logo
Chokers no more: For South Africa, the past stayed in the past

Chokers no more: For South Africa, the past stayed in the past

Bavuma, who conceded he'd batted against the wishes of his coaches while hobbling with a hamstring injury during his critical innings of 66, said he tried not to let the Australian onfield digs of being 'chokers' get to him.
'This morning one of their players threw out the fact we could get bowled out, lose our eight wickets for 60 runs. I definitely heard that,' he said. ' I definitely heard that.
'Aiden kept using the word 'lock in' after every over, 'let's keep locking in, let's give them nothing'.
Resuming with 69 runs to win and eight wickets in hand on Saturday, the captain's dismissal early had triggered some familiar twitching in the South African camp. The loss of Tristan Stubbs shortly after kept the match alive longer than fans might have liked.
But this time, there was no collapse. No mix-up. No error in calculation or nerve.
When the winning runs came — a thick cover drive from Kyle Verreynne that burst through and brought the players sprinting on — they weren't just celebrating a match won. They were celebrating a narrative turned on its head.
It was on Friday when South Africa's fate took a remarkable turn. And here's the kicker: 26 years to the day since Herschelle Gibbs infamously 'dropped the World Cup' at Headingley, sparking Australia's resurrection en route to the final. On June 13, 1999, Steve Waugh's now-immortal line burned itself into South African sporting lore. On June 13, 2025, Opening batsman Aiden Markram and Bavuma rewrote that story.
The relatively unheralded lineup began to rewrite that script. Markram's poised 136 was a masterclass in patience and precision. He and his captain — a player whose own rise was marked by overcoming doubt and adversity—crafted a vital partnership of 147 runs that steadied a potentially fragile chase.
'It'll be great to not have to hear it again,' Markham said of the 'choker' tag. 'To have got the job done and get rid of that is quite a big thing for this team.'
His innings embodied the transformation of a team historically burdened by pressure into one capable of withstanding the weight of expectation.
South Africa's sporting fans have been conditioned to success, with the Springboks lifting rugby World Cups in 1995, 2007, 2019 and 2023. Golf, too, springs to mind, with Player, Ernie Els, Retief Goosen, Charl Schwartzel and Louis Oosthuizen. But for cricket, the narrative was far more complicated—success had been elusive, overshadowed by near misses and self-inflicted wounds.
The 'chokers' tag may not vanish overnight, but it might have met its match — in a team that stayed present, held its nerve, and rewrote history. For once, the past stayed in the past.
The choke never came. And South Africa, finally, stood tall.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Messi falls short for Miami in Club World Cup opener
Messi falls short for Miami in Club World Cup opener

Perth Now

time37 minutes ago

  • Perth Now

Messi falls short for Miami in Club World Cup opener

Lionel Messi has displayed flashes of brilliance but his Inter Miami side have been held to a goalless draw by African giants Al-Ahly in the opening round of the revamped Club World Cup. Fans showed up en masse for the Group A clash at the Hard Rock Stadium, but Messi could not fully deliver, his best chance coming through a last-second attempt that was deflected onto the crossbar. Inter Miami next face FC Porto on Thursday in Atlanta while Al-Ahly, who benefited from raucous, massive support, will take on Palmeiras in New York, where more of their fans are expected to turn up. The near 61,000 strong crowd in Miami dismissed concerns about the attractiveness of the tournament featuring 32 teams for the first time, a year before the World Cup in the United States. Al-Ahly got off to a strong start but wasted two early chances and Oscar Ustari parried away Trezeguet's poorly taken penalty kick after Zizo was fouled in the box by Telasco Segovia. Messi threatened at times after being hit on the knee, but Miami could feel lucky not to be behind at halftime. Miami, however, stepped up a gear after the break, and Messi came close when his nicely curled 25-metre free kick kissed the post and hit the side netting. With six minutes left, the World Cup winner scooped a perfect cross for Fafa Picault, whose header was tipped over the bar by Mohamed Elshenawy. He came an inch close in the dying second when his curled strike from outside the box was tipped onto the bar by Elshenawy. The Club World Cup continues on Sunday with Champions League winners Paris St Germain taking on Atletico Madrid and Bayern Munich playing Auckland City.

Messi falls short for Miami in Club World Cup opener
Messi falls short for Miami in Club World Cup opener

West Australian

time39 minutes ago

  • West Australian

Messi falls short for Miami in Club World Cup opener

Lionel Messi has displayed flashes of brilliance but his Inter Miami side have been held to a goalless draw by African giants Al-Ahly in the opening round of the revamped Club World Cup. Fans showed up en masse for the Group A clash at the Hard Rock Stadium, but Messi could not fully deliver, his best chance coming through a last-second attempt that was deflected onto the crossbar. Inter Miami next face FC Porto on Thursday in Atlanta while Al-Ahly, who benefited from raucous, massive support, will take on Palmeiras in New York, where more of their fans are expected to turn up. The near 61,000 strong crowd in Miami dismissed concerns about the attractiveness of the tournament featuring 32 teams for the first time, a year before the World Cup in the United States. Al-Ahly got off to a strong start but wasted two early chances and Oscar Ustari parried away Trezeguet's poorly taken penalty kick after Zizo was fouled in the box by Telasco Segovia. Messi threatened at times after being hit on the knee, but Miami could feel lucky not to be behind at halftime. Miami, however, stepped up a gear after the break, and Messi came close when his nicely curled 25-metre free kick kissed the post and hit the side netting. With six minutes left, the World Cup winner scooped a perfect cross for Fafa Picault, whose header was tipped over the bar by Mohamed Elshenawy. He came an inch close in the dying second when his curled strike from outside the box was tipped onto the bar by Elshenawy. The Club World Cup continues on Sunday with Champions League winners Paris St Germain taking on Atletico Madrid and Bayern Munich playing Auckland City.

Great Scott eyes 'super fulfilling' US Open triumph
Great Scott eyes 'super fulfilling' US Open triumph

The Advertiser

timean hour ago

  • The Advertiser

Great Scott eyes 'super fulfilling' US Open triumph

Adam Scott has already entered the US Open history books but is chasing so much more after taming fearsome Oakmont to stand on the brink of an extraordinary second career major. The talismanic Australian will play in the final group on Sunday (Monday AEST) after finishing a brilliant third round just one shot behind American leader Sam Burns. Super composed, Scott rebounded from a first-hole bogey with four birdies, including three on the back nine, in a stylish and "stress-free" Saturday three-under-par 67. The former world No.1 is only the third player ever to start with three US Open rounds of 70 or better at the tournament's most demanding layout. Curtis Strange achieved the feat in 1994 before Shane Lowry matched the record eight years ago. Scott's 70-70-67 start leaves the 2013 Masters champion just one stroke behind American leader Sam Burns, who carded a one-under 69. Fellow American JJ Spaun bogeyed the last hole in a round of 70 to join Scott at three under. For much of the day, Scott hovered at even par before exploding with three birdies in the last six holes on 13, 14 and 17. At 44, Scott is bidding to become the oldest US Open winner of since Hale Irwin in 1990. Victory would also place the Queenslander in the history books for the longest wait by a player between their first and second major championship triumphs. "It would be super fulfilling," Scott said. "Everyone out here has got their journey. Putting ourselves in these positions doesn't just happen by fluke. It's not easy to do it. "I really haven't been in this kind of position for five or six years, or feeling like I'm that player. But that's what I'm always working towards. It's not that easy to figure it all out. "But if I were to come away with it tomorrow, it would be a hell of a round of golf and an exclamation point on my career." Golf's most likeable elder statesman certainly has experience on his side, with Scott the only major winner sitting inside the top 10 entering the final round. "At this point, it's just all opportunity for me. I feel like there's all upside," he said. "I'm lucky. I've won a major. I'd love to win the US Open tomorrow. It's going to take a really great round of golf, something like what I did today, I believe, and fortunately the confidence is up so I should take advantage of it." Contesting an incredible 96th consecutive major, Scott three-putted the opening hole in a deflating start. But the veteran put the hiccup behind him to collect his first birdie of the day at the par-5 fourth hole. Then he hit the go button down the stretch to be well-poised to break a five-year winless run since taking out the Genesis Invitational in Los Angeles in 2020. "I played really solid today," Scott said. "Conditions were a lot softer, but there's still plenty of trouble to get in, and I drove it well off the tee. I was in most fairways, I would say. "And the couple of times I missed, I managed to escape. So it was a good solid US Open round of golf." Norwegian Victor Hovland is outright fourth at one under after also shooting 70. The quartet are the only players in red numbers. Playing his first major since 2022, Monday qualifier Marc Leishman rocketed up the leaderboard with a birdie-filled round of 68 to be tied for 11th. But the revitalised Australian looks a little too far back at four over and eight shots adrift of Burns, as is world No.1 Scottie Scheffler who could only manage an even-par third round after a wretched day on the greens. Jason Day (72) is one shot further back in equal 21st. Adam Scott has already entered the US Open history books but is chasing so much more after taming fearsome Oakmont to stand on the brink of an extraordinary second career major. The talismanic Australian will play in the final group on Sunday (Monday AEST) after finishing a brilliant third round just one shot behind American leader Sam Burns. Super composed, Scott rebounded from a first-hole bogey with four birdies, including three on the back nine, in a stylish and "stress-free" Saturday three-under-par 67. The former world No.1 is only the third player ever to start with three US Open rounds of 70 or better at the tournament's most demanding layout. Curtis Strange achieved the feat in 1994 before Shane Lowry matched the record eight years ago. Scott's 70-70-67 start leaves the 2013 Masters champion just one stroke behind American leader Sam Burns, who carded a one-under 69. Fellow American JJ Spaun bogeyed the last hole in a round of 70 to join Scott at three under. For much of the day, Scott hovered at even par before exploding with three birdies in the last six holes on 13, 14 and 17. At 44, Scott is bidding to become the oldest US Open winner of since Hale Irwin in 1990. Victory would also place the Queenslander in the history books for the longest wait by a player between their first and second major championship triumphs. "It would be super fulfilling," Scott said. "Everyone out here has got their journey. Putting ourselves in these positions doesn't just happen by fluke. It's not easy to do it. "I really haven't been in this kind of position for five or six years, or feeling like I'm that player. But that's what I'm always working towards. It's not that easy to figure it all out. "But if I were to come away with it tomorrow, it would be a hell of a round of golf and an exclamation point on my career." Golf's most likeable elder statesman certainly has experience on his side, with Scott the only major winner sitting inside the top 10 entering the final round. "At this point, it's just all opportunity for me. I feel like there's all upside," he said. "I'm lucky. I've won a major. I'd love to win the US Open tomorrow. It's going to take a really great round of golf, something like what I did today, I believe, and fortunately the confidence is up so I should take advantage of it." Contesting an incredible 96th consecutive major, Scott three-putted the opening hole in a deflating start. But the veteran put the hiccup behind him to collect his first birdie of the day at the par-5 fourth hole. Then he hit the go button down the stretch to be well-poised to break a five-year winless run since taking out the Genesis Invitational in Los Angeles in 2020. "I played really solid today," Scott said. "Conditions were a lot softer, but there's still plenty of trouble to get in, and I drove it well off the tee. I was in most fairways, I would say. "And the couple of times I missed, I managed to escape. So it was a good solid US Open round of golf." Norwegian Victor Hovland is outright fourth at one under after also shooting 70. The quartet are the only players in red numbers. Playing his first major since 2022, Monday qualifier Marc Leishman rocketed up the leaderboard with a birdie-filled round of 68 to be tied for 11th. But the revitalised Australian looks a little too far back at four over and eight shots adrift of Burns, as is world No.1 Scottie Scheffler who could only manage an even-par third round after a wretched day on the greens. Jason Day (72) is one shot further back in equal 21st. Adam Scott has already entered the US Open history books but is chasing so much more after taming fearsome Oakmont to stand on the brink of an extraordinary second career major. The talismanic Australian will play in the final group on Sunday (Monday AEST) after finishing a brilliant third round just one shot behind American leader Sam Burns. Super composed, Scott rebounded from a first-hole bogey with four birdies, including three on the back nine, in a stylish and "stress-free" Saturday three-under-par 67. The former world No.1 is only the third player ever to start with three US Open rounds of 70 or better at the tournament's most demanding layout. Curtis Strange achieved the feat in 1994 before Shane Lowry matched the record eight years ago. Scott's 70-70-67 start leaves the 2013 Masters champion just one stroke behind American leader Sam Burns, who carded a one-under 69. Fellow American JJ Spaun bogeyed the last hole in a round of 70 to join Scott at three under. For much of the day, Scott hovered at even par before exploding with three birdies in the last six holes on 13, 14 and 17. At 44, Scott is bidding to become the oldest US Open winner of since Hale Irwin in 1990. Victory would also place the Queenslander in the history books for the longest wait by a player between their first and second major championship triumphs. "It would be super fulfilling," Scott said. "Everyone out here has got their journey. Putting ourselves in these positions doesn't just happen by fluke. It's not easy to do it. "I really haven't been in this kind of position for five or six years, or feeling like I'm that player. But that's what I'm always working towards. It's not that easy to figure it all out. "But if I were to come away with it tomorrow, it would be a hell of a round of golf and an exclamation point on my career." Golf's most likeable elder statesman certainly has experience on his side, with Scott the only major winner sitting inside the top 10 entering the final round. "At this point, it's just all opportunity for me. I feel like there's all upside," he said. "I'm lucky. I've won a major. I'd love to win the US Open tomorrow. It's going to take a really great round of golf, something like what I did today, I believe, and fortunately the confidence is up so I should take advantage of it." Contesting an incredible 96th consecutive major, Scott three-putted the opening hole in a deflating start. But the veteran put the hiccup behind him to collect his first birdie of the day at the par-5 fourth hole. Then he hit the go button down the stretch to be well-poised to break a five-year winless run since taking out the Genesis Invitational in Los Angeles in 2020. "I played really solid today," Scott said. "Conditions were a lot softer, but there's still plenty of trouble to get in, and I drove it well off the tee. I was in most fairways, I would say. "And the couple of times I missed, I managed to escape. So it was a good solid US Open round of golf." Norwegian Victor Hovland is outright fourth at one under after also shooting 70. The quartet are the only players in red numbers. Playing his first major since 2022, Monday qualifier Marc Leishman rocketed up the leaderboard with a birdie-filled round of 68 to be tied for 11th. But the revitalised Australian looks a little too far back at four over and eight shots adrift of Burns, as is world No.1 Scottie Scheffler who could only manage an even-par third round after a wretched day on the greens. Jason Day (72) is one shot further back in equal 21st. Adam Scott has already entered the US Open history books but is chasing so much more after taming fearsome Oakmont to stand on the brink of an extraordinary second career major. The talismanic Australian will play in the final group on Sunday (Monday AEST) after finishing a brilliant third round just one shot behind American leader Sam Burns. Super composed, Scott rebounded from a first-hole bogey with four birdies, including three on the back nine, in a stylish and "stress-free" Saturday three-under-par 67. The former world No.1 is only the third player ever to start with three US Open rounds of 70 or better at the tournament's most demanding layout. Curtis Strange achieved the feat in 1994 before Shane Lowry matched the record eight years ago. Scott's 70-70-67 start leaves the 2013 Masters champion just one stroke behind American leader Sam Burns, who carded a one-under 69. Fellow American JJ Spaun bogeyed the last hole in a round of 70 to join Scott at three under. For much of the day, Scott hovered at even par before exploding with three birdies in the last six holes on 13, 14 and 17. At 44, Scott is bidding to become the oldest US Open winner of since Hale Irwin in 1990. Victory would also place the Queenslander in the history books for the longest wait by a player between their first and second major championship triumphs. "It would be super fulfilling," Scott said. "Everyone out here has got their journey. Putting ourselves in these positions doesn't just happen by fluke. It's not easy to do it. "I really haven't been in this kind of position for five or six years, or feeling like I'm that player. But that's what I'm always working towards. It's not that easy to figure it all out. "But if I were to come away with it tomorrow, it would be a hell of a round of golf and an exclamation point on my career." Golf's most likeable elder statesman certainly has experience on his side, with Scott the only major winner sitting inside the top 10 entering the final round. "At this point, it's just all opportunity for me. I feel like there's all upside," he said. "I'm lucky. I've won a major. I'd love to win the US Open tomorrow. It's going to take a really great round of golf, something like what I did today, I believe, and fortunately the confidence is up so I should take advantage of it." Contesting an incredible 96th consecutive major, Scott three-putted the opening hole in a deflating start. But the veteran put the hiccup behind him to collect his first birdie of the day at the par-5 fourth hole. Then he hit the go button down the stretch to be well-poised to break a five-year winless run since taking out the Genesis Invitational in Los Angeles in 2020. "I played really solid today," Scott said. "Conditions were a lot softer, but there's still plenty of trouble to get in, and I drove it well off the tee. I was in most fairways, I would say. "And the couple of times I missed, I managed to escape. So it was a good solid US Open round of golf." Norwegian Victor Hovland is outright fourth at one under after also shooting 70. The quartet are the only players in red numbers. Playing his first major since 2022, Monday qualifier Marc Leishman rocketed up the leaderboard with a birdie-filled round of 68 to be tied for 11th. But the revitalised Australian looks a little too far back at four over and eight shots adrift of Burns, as is world No.1 Scottie Scheffler who could only manage an even-par third round after a wretched day on the greens. Jason Day (72) is one shot further back in equal 21st.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store