Fleming's chance to reach milestone
By Richard Boock
From The New Zealand Herald, 24 January 2004
A series win over South Africa might not be the last
frontier for Stephen Fleming, but it would certainly
represent a step in the right direction.
The New Zealand captain has been
at the helm during some of New Zealand's most historic
cricketing triumphs, including the side's first win
at Lord's and the first series win in the West Indies,
not to mention the Champions Trophy success in Nairobi.
The trailblazer of New Zealand
captains, he has led the team to places no previous
New Zealand team has ventured, until only two major
historical milestones remain uncovered.
New Zealand, despite making steady
progress in the past five years, have yet to score a
series win in India in either form of the game, and
more importantly, have yet to win a series against South
Africa anywhere.
Slowly the giants have fallen:
Australia, the West Indies, England, Pakistan, and India
(at home) until only South Africa remain unconquered
in a series.
Fleming said yesterday that on
present form only a much-improved performance from New
Zealand would be enough to change a trend that began
73 years ago, when South Africa won the inaugural test
series 2-0.
"South Africa will be a tougher
proposition than Pakistan, there's no doubt in my mind
about that," he said.
"Their batsmen are not afraid of
bounce, they're used to the ball moving a little bit
more, and they're possibly more technically proficient.
So we'll need to be even more precise with our execution."
At a time when Australia and India
have been turning on a batting extravaganza across the
Tasman - with Ricky Ponting, Rahul Dravid and VVS Laxman
playing some of the finest innings seen in decades -
South Africa have been almost as impressive.
Graeme Smith scored the fourth-highest
number of test runs last year (1198), becoming the first
South African to score double centuries in consecutive
tests, and the first South African to score a double
century at Lord's.
And his opening partner, Herschelle
Gibbs, continues to flourish after scoring 1156 runs
in tests last year, and proving almost as effective
in the shorter game.
With a supporting cast of batsmen
such as Jacques Kallis, Gary Kirsten, Boeta Dippenaar
and Neil McKenzie, not to mention useful boundary hitters
like Mark Boucher and Lance Klusener, New Zealand's
next visitors appear to be bristling with firepower.
Fleming said there appeared to
be no obvious weaknesses in the side, which was what
he expected from an opponent of South Africa's pedigree.
But he believed New Zealand were
capable of overcoming the odds if the players showed
they had learned from the Pakistan experience, and lifted
their performance several notches.
"This is one of greatest challenges
in New Zealand cricket history and we're very excited
about the possibilities," he said.
"We knew it would be a tough series
against Pakistan, but we've all been looking forward
to this contest in particular.
"The guys appreciate how big this
thing has become. Many of our players have played against
them before, and while we haven't had any series success
as yet, we feel we're not far away from them."
Fleming recalled that a lot of
the losses (New Zealand have won just nine of 34 ODIs)
had come after extremely close finishes, and pointed
out that his side had won the most recent contest during
last year's World Cup tournament.
However, a concern must be that
New Zealand have featured in six ODI series against
South Africa (not counting one-off events) and have
lost them all, the last two by 5-0 and 5-1 margins.
The ignominy reaches even further
back in the test arena, where New Zealand have yet to
win a single match against South Africa at home and,
although winning three in the Republic, have not yet
secured a series.
Fleming said the South African
top-order seemed to have improved since the addition
of Smith, whose combination with Gibbs was now rivalling
that of Australians Matthew Hayden and Justin Langer.
"I saw a lot of Smith in England
when he got a lot of runs, but I thought the English
bowled poorly to him," said Fleming.
"It's up to our guys to work out
where to attack him, and there are definitely areas
that we're interested in - but obviously I don't want
to go into too much detail on that right now."
Fleming said he believed South
Africa's bowling attack was possibly less penetrative
than in years gone by, and was now using different strategies
to gain success.
"They rely more now on accuracy
and building up pressure," he said.
"They've got Makhaya Ntini but
they're missing Allan Donald's express pace, so they've
had to adjust their attack."
He suggested the biggest difference
to Pakistan was South Africa's strong team ethic, a
bond that left them less vulnerable to pressure and
made them a much "tougher nut to crack".
"They're similar to us in terms
of work-ethic and strategy, and that makes them difficult,
because then it comes down to things like individual
talent and skill levels."
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