Who will the joke be on in Adelaide?

By Amrit / Roar Guru

“The reason everybody is here is to stand together and to show solidarity to what has been something we actually thought was a joke.”

This is exactly what South Africa’s Hashim Amla had to say last week about the ball tampering allegation against his captain Faf du Plessis.

On Tuesday, du Plessis was fined over the incident that occurred in the second Test.

Regardless of what anyone thinks of the mint-saga, it was quite clear after Amla addressed the media that South Africa still values their Protea fire legacy; a legacy that instils deep in the heart of every South African cricketer, the foremost need to stand behind their captain, or any player needing a hand.

All the South Africans were trying to do was back their captain and send a strong message that the snarky Australian media is at fault.

And to be honest, they have succeeded a long way in doing that.

As cricinfo’s Melinda Farrell suggested in one of her recent articles, maybe it is the laws of the game that should be more heavily examined than du Plessis.

If du Plessis is guilty of ball tampering for shining the ball with his saliva-soaked mint, then what about the use of hair gels and sunscreens, which players normally use while taking the field? Chewing a mint has perhaps been done by everyone.

But now comes the important question – after all this fuss, what’s going to happen in Adelaide?

Australia made the changes that the thousands of ‘selectors’ around the country called for; they brought Matthew Renshaw, Matthew Wade, Peter Handscomb, Nic Maddinson, Jackson Bird and Chadd Sayers into the squad.

Yet, will it change the result in Adelaide?

Perhaps not.

In all probability, now that du Plessis has retained his place as captain, he would definitely go with two spinners in Tabraiz Shamsi and Keshav Maharaj. Either Vernon Philander or Kyle Abbott is sure to miss out.

Along with the SCG and MCG, the Adelaide Oval always comes to the aid of the spinners from the fourth day onwards. Playing with two spinners on a flat Adelaide pitch would give them a favoured response.

Though the pitch will be expected to be true to the batsmen too, having a left arm chinaman spinner up their sleeve might turn out to be decisive.

So does Australia have a chinaman spinning option?

No.

While Steve Smith is still growing as a leader, du Plessis has shown a penchant for making some shrewd and bold decisions on the field.

Had he been suspended for Adelaide, the job would have been much easier for the Australians.

South Africa’s pacemen will be high on confidence after the first two Tests. Their quality as of now looks a couple of notches higher than the Australian pace attack, with the exclusion of Josh Hazlewood.

So can Mitchell Starc, Hazlewood, and Jackson Bird dictate the terms of the match?

That depends on the toss.

If South Africa bat first, the Australians will be up against the wall, as their inexperienced batsmen would have to later come up against Shamsi and Maharaj.

If Australia loses in Adelaide, the joke would not be on Faf du Plessis or Hashim Amla or even Rod Marsh; the joke would be on us, the people who have called for such drastic changes and vented our abject feelings against South Africa’s stand-in-skipper.

The Crowd Says:

2016-11-25T07:04:38+00:00

hopalong

Guest


Do not agree with your headline.Hash did not mean "it was a joke" as in it was a prank.let,s all laugh ha ha. I took it as him trying to say that the whole brouhaha was laughable.

2016-11-23T22:16:29+00:00

Don Freo

Guest


So when Duminy bats for many sessions with De Kock, where is the right hander? When Elgar is the first wicket to fall, do the dynamics suddenly change because Amla stands on the same side of the bat as Cook? Batting abilty is a far more significant factor.

AUTHOR

2016-11-23T16:19:24+00:00

Amrit

Roar Guru


Yet it has worked out perfectly for the Proteas- Cook(R), ELgar(L),Amla(R), Duminy(L),Faf(R),Bavuma(R) and De Kock(L). I mean that highlights Duminy's promotion to number 4 and he has done his job; Maybe Australia could follow the concept- it's not a non-cricketing concept

2016-11-23T13:58:01+00:00

Don Freo

Guest


It all depends on who gets out. They don't always get out in batting order. The L/R thing is such a silly idea. It is a non-cricketer concept.

AUTHOR

2016-11-23T06:25:04+00:00

Amrit

Roar Guru


I don't know if Maharj would sit out, I see Faf going with both Maharaj and Philander for they add strength to the lower-middle order. As for Cook, I still see him getting one more match. Though I would love to see Rossow and Elgar open.

AUTHOR

2016-11-23T06:23:11+00:00

Amrit

Roar Guru


That is why I'm a bit too skeptical to see Nevill miss out. Wade, I don't know. If Nevill had been there, it would have made it L,L,R,L,R,L,R. In the case, it would have matched that of the South Africans middle-order.

2016-11-23T05:51:45+00:00

likkewaan

Guest


Yeah, I don't think they will change the team at all from the Hobart game.

2016-11-23T04:38:57+00:00

Rats

Guest


Really doubt if SA would go with two spinners for a day and night Test and pink ball. Maharaj should sit out. Hardly looks like a threat. Shamsi should have got a chance even in the last test. And please, Cook needs to be replaced with Rossow.

2016-11-23T03:07:41+00:00

JamesH

Roar Guru


I'd love to see all of the less experienced faces do well - that probably means we win the match!

2016-11-23T01:10:47+00:00

dan ced

Guest


Yeah it will be Warner, Renshaw, Khawaja, Smith, Maddinson, Handscomb, Wade, Starc, Hazelwood... then 2 of Sayers, Bird and Lyon. I think they will go with Sayers and Bird.. and use Smith/Maddinson as part time spinners. If Sayers plays I might pop over after work Friday night. I guess I'm also rooting for debutante batters too.

2016-11-22T22:50:35+00:00

JamesH

Roar Guru


AB, I'm not sure what you are getting at with this left-right combo thing. Patterson is also a left-hander, and Burns would be playing as an opener in place of Renshaw. A batting order of Warner, Renshaw, Khawaja, Smith Handscomb, Maddinson and Wade gives you L, L, L, R, R, L, L. An order of Warner, Burns, Khawaja, Smith, Patterson, Handscomb and Wade gives you L, R, L, R, L, R, L. Even if you swap those orders around a bit you still get a better spread of left-right with the second group. Renshaw will play, by the way. Only 6 batsmen plus Wade were picked in the squad.

AUTHOR

2016-11-22T16:55:05+00:00

Amrit

Roar Guru


More than anything else, mate, he reminds me of Matthew Hayden's batting. I mean the straight drive is immaculate and kinda carbon-copy of Haydos. Yeah I hear your point.

2016-11-22T16:37:24+00:00

Immy

Guest


Just hope Renshaw is playing in the next Ashes and standing somewhere close when Joe Root is batting

AUTHOR

2016-11-22T16:27:28+00:00

Amrit

Roar Guru


I would rather go with Maddinson in the future and even in this series; he gives them that left-right combination in the middle-order. I would have gone with Renshaw but again, he's an opener. Hopefully he can slog it out with the veteran Shaun Marsh.

2016-11-22T15:27:46+00:00

Immy

Guest


I think the media was snarky and the whole mint thing was ridiculous. I'm not sure you saw the last test under lights with a pink ball last year but the ball swung a lot. I'd be really surprised if the wicket turns and Abbott, after his match winning display, will play. I think South Africa are huge, huge favourites. Own new team can't be expected to beat them but I'm glad the selectors have finally picked some youth. Let's hope they stick with them for the rest of the summer regardless of the result (although swapping in either Burns or even Patterson for Maddison would be fine by me)

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