Clumsy politicans smudge fields of dreams
Trevor Chesterfield
3 December 1998
CENTURION (South Africa) - It is almost eight years since the man
known in South African sport as ``Mr Fix-it'' puffed his way into a
variety of boardrooms and, with much geniality, spread calm and
soothed fears among the administrators who now make up the bulk of the
United Cricket Board. Steve Tshwete walked many careful steps and
gave sound advice as opposing camps first circled and peered at each
other as acceptance grew and ideas created a climate of understanding
and brotherhood. It was brave new world and many embraced it.
Development was not a swear word. It was part of a well-organised
programme and a young man from Mamelodi, Edward Khoza, with his own
image and his own dream of the future planned, when he had graduated,
how he was going to help the game grow. And how the culture of the
sport learnt in the dusty streets would grow with him.
There are many like Edward Khoza. They are your average club player,
yet they know the importance of good administration, and how they can
help create the culture of the game which it takes years to
develop. Bob Blair, who once coached in Northerns and played for New
Zealand, explained not too long ago how it took 20 years of ``solid
slog'' to develop a playing culture in Zimbabwe.
If you care to glance down the Zimbabwe scorecard of the match against
Pakistan and which they won earlier this week, you will find the names
of two players who had a decisive role in that victory. Mpumelelo
Mbangwa and Henry Olonga are part of the programme in which Blair was
involved. Later next year they could share the new ball attack
against South Africa at Springbok Park in Bloemfontein when the two
countries play a one-off test. It might become two should Zim beat
Pakistan in the current series.
Just what sort of team South Africa will field, however, seems to
depend on the whims of politicians who give the impression they could
not care less whether South Africa beat the West Indies in the test
series. That's the impression Tshwete and Thabo Masebe give in their
statements demanding a speeding up of the transformation process.
It makes me wonder whether Masebe has ever visited a black area and
watched the UCB development programme in action. He should start at
Shoshanguve and then move to Mamelodi and on to Atteridgeville. He
would get a pretty good eyeful of what it is all about.
His criticism of Peter Pollock's selection panel's decision to leave
out Makhaya Ntini and Paul Adams is based on ignorance and uninformed
opinion; it smacks of mischief-making by an ANC official. Masebe needs
to learn a few facts about cricket culture from young Edward Khoza
before he starts his tub thumping.
Perhaps the question which needs to be asked is just who is Masebe? If
his comments are to be taken seriously he is not a friend of the UCB
development scheme and its long term goals.
For someone who has vigorously supported the development and
transformation process I find it hard to accommodate those who have no
idea what is involved and yet aim to push ahead and damage the
carefully built structures which left alone, will become successful.
Political appointees are going to find it hard to justify interfering
in a programme designed to create a demographically correct selection
and with it a nation of pride. The under/19 World Cup team was an
example of the success of the scheme, a fact the NSC seem to have
conveniently forgotten.
As the great West Indies author and philosopher, C L R James, once
wrote: ``What do they know of cricket, who cricket only know? West
Indians crowding to Tests bring with them the whole past history and
the future hopes of the islands.''
The same can apply to today's South Africa: patience and care and
attention, not pressure on the system, is more important than waving a
big stick.
The danger of selecting players who are out of their depth and are
more likely be an embarrassment to themselves and the side will
exacerbate, not solve, the problem. As it is the Australians and
England have already let it be known they will not play second rate
South Africa teams. Merit selection policy not affirmative action is
what really matters.
It leaves us with a sense of deja vu 30 years after the Basil
D'Oliveira affair. Surely Messrs Tshwete and Masebe do not want to
repeat similar a folly to that of John Vorster? And that is a real
danger.
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