21 January 2019, by: Rohit Sankar of CricXtasy
Do the Proteas Have a Defensive Mindset?
Remember Adelaide 2012? If you were too young, too old, have amnesia or are an Aussie, this is what transpired:
Faf du Plessis on Test debut denied the Aussies in their backyard with ardent help from a certain AB de Villiers. They did not win the Test. They did not score a truckload of runs. They hadn’t even won the series yet. But they batted time. In 148 overs, South Africa made 248. Du Plessis faced 376 balls for a 110 (No, don’t look at the runs, look at the deliveries). de Villiers faced 220 balls for 33.
What the innings did is tire out the Aussie bowlers so much that none of the three pacers in that game played the next match of the series where the visitors thumped the hosts by a whopping 309 runs to win the series.
Jaw-dropping? A midsummer night’s dream for every Protea fan who had seen decades of Aussie domination across the globe, across tournaments and series? Without a shade of doubt. South Africa’s outrageous effort even earned a name – the blockathon.
The pioneer? Current Test skipper, Faf du Plessis. What is arguably South Africa’s greatest Test innings of the last decade, if not in their entire Test history, could potentially have had a say in their current debacles as a Test unit under du Plessis. No, let’s not place the entire blame on him.
At Cape Town against England, South Africa played out 137.4 overs for exactly 248 runs (yes, so much like at Adelaide). Only, this time they lost. The innings run-rate? 1.80! The fifth worst in a completed Test innings since that Adelaide Test. Not South Africa’s worst, though, as they make an appearance at the top with a team run-rate of 0.99 in 143.1 overs in Delhi 2015, that was also a lost cause.
As brave an effort as these blockathons are, the results haven’t been too encouraging and the mindset has quickly gone down this path every time they find themselves on the back-foot. As South Africa stared at another blockathon effort at Port Elizabeth, former opener Herschelle Gibbs put out a compelling tweet that resonates with South Africa’s demons in Test cricket right now.
Saw this in India on flat wickets with no turn or seam. Its carried on now again. First test in India we got to 400 playing positively.. not sure who saying what but it has to change ASAP.
— Herschelle Gibbs (@hershybru) January 19, 2020