Cape Argus E-dition

It’s now about executing game plans – Rabada

STUART HESS stuart.hess@inl.co.za

RATHER than reflect too much on the past, whether the memories are good or bad, Kagiso Rabada would rather he and his teammates look forward – ahead of the T20 World Cup.

Rabada joined the Proteas squad yesterday for his first training session with them, saying he enjoyed being “around some positivity”.

Rabada’s Indian Premier League campaign with Delhi Capitals ended on a low, with the Capitals coming up just short in their play-off match against Kolkata Knight Riders last week. Given that the Capitals were runners-up last year, the disappointment is understandable.

Crucially for Rabada, his Capitals teammate Anrich Nortje, Aiden Markram, Quinton de Kock and Tabraiz Shamsi, the IPL gave them some match time in conditions they will encounter in the World Cup over the next few weeks.

“I’ve been playing, I don’t think I need to do too much more. It’s about locking in and executing game plans,” said Rabada.

He claimed seven wickets in eight matches for the Capitals during the UAE portion of the IPL and while that return is modest given his success there previously, his economy rate of 7.6 indicates that he provided control.

The UAE is where Rabada, Markram and Andile Phehlukwayo – one of the three back-up squad members – lifted the Under-19 World Cup in 2014 and where, in Rabada’s case particularly, he announced himself to the cricket world.

“There’s a lot of good memories from the Under-19 World Cup, it would be great to replicate that with the senior team,” Rabada said.

The senior Proteas team, of course, have a dismal record at World Cups. Rabada was part of the 2019 side which won just three matches in England and Wales, and personally had a very disappointing tournament.

However, like recent memories of success with the Proteas – they have won their last three T20 series, and are on a seven-match unbeaten run – Rabada explained that it is important to put both disappointments and achievements into perspective.

“We’ve been rebuilding as a team and so far it has been going according to plan. We’re taking this as a new challenge, everything that is in the past is in the past, but we do take confidence from it,” he said.

As for the disappointments, Rabada said it was not something he wanted to spend too much time reflecting on.

“What has happened in the past has happened. We have a challenge in front of us. No one in the past had tried to lose games. Whether we have baggage or not ... it’s not worth talking about; it’s about playing,” Rabada said.

South Africa face Australia on Saturday in a Group A fixture (12 noon SA time start), which for both teams will be a crucial match.

Neither side goes into the tournament as one of the favourites. Instead, that tag sits with two other teams in the group – defending champions the West Indies and one-day international World Cup holders England, who’ve put a lot of planning into this tournament.

Rabada is now a senior member of the SA team, so his leadership in helping the rest of the players traverse a tricky group is vital.

“It’s something I have learned to embrace. I’m not letting it affect me, it’s just about doing it,” Rabada said.

“(Leadership) is something I have to do, I don’t see it as a burden, it’s not something I am desperate to do. I am eager to do it, it is something that there is a need of (within the group).”

SPORT

en-za

2021-10-19T07:00:00.0000000Z

2021-10-19T07:00:00.0000000Z

http://capeargus.pressreader.com/article/281792812221219

African News Agency