In the second of out feel good series. We look back on David Miller scoring a 35-ball hundred against Bangladesh. A look back on better times.
Standing at 4 feet 9 inches tall, Kruger van Wyk is
officially the shortest cricketer in the history of the international game. But
what he lacked in height, he more than made up for in determination,
intelligence and a never-say-die spirit. Van Wyk left South Africa to pursue dreams
of a career in international cricket, moving to New Zealand as a young adult. A
successful career which included nine Tests for New Zealand was to follow.
Following his retirement from the international game, van Wyk took up coaching,
as the head coach for the Assupol TuksCricket academy (University of Pretoria).
He recently tasted success with the team, winning the latest edition of the
Varsity Cup (South Africa’s premier inter university tournament).
ZA cricket: Mr. van Wyk, let’s start with the latest news,
congratulations on the Varsity Cup victory.
Kruger van Wyk: Thanks a lot. It was an exciting week for
the lads, and they performed beautifully.
ZAC: Could you take us through the differences in preparing
for something like the varsity cup, compared to domestic cricket?
KvW: Look, the level of exposure obviously goes up, you know
for the players, and there’s a lot more at stake (in Varsity Cup). It’s probably
the one week in the year where the players have a chance to play in front of
crowds, and to play on TV, where their skills get put under a lot more pressure
than your local leagues. It’s a wonderful breeding ground to see how they
mentally react, and the preparations and intensity of it all does go up, so it
was great to see how they responded and this is something which will help them
grow.
ZAC: Looking ahead, varsity rugby has produced quite a few
Springboks, while Varsity cricket has not quite had the same effect. Why do you
think that is? Or do you think that the two games are too different to expect
similar levels of international quality players?
KvW: Look I think that it has a produced a couple of international
players, your guys like Heinrich Klaasen and Aiden Markram, but I do think that
Varsity Cricket at times can be over regulated when it comes to a few things.
Rugby has been very successful when it comes to producing players to play at
the next level, but I’m pretty sure that more players will be going into
international cricket having come through the varsity cricket set up. It is
also important that Cricket South Africa values this tournament as well, I
think that is a very important thing. As well as to understand that everyone
wants to produce (international) cricketers for South Africa.
ZAC: Moving back to you, what has been the biggest
difference for you between coaching and playing?
KvW: I think the biggest difference is that as a player you
can be quite single minded and driven towards your own career, and coaching is
all about giving. You put yourself second, and you’re almost fighting for other
people’s careers. It’s not about your career when you are coaching, it is about
the players, and I would say that is the big thing. Cricket, as a player you’re
more selfish.
ZAC: Delving into your career a little bit; you made the
move to New Zealand at a relatively young age. Looking back, would you say that
was a scary time for you?
KvW: Yes, going to New Zealand was a tough decision to make
at the time, but it was as much a lifestyle change as it was a career one. I
always wanted to experience what it was like to live abroad, to broaden my own
horizons. I loved New Zealand, I loved representing New Zealand, and it meant a
lot to me. Hopefully I can take all the things I learnt over there, which was
incredible from a coaching and management point of view, and impart that
knowledge onto my players.
ZAC: I’m not sure if you’re a huge tennis fan, but I was
watching the US Open a few weeks ago and I began to get really annoyed while
watching Diego Schwartzman, because every second comment about him was in
relation to his height (at 5’7, Little Diego is on the shorter end for
professional tennis players)?
KvW: No, I loved being the underdog, I always have. I think
it made for a steely character, and it’s something that I needed in my career
as well. I think my teams as well, we back ourselves, and we back ourselves in
a one on one battle any day. If you can be mentally strong and up for battles,
then you will win most fights.
ZAC: Looking ahead, sort of forecasting, South Africa are in
India, with a big series ahead, what do you think are the major keys which will go some way towards South Africa gaining
some success?
KvW: Look, it is going to be incredibly tough in India, I’m
not going to beat about the bush. It’s going to be very hard for a side which,
and I hate admitting to it, because in sport there shouldn’t be transitions.
When you do your planning well, these things they naturally happen. But it’s
going to be a tough, tough tour, especially the Test series. I think in one day
cricket – T20 and 50-overs – you can still get away with it (transitioning),
but when conditions come more into play in the Test series, it is going to be incredibly
tough. But, they have to find a way. They’ve got a new coach who needs to take
the reins and lead management and leadership as well, so it will be a
challenge. A lot of things will come out in the wash, but hopefully they’ll
learn from it and come out with some very positive results as well.
ZAC: Looking at the Test team, we’ve sort of struggled for a
while to score hundreds, just as a coach do you think a lot of that is mental,
is it technical? Where do you think the two bridge?
KvW: I would say a lot of it is temperamental, I also think
it’s an epidemic that goes right through our country. You don’t see a lot of
junior players scoring hundreds (in the age division. It has a lot to do with batsman
ship, the power game is valued over more skilful, and good batsman ship. So,
(scoring) hundreds is really a dying breed over here, and it is something that
really needs to be addressed as they take games away from opposition. It is
something that the national side definitely will look at. If you look at the successful
teams, they have guys who get hundreds, who score daddy hundreds regularly as well.
Hundreds pay the bills as a batter, so I think it’s something that needs to be
looked at, and it is a key art of batsman ship, which needs to be valued a lot
more.
ZAC: As a former international wicket keeper, how do you
feel about the idea of removing the gloves from Quinton de Kock and giving him
more responsibility with the bat? Especially with Hashiim Amla gone, you could
argue that he is our best batsman. On form he definitely is. Would you be in favour
of him dropping the gloves, or keeping what’s working for him? But on the other
hand, what seems to be working for him leaves us at 150/5 every second game.
KvW: No. Quinton
needs the gloves, in my opinion. I don’t see the point in not utilising the
best all-rounders in your team to ease pressure on him. If he’s going to take
captaincy (in future), then he needs to perform and live with the pressures of
keeping wicket and batting. Otherwise he’s just not the man for the job. So I
would keep him with the gloves, he’s one of the main all-rounders in that side.
A team can only win when your best players are performing, so neutralise some
of his best skills would be foolish in my mind. I think the whole team needs to
step up, performance and temperament-wise, and in this next cycle, whether it’s
a one year, two-year of four-year cycle, we need to get back to where we
belong.
ZAC: As a wicket-keeper who has kept internationally, what
would you say is the hardest part of it that people don’t acknowledge?
Especially as a wicket-keeper batsman.
KvW: The workload is definitely massive, especially in Test
cricket. Tours to places like India or the subcontinent, it’s heavy on a keeper
mentally, you know. The ball is bouncing low, it is spinning, and you are in
the action for five days. The way the game has moved, keepers need to be
contributing massively with the bat. So if you don’t have a passion for it
(keeping wicket), then you will be exposed, but it is a great honour playing
international cricket, and it’s all part of the job, but I would certainly say
it’s the mental part of it.
ZAC: Having watched the disastrous World Cup, where do you
think it all went wrong? Do you think it was just a matter of having a poor
start and never getting back on track, or where there specific things which we
could have and should have done better?
KvW: ( I think selection could have been better, I felt that
selection could have been better, but you know what; it is all very easy to say
in hindsight. Hindsight is an exact science, and we’ll never get everything
right. I think the most important thing about the world cup is that you
actually take the key lessons and there are changes. If we don’t take the
things we did wrong and improve on them, and learn from them, then it is going
to be a vicious cycle of making the same mistakes over and over again and never
moving forward. So I think it is important within the set-up to know where
things went wrong. Whether it was preparation or mind set/tactic. Take those
lessons, acknowledge them, and make sure that they don’t happen again.
ZAC: Penultimate question, what is the major thing you would
change about international cricket to improve it?
KvW: I think the schedule is something that needs to be
looked at, I think there’s way too much cricket going on. I think international
cricket needs to be the dessert, and currently there’s a diet of too much
cricket. Whether it be IPL or international cricket, there is too much cricket.
And that is what causes a lot of good players to start managing their own
workloads, ahead of international cricket.
ZAC: Final question, what is the one thing you would change
about the domestic set up?
KvW: (Laughs) I don’t think there’s only one thing, I think
the competitiveness, we’ve got a bottleneck, where there are actually a lot of
very good young cricketers, but not enough opportunities for all of them. I
would love to see young players get exposed at a higher level, which broadens our
base to have more players selected for the national side. More players who are
ready and available to play for the national side. So, I think opportunities is
something I would like to see improved, because only a small amount of our very
talented cricketers get exposure and opportunities and that is the one thing I’d
like to change.
ZAC: So with that – apologies because now I’m sort of
cheating by asking another question – but with that, would you be in favour of
CSA’s attempt to increase the amount of teams there are?
KvW: I must admit I am in favour of it, I do think it will
create a lot more players, because more players will get exposure. I do think
it needs to be managed very well though, and I’d like to see a system and
structure which is conducive to good exposure, where players get more exposure.
The competitiveness of the game is what is most important to me, so I’m in
favour of getting rid of the bottleneck
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