da winzada777: Graeme Smith admitted that fortune had smiled on South Africa in theclosing stages of the second Test at Durban, but praised the tenacity ofhis team, since lesser sides might have crumbled in the face of such aturnaround

Andrew Miller30-Dec-2004

Graeme Smith: ‘A draw is a bitter-sweet result for both teams’© Getty Images
Graeme Smith admitted that fortune had smiled on South Africa in theclosing stages of the second Test at Durban, but praised the tenacity ofhis team, since lesser sides might have crumbled in the face of such aturnaround. “I think we were a bit lucky at the end there,” he said, “but we deserve a lot of credit for the way we fought, after being on top for two days.”Smith added that Shaun Pollock’s local knowledge had come into play whenassessing the team’s approach to the fifth day, “[Polly] said that, at4.30 local time, bad light starts to set in. We set out to win at first,but when we lost a few wickets after lunch, that became the goal.”I think a draw is a bitter-sweet result for both teams,” said Smith, whoseside was well on top until a 273-run opening stand between Andrew Straussand Marcus Trescothick flipped the game on its head. “On Day Two, we wereconfident of our ability to put the pressure on England’s batsmen, butmaybe we needed to be more on the button in that 11-over stint [at the openers late in the day]. It was crucial that England’s openers started well and they did. In that heat, once you get behind it’s hard to come back, and we toiledthrough the rest of the Test match.”South Africa now have just two days to regroup before the third Testbegins in Cape Town on January 2, but Smith insisted that his team wasready for the challenge. “Back-to-back matches are always an issue,” hesaid. “But both sets of bowlers had a workout, and our medical team hasbeen on the case straightaway. This afternoon was a stepping stone. Wehad our opportunities to win and we need to look at that, but there’s aneven feeling in the dressing-room. We haven’t lost here, but we’re still1-0 down, and we need good cricket to come back.”

The Barmy Army was denied a England win at Durban© Cricinfo/Neil Lane
The closing stages of the game were fraught for South Africa’s fans and players alike. Shaun Pollock is expected to be fit after being hit on the fingers by Steve Harmison, although he was run out immediately afterwards by his partner AB de Villiers, which gave Smith a minor attack of thevapours. “I was bouncing a cricket ball around the dressing-room for about15 minutes afterwards,” he admitted. “But AB’s a young guy and he playedsuperbly, and with Polly’s experience, it worked well. We showed someserious hardness, and got a lot more out of the Test than we expected attea.”With the light fading, England took the new ball, which may have hastenedthe umpires’ decision to call the game off. “It’s interesting,” said Smith. “They bowled well with the older ball, but maybe they tried too hardwith the new ball? But that happens when matches get close, you get anxious and try to force the pace. They might have tried one or two things, or maybe given a go to their spinners – but I was concentrating more on our boys.”The pressure’s always on in Test cricket,” Smith concluded. “We playedpositively throughout and we played to win, but maybe this one thing haschanged the series for us now. If we play good cricket at Cape Town, wecould go to Jo’burg at 1-1.”