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Kyle Simmonds Crowned Overall Division 1 SACA MVP

The 2025/26 domestic cricket season concludes with Western Province all-rounder Kyle Simmonds named Division 1 Overall SACA MVP. Simmonds earned…

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Liam Alder Named Overall SACA MVP for Domestic Division 2

Following the completion of all domestic fixtures, Liam Alder of the Garden Route Badgers finished at the top of the…

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TWELVE YEARS OF RESEARCH-BASED PLAYER SERVICE

Over the past 12 years, the South African Cricketers’ Association (SACA) has cemented its dedication to evidence-based practice through a…

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DU PLESSIS TO MISS OPENING TEST

Standard Bank Proteas test captain, Faf du Plessis will miss the opening Test against England at Lord’s to remain with his wife after the birth of their first child. Dean Elgar will stand in as captain, leading South Africa for the first time.

Du Plessis will rejoin the squad later in the week to prepare for the second Test at Trent Bridge which begins on July 14.

In du Plessis’ absence, South Africa look set to pick Theunis de Bruyn ahead of newcomer Aiden Markram, who was included in the squad as cover for du Plessis. De Bruyn was preferred over Markram in the tour match at New Road last week, and made his debut in South Africa’s most recent Test against New Zealand after Stephen Cook was dropped from the opening berth. De Bruyn scored 12 runs in the match and selection convener Linda Zondi confirmed that when the batsman was reconsidered for a Test spot it would not be as an opener. This is, therefore, an opportunity to blood him in the middle order.

“Theunis played the one Test match in New Zealand. There’s been a sense of fairness to players,” Russell Domingo, South Africa’s coach, said. “We haven’t really discarded a player after one Test match, or two or three innings. At the moment he would be ahead in the pecking order, ahead of a guy like Aiden.”

Even if Markram is made to wait, South Africa will still have at least one newcomer to the XI come Thursday. Heino Kuhn is set to partner stand-in skipper Elgar at the top of the order which means half of South Africa’s top four will be fairly inexperienced. Hashim Amla, with 103 Test caps, will bat at No.3 with Temba Bavuma and JP Duminy at No.5 and 6 respectively.

South Africa can call on seniority in the bowling department, though. Vernon Philander was passed fit after sustaining an ankle injury during a county stint at Sussex. His availability was particularly pleasing to Domingo, who regards Philander as among the tougher prospects for batsmen.

“Vernon is a fantastic bowler for us. He is probably the hardest bowler to face in our side and when he is not there, we tend to struggle a little but because he gives us that control but also gives us the cutting edge if there is something in the wicket and also balances our side with his batting. He is a fantastic cricketer.”

Philander will form part of a three-pronged pack alongside Kagiso Rabada and Morne Morkel. Duanne Olivier, Chris Morris and Andile Phehlukwayo are the reserves.

With the focus on the make-up of their own XI as they “try to find out what the best combination is,” as Domingo put it, South Africa have not spent too much time weighing up their opposition. Like South Africa, England are under a new captain in Joe Root – although his is a permanent appointment – and Domingo suggested his side would look to a test a top order which continues to be juggled around.

“We haven’t looked too closely at their side. Ben Stokes, Joe Root, Alastair Cook, Stuart Broad, James Anderson are five seriously experienced players who are all match winners in their own right. They are a good side but they’ve also got some uncertainties,” Domingo said. “There’s a new opening batter in Keaton Jennings who has only played a handful of Tests and Gary Ballance has come back into the side. There are certain areas where they may be a little uncertain about that we want to expose.”

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MCC wants change on ‘umpire’s call’ lbws

The MCC World Cricket Committee has welcomed the development of technology that could allow the third umpire to call no-balls, and it has also recommended that fielding teams should not lose a review for lbw decisions in the “umpire’s call” zone. The committee has also commissioned a report into the balance between bat and ball, and specifically highlighted the quality and size of modern bats as an area of concern.

It was the World Cricket Committee, an independent think-tank made up largely of former international cricketers, that six years ago recommended serious consideration be given to playing day-night Tests. The current committee, chaired by Mike Brearley, met this week in Adelaide in the lead-up to the inaugural day-night Test between Australia and New Zealand, and technology was a key part of the discussion.

“The committee received a report from Simon Taufel on technology designed to allow front foot no-balls to be monitored by the third umpire,” the World Cricket Committee said in a statement. “It felt that a fast, automated system for the calling of front-foot no-balls would be a welcome enhancement to the game.

“The committee also debated the ‘umpire’s call’ for lbws and felt there should be no loss of a review for the fielding side if the ball is shown to be clipping the stumps in the umpire’s call zone; this could then allow the removal of the reallocation of two reviews after 80 overs.”

The committee also discussed whether there should a be a limit to the size of the edges and overall depth of cricket bats. It said that the dimensions and quality of bats had started to distort the game but recognised that other elements such as boundary sizes, shot selection, player fitness, quality of pitches and behaviour of balls also played a part.

“It was decided that further game-wide consultation is needed and has commissioned a report to be written and brought back to the committee for its next meeting, at Lord’s, in July 2016,” the committee said.

It also said it would monitor the success of the ECB’s recently-announced trial in which the away team will be given first chance to bowl first in county matches, and the toss will only take place if they decline to take the bowl-first option. If such a change made it to Test cricket it could alter the dynamics of home-ground advantage; the committee said it was concerned that too much advantage currently sat with the home team.

“The MCC World Cricket committee is concerned that home advantage in Test Cricket now carries too much significance,” it said. “In the last three years, over 70% of Test victories have been achieved by the home team.

“There are other factors contributing to this trend, such as shorter tours and a lack of adequate player preparation in local conditions, but there are indications that pitches are increasingly being prepared to suit the home team. The committee would like to see a game-wide agreement that ground authorities be left alone to produce pitches that reflect local conditions whilst encouraging a fair balance between bat and ball.”

And, not for the first time, the committee expressed its strong desire for a World Test Championship to take place in an effort to provide greater context for all international cricket. Most ODIs should also count towards qualification for the next World Cup, the committee said.

“The committee believes that the game needs to address these issues as a priority,” it said. “In so doing so, more thought needs to be given to how the game to distinguish and market the three formats to ensure that they complement each other in a highly competitive market place.”

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