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Home  » Cricket » South Africa's coach examines defeat to the Dutch

South Africa's coach examines defeat to the Dutch

Source: PTI
October 18, 2023 11:01 IST
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South Africa coach Rob Walter blames shock defeat to Netherlands on his side's death bowling and poor start with bat

South Africa

IMAGE: Rob Walter said the two upsets so far proved that no team can be taken for granted in a tournament of this magnitude. Photograph: ICC/X

South Africa coach Rob Walter has blamed the shock 38-run defeat at the hands of the Netherlands in the ongoing World Cup to his side's disappointing death bowling and poor start with the bat.

The Netherlands recovered from 140 for 7 to post 245 for eight in the rain-hit match on Tuesday and then bowled out South Africa for 207 in 42.5 overs to cause the second major upset of the ongoing showpiece.

Afghanistan pulled off the first upset on Sunday, shocking defending champions England by 69 runs in New Delhi.

 

The 38-run win was also Netherlands' first against a Test playing nation in their World Cup history.

A disappointed Walter minced no words, saying his side were below-par against the Dutch.

"At 140 for 7, you're in control of the game really. So, to not be able to close it out at the death is disappointing, of course, and certainly the momentum shifted in the game then," Walter said at the post-match press conference.

"But at the end of the day, we back ourselves still to be able to chase 240 but then we probably you know we got off to a very poor start and they put us on the back foot," he added.

He said strategically also South Africa committed mistakes.

"Maybe I've got our ratios a little bit wrong in terms of the slow balls versus hard length and on pace deliveries. From extras point of view, there's definitely more extras than we would want to bowl."

South Africa were unbeaten coming into the match and looked a confident lot having registered convincing wins over Sri Lanka (by 102 runs) and Australia (by 134 runs).

Walter said the two upsets so far proved that no team can be taken for granted in a tournament of this magnitude.

"Four days ago, we played outstandingly well, and then today, not well. Just ultimately, we weren't good enough, specifically at the back end of the innings. And then at the start with the bat, and we put us on the back foot.

"As I said before the World Cup started, I don't think there's any weak teams in this tournament. And if you're not switched on and you don't win the key moments in the game, you find yourself on the wrong side of the result. We learned that today," he said.

Walter reminded that cricket is a team game and his side failed to click in unison on Tuesday.

"...it takes everyone to win the game and to win a competition so you can't rely on any one suite of your makeup. You've got to do it all and you've got to do it consistently well," he said.

"So, we were inconsistent from last game to this game and we got a couple of things wrong that we normally would get right. So, you've got to keep your consistency up.

"As I said, we can't put our eggs in one basket. It takes batting, bowling, and fielding to win games, not just one pot."

He, however, begged to differ on the perception that bowling was a cause of concern for the Proteas.

"...I think our bowling won us the game against Australia. The guys were excellent. So, I won't look too deeply into it and start saying there's any concern in one area. As I said, we got some things fundamentally wrong today," Walter said.

Chasing the modest target, South Africa slipped to 44 for 4 by the 11th over, and Walter said there were plenty of learning from the match.

"...obviously we'll sit and do a proper dissection of the game. Win or lose, what are the lessons that we take and how do we use those to be better next time round. There's a lot to learn, both good and bad," he said.

"Our tail showed us some resilience with a bat, which is great, that we can lean on that at some point in time. We obviously need to brush up on our death (bowling). So, the learnings are there and it's just about us being open enough to be able to take them on board and move forward." 

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