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What a great time to be a Protea fan. No, I’m not referring to the flower, although I suppose this would also be a good time as spring is almost upon us. I am, of course, referring to the Proteas, our national cricketers.

The last time I was this excited about South African cricket, Hansie Cronje was being coerced by the devil and making some extra pocket money on the side. The game has hopefully been cleaned up considerably since then, which makes my heightened optimism all the greater. After resounding victories in the second and third Tests, the Proteas have gone on to achieve a historic series win in England. This coming after dispatching the West Indies at home and Bangladesh away, and earning a share of the spoils in India.

Graeme Smith may forever kick himself at the unforgivable loss of Minki, and his anti-fan club may be as large as his alleged ego, but he has developed into a fine captain nonetheless and has been instrumental in the molding of a fiercely competitive side. Our top order, traditionally about as strong and dependable as a Baker’s Tennis Biscuit, is suddenly piling on the runs, our fielding is up to the standard last seen during the Jonty Rhodes era and we have arguably one of the strongest seam-bowling attacks in the world today.

Watch out Australia, here we come? South African fans certainly have grounds to believe so.

Smith and Neil McKenzie have quickly developed into a formidable opening pair, with McKenzie grabbing what was potentially his last crack at international cricket with both hands and feet. Hashim Amla has grown in stature since his nervy introduction to Test cricket and, armed with an impressive beard to boot, looks set to become a stalwart in the side for many years to come.

Jacques Kallis is arguably the greatest South African batsman of the modern era and will be a vital to the team’s success in Australia, both with the bat and the ball. In Ashwell Prince and AB de Villiers, we have the combination of steely grit from the Gary Kirsten school of cricket, together with flashy and aggressive stroke play.

Boucher is as dependable as ever behind the stumps, as well as being the ideal go-to-guy when the chips are down, as he proved in the third Test with his match-winning partnership with Smith.

With a quartet of Morne Morkel, Dale Steyn, Makhaya Ntini and Monde Zondeki, we have a battery of fast-bowlers capable of destroying any batting line-up, and then of course there’s also Andre Nel if need be.

Our one potential weakness remains our lack of a world-class spinner, a perennial problem that has dogged our cricket. Paul Harris has a bit of a “stop gap” air about him, and the sooner we unearth a slow bowler who can actually turn the ball, the better. (The Western Province rugby team tried importing a few Fijians recently; perhaps their cricket counterparts should consider inviting a few Sri Lankan youngsters to Cape Town?)

Nevertheless, the Australian series promises to be a cracker and, were I a betting man, I would certainly fancy a wager on the Proteas pulling off a series win. Whatever happens, cricket fans can be prepared for one hell of a summer.




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6 Responses to “Proteas: Is this our golden generation?”

I agree with you, Shaun. It’s a great time to be a Proteas supporter. But there’s even more room for optimism: SA have also got a serious depth of talent. JP Duminy could replace any batsman who experiences a drop of form (as, I’m sad to say, Kallis may be doing right now) and there is a host of fast bowlers in the wings (Zondeki among them). Let’s hope we can save (perhaps even win) the fourth test against England after two discouraging days…

(Report abuse)

Paddy II on August 9th, 2008 at 1:20 pm

I am a huge SA cricket fan but honestly, our chances against Aus are slim. Let’s be realistic here, Ntini’s best days are behind him and our seam bowling attack, while impressive, has a serious lack of variety about it. Without a quality spinner we are always going to struggle to bowl the Aussies out twice.

(Report abuse)

Sean on August 9th, 2008 at 3:52 pm

Hi Sean. I would like to share the optimism, but I get the feeling we’ve been here before. Many times. We put together 2 great series performances and then something (usually the Ozzies putting us back in our place) brings us back to earth. Well, no harm in enjoying it… while it lasts….

(Report abuse)

TheElephant on August 10th, 2008 at 4:31 pm

the real LSD test comes against the Aussies as always, and quite frankly - our pace attack is more luke warm than hot. We still lack a genuine outright pace attack that scares the daylights out of oppo’s. we have some pie throwers doing an okay job.

And its worth noting that Kallis is in fact the greatest all rounder statistically to play the game…

(Report abuse)

gmk on August 11th, 2008 at 12:42 pm

Pity though about our shocking ODI form. We’re currently being caned 4-0 against an utterly average England team that we beat 2-1 in a test series in their own back yard!

Forget about Australia, I’s start worrying about our lack of ODI form and move to correct it ASAP. This ODI series in England is by far our worst performance in history!!

(Report abuse)

cyberst0rm on September 1st, 2008 at 12:07 pm

This smacks of our SA arrogance - yes a first test series win since 1965, but place it in context. Thanks to weather we survived the 1st test( we completely outplayed. True leadership, rather lack thereof, sufaced when we were again outplayed in the 4th. Would a world class outfit like Oz allowed this? Lets not go the ODI route as we are going to be embarred against Oz. Mickey and Smith seem to have a very snug approach and our players have got to be the chubbiest unfit bunch in the top 5 ICC ODI rankings. I’d love to read Shaun Oakes after the Oz saga - its time journalist in SA start seeing the real story. SA just simply have slipped under Mickey when it comes to competing in ODI’s or challenging Oz.

(Report abuse)

jeff on September 2nd, 2008 at 6:28 am

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A scholar and a gentleman, Shaun Oakes has many passions in life - including rugby, soccer and peeing in the shower.

Although mediocre at virtually every sport he has played, Oakes is nonetheless a passionate writer, and regularly shares his unique insight on various sporting codes.

When not getting harassed by Big Issue vendors or women with small feet, he also finds the time to run the surprisingly popular website www.shaunoakes.com.
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