logo
Neil McKenzie interview on WTC final: Can South Africa beat serial winners Australia at Lord's?

Neil McKenzie interview on WTC final: Can South Africa beat serial winners Australia at Lord's?

Indian Express09-06-2025
The upcoming World Test Championship final will mark quite a pivotal moment in the future of Test cricket for South Africa. With the increasing attraction of T20 franchise leagues across the world offering lucrative amounts, the red-ball format has become an afterthought outside the big three (India, England and Australia). South Africa, not long ago, at the beginning of the WTC cycle, sent their 'provincial team' to New Zealand to accommodate the players who had SAT20 gigs.
Neil McKenzie, who played 58 Tests for South Africa in a nine-year career, spoke on whether he thinks Temba Bavuma's men can beat defending champions Australia and what the WTC Final and Test cricket overall means to the country in a chat with The Indian Express.
Excerpts:
What does this WTC final mean to South Africa?
Everyone's really excited in South Africa and can't wait for the 11th of June. We've gone through a little bit of a slump in terms of Test cricket, in the last couple of years. So it's nice to be back competing for the championship.
There have been a few questions raised on the path which South Africa has reached the final of the WTC final
It's not South Africa's fault or any of the other nation's' fault. That's the scheduling. Yes, they haven't played against Australia or England, but they've had some quality results. Winning in Bangladesh was quite clinical, especially having to sort of almost give up on the New Zealand (2023-24) tour because of the SA20.
There has been sharp criticism from former players about the way South Africa didn't send their main team to New Zealand because of SA20. How do you view that?
We know what a big money spinner it is (SA20), and it's really important for South African cricket. So you can have money to develop grassroots and your provinces, and have pipelines. So everyone understood it. It wasn't ideal sending a second, third string to New Zealand. You don't just want to hand out caps, and your test side has to be your ultimate side.
We've seen some of the other countries where they're playing a lot of young players in their Test side because of the T20 system and guys choosing to go that route, which is a personal choice for a lot of players. That team that went to New Zealand was all those guys who didn't get a gig in the SA20 sides. So that's taken out a lot of your core players. So it was probably a provincial team that went to play test cricket.
How do SA players view Test cricket with SA20 and all franchise money that can be made? We have seen Anrich Nortje deny a central contract
A guy like Andrew Nortje, he's a fast bowler, bowling 150 km an hour. He knows his body. He's not 21 anymore. So he's got some choices to make in terms of what's best for him. Obviously, we'd love to see him playing in the SA20 and Test cricket. But he's had a couple of injuries. I never look down on anybody in terms of their decisions they make. Everyone's got their reasons. But as an ex-player, I want South Africa to have at their call their best resources for test cricket.
We've got a few more all-rounders coming through the system, which gives our team a lot of balance in terms of Marco Jansen, Wian Mulder and some of those younger batters. If you look at how they're coming through there, all of them have got Test 100s, and there's competition for places, which hasn't always been the case over the last couple of years. If you think of South African cricket and you think of all the wins in the history that we've had, there's always been competition for places, and it's hard to crack a position, where in the last couple of years, I don't think that competition for places has been there.
It could have been a bit of Kolpak (to play in County cricket in England), it could have been a couple of T20 leagues, but there's that hunger now. A lot of those players are playing T20 as well. South African cricket is being clever in terms of allowing them to go earn their bucks, but managing players. So there's a give and take. Players can't just take, take, take in terms of, 'I want to do this league, that league'.
What do you think of Temba Bavuma as captain, which makes him tick?
Temba's been good. He's found his little niche in terms of how he wants to captain. And there's always that time where you've got to find your feet, know how you want to lead.
And he's gone about it, not going away from his personality. He's led in terms of the batting department the last couple of years, shown grit, gets stuck in, and been consistent in his performances. So that's one way to lead.
He has a quiet demeanour, but there's a steeliness; your core skill has to be leading from the front, whether you're a captain or not. So he's been leading the batting department. And he's making a good pair with Shukri Conrad as the coach. So they've got a World Cup final to show for their efforts and hopefully a win at the end of the Test match.
Australians are serial winners. What do you think South Africa will need, apart from obviously playing well, to beat this side?
It's just doing the basics well, playing against a well-drilled experienced Aussie side that has been there before and done it. You don't have to go there to try and do something different. South Africa got a blueprint of how they want to play.
You do the analysis on the opposition and try and find little chinks or little opportunities, which you can sort of get through to them. But South Africa should just focus on themselves, enjoy the occasion and sort of play as a team, which they've done. That character, that resilience, that pride playing for your country, that will come out just to fulfil your role.
And with these tight Test matches there, you've got to stay in it. And if you are on top, you've got to try and stay on top, really push the hammer down because you know Australia, they've got an experienced bowling line-up and a few world-class batters – a few very X-factor batters. They'll be bringing their toys to play. South Africa is going to match them, and they'll have a lot of support at home and at the home of cricket, Lord's.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

South African Batter, Who Plays For LSG, Breaks World Record Of...
South African Batter, Who Plays For LSG, Breaks World Record Of...

News18

time9 hours ago

  • News18

South African Batter, Who Plays For LSG, Breaks World Record Of...

Last Updated: Breetzke scored 57 runs for the Proteas in the first ODI against Australia, and his 57-run knock helped him break the world record for scoring the most runs after the first 3 ODIs. South African batter Matthew Breetzke entered his name in the history books on Tuesday (August 19) by breaking the world record for scoring the most runs after the first three ODIs. The 26-year-old right-handed batter, who made his ODI debut for the Proteas against New Zealand on February 10, 2025, at Gaddafi Stadium in Lahore, went past former England batter Nick Knight's tally of runs. Knight, who made his ODI debut against Pakistan in Manchester on August 29, 1996, amassed a total of 264 runs for the English team in his first three ODIs. Whereas Breetzke has scored 290 runs. The right-handed batter scored 57 runs from 56 balls against Australia on Tuesday in the first ODI of the bilateral series played at Cazaly's Stadium in Cairns. In his first two ODI matches, he scored 150 runs against New Zealand and 83 runs against Pakistan in February 2025. The record of scoring the most runs after four ODIs is in the name of South Africa's Temba Bavuma. Bavuma amassed a total of 280 runs after his first four 50-over matches for the Proteas. Even if Breetzke fails to open his account in the next ODI for the Proteas, he will remain ahead of Bavuma. The fifty by Breetzke on Tuesday also helped him become the first South African and overall fourth cricketer in the world to score half-centuries in the first three ODIs. India's Navjot Singh Sidhu was the first cricketer to achieve the feat. In fact, Sidhu crossed the 50-run mark in each of his first four ODI innings, and he was joined by Netherlands batters Tom Cooper in 2010 and Max O'Dowd in 2021. Sidhu made his ODI debut against Australia in Chennai on October 9, 1987, and scored 73 runs in an ODI World Cup match. In his next game he made 75 against New Zealand in Bengaluru. He didn't get a chance to bat in the third ODI against Zimbabwe, but in the fourth match he once again scored 51 runs against Australia in Delhi and then 55 against Zimbabwe in Ahmedabad. In his first three ODIs for the Dutch team, Cooper registered scores of 80*, 87 and 67, whereas Max scored 86*, 59 and 82 runs. Batters to score 50+ runs in first three ODIs Breetzke, who plays for Lucknow Super Giants in the IPL, also holds the world record for scoring the most runs on ODI debut. On February 10, 2025, he became the first batter in the world to score 150 on ODI debut. view comments First Published: August 19, 2025, 21:26 IST News cricket South African Batter, Who Plays For LSG, Breaks World Record Of... Disclaimer: Comments reflect users' views, not News18's. Please keep discussions respectful and constructive. Abusive, defamatory, or illegal comments will be removed. News18 may disable any comment at its discretion. By posting, you agree to our Terms of Use and Privacy Policy. Loading comments...

Australia all-rounder Webster ready to fight for his Test spot, welcomes pressure from fit-again Cam Green
Australia all-rounder Webster ready to fight for his Test spot, welcomes pressure from fit-again Cam Green

Indian Express

time11 hours ago

  • Indian Express

Australia all-rounder Webster ready to fight for his Test spot, welcomes pressure from fit-again Cam Green

Australia all-rounder Beau Webster said he is okay putting up a fight and the need to prove himself and his spot in the Test XI after getting direct competition from Cameron Green. The lanky all-rounder has welcomed the compounding pressure from Green for his No. 6 spot in the upcoming blockbuster Ashes series against England at home. Webster has had a decent start to his Test career, playing several crucial innings for Australia in a short span. He scored a vital half-century on his debut against India and led his team to a win at Sydney Cricket Ground, from which Australia sealed the five-match series 3-1. He also shone with the bat in the World Test Championship final against South Africa, where the defending champion had lost their WTC title to the Proteas. 'When you're at the top level, you're fighting to hang on to your spot with all the wonderful cricketers around the country, especially a guy like Cameron Green,' said Webster to Cricket Australia. 'He's (Green) obviously going to be back bowling this summer, which is going to put a bit more pressure on my spot at number six as the allrounder. But I welcome it. I feel like I've been in this position before a lot in my career where I've got to score runs to either go to the next level or stay in a team. So it's certainly not unfamiliar,' said Webster who has signed a three-year BBL deal with the Hobart Hurricanes. 'I'm looking forward to once again showing what I can do at Shield level, and hopefully be lining up in that that first Ashes Test in Perth. It's going to be a massive summer, and I'm sure the team's going change a little bit throughout those five Tests, and I'm just going to do everything I can to make sure I'm there for all five,' he added. Webster took the No.6 spot from Mitch Marsh, who had been preferred over Green as the team's all-rounder since midway through the 2023 Ashes. Marsh subsequently played in the same XI as Green and now selectors are weighing up whether dual all-rounders is a viable ploy against England this summer.

Maharaj's 5-33 Sparks 98-Run Win for South Africa over Australia
Maharaj's 5-33 Sparks 98-Run Win for South Africa over Australia

Business Standard

time11 hours ago

  • Business Standard

Maharaj's 5-33 Sparks 98-Run Win for South Africa over Australia

Left-arm spinner Keshav Maharaj dismantled Australia with a career-best 5-33 as South Africa romped to a 98-run victory in the first one-day international on Tuesday. Maharaj made full use of spin-friendly conditions to help dismiss Australia for 198 with more than nine overs to spare after South Africa had earlier posted 296-8 -- the highest ODI total at Cazaly's Stadium in Cairns. Australia captain Mitchell Marsh made 88 off 96 balls and Ben Dwarshuis scored 33, but Maharaj had done enough damage in his unchanged spell of 10 overs to give the Proteas a 1-0 lead in the three-match series. Travis Head (27) gave Australia an explosive start of 60-0 in the first seven overs when the left-hander smashed fast bowler Nandre Burger for five boundaries in one over. But in a dramatic turnaround, the home team lost six wickets five to Maharaj for the addition of only 29 runs as Proteas skipper Temba Bavuma turned to his slow bowlers inside the batting power play. Australia went from 60-0 to 89-6. Debutant off-spinner Prenelan Subrayen (1-46) had Head stumped off his seventh ball in ODIs before Maharaj removed five batters for single digits. Maharaj had Marnus Labuschagne and Alex Carey trapped leg before wicket while Cameron Green, Josh Inglis and Aaron Hardie were clean bowled off deliveries that spun enough to beat the bat. Marsh and Dwarshuis resisted with a 71-run stand but Lungi Ngidi (2-28) and Burger (2-54) wrapped up the tail quickly after Maharaj and Subrayen's impeccable spells. After losing the toss, three half centuries from the top four batters powered South Africa on a wicket where spinners ruled with part-time offspinner Head claiming 4-57, his second four-wicket haul in ODIs. Aiden Markram (82), Bavuma (65) and Matthew Breetzke (57) all scored 50-plus before Australia came back strongly in the death overs with Head claiming three of his four wickets in the last 10 overs. Ryan Rickelton (33) survived a number of close calls, including a dropped catch by wicketkeeper Josh Inglis, as he put on a 92-run opening wicket stand with Markram. Rickelton's luck ended when he holed out to Labuschagne at mid off that gave Head his first wicket. Markram looked set for his first century in the last 20 ODIs, but the right-hander played a loose drive against Dwarshuis and was caught behind in the 24th over. Bavuma, playing his first international since leading South Africa to victory in the World Test Championship final, struggled to get going but Breetzke found boundaries against Australia's third spinner Labuschagne. Breetzke raised his run-a-ball half century but just when it looked like South Africa would finish off well he top-edged a slog sweep against Adam Zampa to Hardie at deep square leg. Head then got the big wickets of power-hitter Tristan Stubbs and debutant Dewald Brevis in the space of three balls. Brevis smashed the spinner for a first-ball six in his ODI career before perishing off the next ball when he couldn't clear Carey at long off. Bavuma tried to pick up the pace but got an inside edge when he tried to lift Dwarshuis as the fast bowler ended up with 2-53. Wiaan Mulder played a little cameo of 31 off 26 balls. Rabada ruled out ============ Pace bowler Kagiso Rabada was ruled out of the ODI series with an ankle injury in a major setback for South Africa. The 30-year-old Rabada underwent scans on Monday which confirmed inflammation in his right ankle. Rabada will stay with the team in Australia and undergo rehabilitation. Kewena Maphaka, who finished as the leading wicket-taker in last week's T20 series, replaced Rabada in the squad but was left out of the playing XI for the first ODI. The Australians were coming off a 2-1 win in the T20 series. It was the first ODI between the teams since Australia beat South Africa in the 2023 World Cup semifinals. Their scheduled Champions Trophy meeting in March was washed out.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store