to negotiate before they wrap up Test business for the year, whilst Australia still have to play New Zealand away in a two-Test series during February.

Not only is touring, presently sixth-ranked England’s ongoing mastery of the four-Test series against South Africa an obvious imperilment to the Proteas’ reign, but changing weather on the Highveld of late only adds to the hazards as AB de Villiers and company attempt to come from 1-0 down to steal the series 2-1.

Read also: Rob Houwing: Proteas must ring changes now to avoid another embarrassment

The third Test starts at the Wanderers on Thursday, whilst the final clash of the series is scheduled for not far up the road in Centurion.

Apart from having to belatedly hit their straps from a purely cricketing point of view – series defeat by any margin definitely sees them lose top spot – South Africa may well also have to dodge the elements if they are to strike back meaningfully in the series and at the very least share it.

Earning a 1-1 outcome would give them a chance of staying No 1, as that scenario would require the Baggy Greens to clean-sweep the mini-series across the Tasman – Wellington and Christchurch Tests – to fractionally dislodge them.

But the forecast for the Wanderers is not too promising, with the prospect of varying amounts of rainfall on several of the scheduled match days – better news for drought-ravaged Highveld farmers than for domestic cricket-lovers, perhaps.

Read also: Hail cricketer Temba Bavuma – the pocket dynamo all SA should be proud of

Still, matches at the Bullring tend to proceed at a good pace, and a gloomy, low cloud-cover sort of environment without too many rain disruptions could make the pitch fairly spicy and turn the Test into something of a lottery – maybe a better hallmark for the team that is trailing in a series?

Speaking of drought, the Proteas are in the rare midst of their own: failure to win at Newlands over New Year meant they stretched to eight their winless run in Tests.

This eclipsed their previous worst spell of the post-isolation era of seven, between 2005 and 2006.

Then, they drew the final Test of a series in the West Indies they’d already clinched, and went on to lose five and draw just one of six Tests in back-to-back series against Australia.

South Africa’s last, protracted barren spell of the pre-isolation phase came between 1963 and 1965 – a 10-Test sequence without a victory.

After drawing the fifth Test of a shared series in Australia, SA drew 0-0 in a three-Test series in New Zealand, lost 1-0 in a five-Test series at home to England, and drew the first Test of 1965 away to the same foes.

The drought famously ended in the second Test at Nottingham, where a 21-year-old Graeme Pollock wowed the Trent Bridge crowd with his blistering stroke-play in successive, match-swaying knocks of 125 and 59.

SA earned a draw in the final Test to secure the series 1-0. – Sport24

Source: http://www.sport24.co.za/Cricket/Proteas/no-1-rain-adds-to-threat-for-sa-20160112

AB to decide on fourth seamer?

Cape Town – With the batting line-up seemingly back on track – with the exception of opener Stiaan van Zyl – the only selection issues for the Proteas going into the third Test against England at the Wanderers are in the bowling department.

Dale Steyn has been ruled out of the match as he continues to recover from a shoulder strain, but the biggest headache is likely to be whether or not to play Dane Piedt.

The off-spinner gave a good account of himself in the second innings of the second Test in Cape Town – taking 3/38 as the Proteas chased an unlikely victory on the final day.

But Piedt’s potential exclusion in no way suggests that he has done a poor job, and it would be more about conditions in Johannesburg than anything else.

History has suggested that spin bowling in Johannesburg is not a necessity, and with rain expected throughout the Test match there is likely to be a bit in it for the seamers.

It is a decision that will fall largely on the shoulders of new captain AB de Villiers.

“With a new captain and a new leader … we really take the input of the captain very seriously,” convener of selectors Linda Zondi told Sport24.

“We need to make sure that the captain is happy with the team that he is going to take across that white line.”

Previous captain Hashim Amla was a known fan of having a specialist spinner in his teams, but De Villiers and the Proteas can not accept anything other than a victory in this match and there will surely be a temptation to use conditions in an attempt to blow England away.

“We’ve done our homework and we know what Wanderers has to offer, and if there is an opportunity for four seamers we shall definitely go with four seamers, and if we feel that we need a spinner then we have Dane Piedt,” Zondi added.

“It’s better to have more options than to limit yourself.”

With Steyn out, a fourth seamer will come in the form of Kyle Abbott or Hardus Viljoen. – Sport24

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