But Botha warned that they also have to be more careful about their discipline, which broke down on Sunday afternoon and the number of no-balls increased. Overall, South Africa bowled 23 wickets in this match and ten in the second innings. Only one, Kagiso Rabada’s delivery to Masood on a knee roll, looked like a wicket-taking ball, but South Africa did not want to take the chance that there might be more, and the bowler overstepped. Is.
“It’s disappointing,” Botha said. “It’s something that comes into play from time to time. We probably started a little bit with that problem in Bangladesh and sorted it out. Now it’s back again.”
But Botha is only partly right. In the two Test matches in Bangladesh, South Africa bowled 25 no-balls, but then they bowled 28 against Sri Lanka and ten no-balls at SuperSport Park. Including this Test, there were 86 no-balls in six matches. Of these, Rabada bowled 44 balls and Viaan Mulder bowled 11 balls. Botha had an explanation for at least one of them. He said, “With Viaan, what we are really trying to do is to get him to run a little bit faster because he wants to be a bowler who has a fourth seamer in the attack and he is a little bit quicker. yes.” “One of the aspects we worked on was getting him to run a little harder and that came with its own issues. We worked on it a little bit this morning, and it seemed to be working for a while. Others It may be different for different days.”
Many other reasons were raised to explain the rest. “Sometimes it’s the ground, sometimes it’s the wind, sometimes it’s fatigue, sometimes it’s the slope,” Botha said. “But it’s clearly something we need to revisit and make sure we get it right.”
“Once you get frustrated or start searching too much as we might have done in the second innings, you’re going to go for fours and fives (runs per over). That’s what you don’t want to do. Are.”
Pete Botha, South African Test bowling coach
And that would be his second message for the morning onslaught: Be patient. Botha said, “We have had some very good tests where we have beaten teams but we always talk about these things: discipline and patience.” “Once you get frustrated or start searching too much, as we might have done in the second innings, you’re going to go for fours and fives (runs per over). That’s what you don’t do. Want to. Let’s go back to try and see if we can go to three and get a false shot.”
In this case, they understand that by enforcing the follow-on, they gave Pakistan some of the best batting conditions of the match, but with them out for 194 and a lead of 421 runs, they felt they had to rebuild. There was enough support. , The surface shows no real signs of degradation yet, but it is turning and has historically become more difficult from the fourth day onwards. Botha said, “There were some slow motion videos with the dust and you expect days four and five to be the days when the spinner comes into play. There have already been a few spins and bounces.” “Indications are that after lunch tomorrow, Kesha[av] Maharaj will come into the game more.”
Maharaj has already got the turn that Pakistan’s part-time spinner Salman Agha did not get, but even if he doesn’t, South Africa are prepared to wait for him. Botha said, “We talk about it all the time because you expect it these days. That’s Test cricket.”











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