News

'Lot of work to do with Test side' - Domingo

South Africa came back from India with the T20 and ODI trophies in their luggage but their nine-year unbeaten run on the road in Test series was broken

Firdose Moonda
Firdose Moonda
11-Dec-2015
Faf du Plessis and AB de Villiers resisted India, India v South Africa, 4th Test, Delhi, 5th day, December 7, 2015

South Africa's batsmen must leave their troubles in India behind and prepare for home conditions  •  BCCI

If, when Russell Domingo started coaching, he had been told he would inherit a Test team at the top of the rankings and limited-overs sides that had suffered because of it, he would have taken it. When such riches rain on you, you do not consider the subsequent drain even if you know that in any functioning sporting system, there has to be one.
Player pools change every few years so no matter whether you jump in at the shallow or the deep end, you are joining a cycle. From the shallow side, things will improve as the younger swimmers are schooled, a community is formed and they find their preferred stoke. From the deep end, the seas get rough, not everybody slips into the same stream and the waters begin to empty.
What has made Domingo's tenure so topsy-turvy is that these two processes have happened at the same time. "When I took over, there was a little bit of instability in the T20 and ODI teams and the Test side was very stable. Now, roles have reversed," he said during his assessment of South Africa's tour of India on their return home.
South Africa came back with a perfect illustration of that. They T20 and ODI trophies were part of their luggage, which will boost their confidence ahead of next year's World T20, but their nine-year unbeaten run on the road in Test series was broken. The gains of the former may not outweigh the disappointment of the latter, which is why so much focus has fallen on the longer format.
"There is a lot of work to do with the Test side," Domingo admitted. "Let's not be naive about that. There are a lot of spots that people have questions about."
Some of those questions were answered a day later, when the selectors named their 13 to face England in the first two Tests. They stuck with opener Stiaan van Zyl despite the difficulties he faced in India, but deposed gloveman Dane Vilas. Their reasoning was that van Zyl needs to be tested in home conditions, having only opened in the subcontinent - he was promoted to the job in July for the Bangladesh series - but Vilas, who has also only played on the subcontinent, was superfluous to requirements that actually called for an extra batsman.
That Vilas and his nearest rival Quinton de Kock are also batsmen was not part of the thinking because Temba Bavuma, the middle-order man who impressed when thrust into a role at the top, is more of a batsman and batsmen are in the spotlight. Domingo wants them to know their sails have not been ripped off, they have merely been blown a little off course.
"As far as I'm concerned, India was a very tough tour for any batter to go on. We've got quality in our batting line-up that wasn't able to showcase their skills under those conditions against those bowlers but that doesn't make them bad players," he said. "Those conditions were really extreme as it shows with the stats of the Indian batters as well."
India struggled only a little less than South Africa until Ajinkya Rahane's twin tons in the Delhi Test. But the reality remains that no South African scored a hundred and only AB de Villiers managed to pass 50. Hashim Amla and Faf du Plessis stonewalled impressively later in the series but balls faced and time batted do not count as much as runs. Bavuma showed some promise, Dean Elgar was caught and released a few times but eventually caught and the rest all took the bait the India spinners put out.
In general, South Africa approached spin like a fish out of water but Domingo does not think they could have prepared any differently. Their batting consultant Mike Hussey was with them for a week before the first Test but could not stay. There is no word on if he will back before the England series. "We would have loved to have him longer but he had some other commitments so he wasn't able to stay through the series but he did add a lot of value prior to the series," Domingo said.
Even when he had left, the team used any extra time as productively as they could. "We kept complimenting the players about the extra work they were putting in and the meticulous way they were trying to work on how to play against the Indian spinners," Domingo said.
Their floundering took place in the mind where the constant threat posed by both pitch and opposition players took its toll. "We were always under pressure and that can wear you down, whether it's physically or mentally," Domingo said. "I'm sure players' confidence would have been knocked because we pride ourselves on being good players of spin but the fight that was shown on the last day [in Delhi], shows there's still some fight left there. It shows that they can do it and these next 10 days will be important to make sure they freshen up and get themselves in the right frame of mind of England."
The quick turnaround has been cited by Domingo and captain Amla as the best way to recover. "We've got the ideal break," Amla said. "Everybody will take a couple of days to rest up and get back into the nets and face the new ball on wickets with a bit of nip."
Home conditions are going to cast a different net over batsmen who will have to prepare for the ball flying past their noses instead of reaching down to smell it but Amla is not worried about how his team will tackle that. "I don't think it's a huge adjustment because these are the conditions we are accustomed to," he said. So, in their own waters, Domingo and Amla are hopeful South Africa's Test team will become big fish again.

Firdose Moonda is ESPNcricinfo's South Africa correspondent