On Monday it will be back to work. The tournament’s schedule has thrown up another quirky coincidence, in keeping with the rugby event. After the Saturday ‘double header’ with England last weekend, Wednesday sees the Proteas face New Zealand in Pune on Wednesday.
It is historically not a matchup that has favoured South Africa at the World Cup. The Black Caps have won six of the eight ties between the sides at the tournament, including that painful semifinal loss in Auckland in 2015.
South Africa’s last win came in 1999 inspired by half-centuries from Gary Kirsten, Herschelle Gibbs and Jacques Kallis, the latter also picking up two wickets to earn the player of the match prize.
But the Proteas have challenged history at various stages in this tournament. They hold the record for the highest World Cup total, achieved in the opening game against Sri Lanka, inflicted a record defeat on England and then snapped a seven-match losing streak in ICC tournaments against Pakistan with that win in Chennai.
The Boks winning could do two things; burden them with extra pressure or prove inspirational. Bavuma and the coaching staff will believe it's the latter.
After Boks over to Proteas, whose maths shows they’re as good as in semis
Image: Pankaj Nangia/Gallo Images
One World Cup secured, another still up for grabs and with South Africa well placed too.
No pressure then Temba.
To be fair to the Proteas, who watched the dramatic Paris final in their team room in the early hours of Sunday morning, they have maintained an even disposition throughout their own campaign in India.
Ahead of Sunday’s match between the host nation and England, South Africa, who beat Pakistan by one wicket on Friday, were top of the points table and with a healthy net run rate too. It is that figure, the result of winning four matches by more than 100 runs — including a 229-run triumph against England — that means they have a toe in the playoffs.
It will take losing their remaining three matches, all by 100 runs or more, for them to be dragged into any kind of play-off dogfight that might develop in the remaining two weeks of the round-robin phase.
Of course they would rather avoid that. Win just one of those three games and their semifinal spot would be secured.
Aside from the chaotic scenes at the end of Friday night’s one-wicket win against Pakistan in Chennai, the Proteas have not allowed themselves to get too high or too low at the end of matches.
“Five games ago, we probably weren’t seen as favourites, but now, there's a lot more positivity around the Proteas and the South African team. But, I think, in the old, cliched way, we're trying to take it day by day and keep enjoying our processes and the journey,” Bavuma said.
Sunday they had a day off — to recover from the long journey the previous day and the late night spent watching their rugby brethren etch their names into history.
How Keshav Maharaj helped the Proteas over the line against Pakistan
On Monday it will be back to work. The tournament’s schedule has thrown up another quirky coincidence, in keeping with the rugby event. After the Saturday ‘double header’ with England last weekend, Wednesday sees the Proteas face New Zealand in Pune on Wednesday.
It is historically not a matchup that has favoured South Africa at the World Cup. The Black Caps have won six of the eight ties between the sides at the tournament, including that painful semifinal loss in Auckland in 2015.
South Africa’s last win came in 1999 inspired by half-centuries from Gary Kirsten, Herschelle Gibbs and Jacques Kallis, the latter also picking up two wickets to earn the player of the match prize.
But the Proteas have challenged history at various stages in this tournament. They hold the record for the highest World Cup total, achieved in the opening game against Sri Lanka, inflicted a record defeat on England and then snapped a seven-match losing streak in ICC tournaments against Pakistan with that win in Chennai.
The Boks winning could do two things; burden them with extra pressure or prove inspirational. Bavuma and the coaching staff will believe it's the latter.
READ MORE
Maharaj smacks the winning runs as Proteas survive tense affair against Pakistan
Proteas learn to fuel up as extreme conditions bite at World Cup
Proteas far from perfect, but still on track ahead of clash with Black Caps
Shamsi takes four as Proteas chase challenging target against Pakistan at World Cup
Head repays Australia's faith with blistering hundred
Bok-supporting Pakistan coaching staff have major mission against Proteas
Maxwell smacks fastest World Cup ton in history as Australia drub Dutch
Would you like to comment on this article?
Sign up (it's quick and free) or sign in now.
Please read our Comment Policy before commenting.
Most read
Latest Videos