CRICKET NEWS - Despite fielding an inexperienced T20 side, the Proteas produce one of their most apathetic performances in recent memory and pay the price.
Defeats are never nice to witness but they’re easier to stomach when your team was outplayed by better opposition.
However, that line becomes blurred when your team showed little or no thought process in trying to fight.
The Proteas were guilty of that in their comprehensive nine-wicket loss to England in the first of three T20s in Southampton on Wednesday night.
South Africa were vividly shown how to bowl on a two-paced pitch after they won the toss and chose to bat. Keeping it slower and fuller was the way to go as AB de Villiers and his troops only managed 142/3 in their allotted 20 overs.
But that mediocre score wasn’t really the problem. Instead, it was thoughtless, uninspired bowling that gifted England this victory.
De Villiers’ decision to open the bowling with the left-arm spin of Jon-Jon Smuts was about the only good decision that was made in the field.
He at least bowled at the pace that gave one a chance on this pitch. The rest was a shambles. Wayne Parnell conceded 25 runs off two overs, bowling down leg, insufferably short and then too wide.
And that’s pretty much what the rest did too. Imran Tahir, who started bowling in the powerplay, was spooked by that role and bowled way too short and quick.
His spin partner Tabraiz Shamsi was less messy but also way too quick. Dwaine Pretorius (0/20 off two) also decided bowling short was the way to go.
It was properly poor from the Proteas, who simply refused to keep things simple … and logical. Nobody was really surprised that Jonny Bairstow (60 off 35) and Alex Hales (47 off 38) raced to the target.