Mark Boucher Richard Ngarava Netherlands South Africa Zimbabwe Bangladesh cricket Proteas T20 World Cup cup Mark Boucher Richard Ngarava Netherlands South Africa Zimbabwe Bangladesh

Boucher responds to Proteas' rain-induced World Cup heartbreak: 'We wanted to play'

news24.com

Proteas head coach Mark Boucher says that the Proteas wanted to finish their T20 World Cup opener against Zimbabwe in Hobart on Monday despite the conditions and that Zimbabwe would have wanted the same outcome had they been in South Africa's position.

It was a hugely frustrating outing for the Proteas, who were far better than their African neighbours and well on course for a valuable Pool 2 victory before the umpires - Ahsan Raza and Michael Gough - finally pulled the players off the field one last time.

At that point, the Proteas were 51/0 in just three overs, needing another 13 for victory in four remaining overs after their target of 80 in nine overs had been reduced to 64 in seven following another delay.SCORECARD | T20 World Cup: Proteas v ZimbabweQuinton de Kock (47* off 18) did all he could to get his side over the line in time, but it was not to be.READ | Hobart rain cruelly denies Proteas World Cup points in farcical circumstancesAddressing the conditions after the match, Boucher acknowledged they were "tough" but said the decision was ultimately out of his control. "I thought it was tough conditions.

We are here to play a World Cup, and, obviously, we wanted to play," said Boucher."It seemed like both captains wanted to play at the start, and having a look at the game before [Bangladesh v Netherlands], the field was fairly wet as well, and there had been a bit of rain around."The bottom line is that players don't make those decisions; the officials are there to make those decisions, and that's what happened."Live with decisionsWhen asked if he would have been comfortable with his bowlers having to operate in the conditions Zimbabwe faced towards the back-end of the match - they lost bowler Richard Ngarava to

Related News
Cricket South Africa (CSA) and Enoch Nkwe, its director of cricket, will be "taking accountability" by conducting a comprehensive if rather tight review to determine why the Proteas bombed in the ICC T20 World Cup.
Outgoing Proteas coach Mark Boucher admits that failing at multiple ICC events has "naturally" played on the team's mind after South Africa crashed out of the T20 World Cup in Australia.
Could the Proteas be on the cusp of a player exodus after the failed ICC T20 World Cup campaign?
Cricket South Africa (CSA) has slammed the Proteas' performance at the T20 World Cup in Australia following Sunday's 13-run defeat to the Netherlands in Adelaide that saw them knocked out.
Suryakumar Yadav hit a blazing unbeaten 61 as India set up a Twenty20 World Cup semi-final against England by crushing Zimbabwe by 71 runs at a packed Melbourne Cricket Ground on Sunday. India were flying at 87-1 but the loss of three quick wickets slowed them down before Yadav set the proceedings alight, smashing six sixes in his 25-ball blitz to steer them to 186-5, with 79 coming off the last five overs. Zimbabwe lost two wickets for two runs in reply and were never in the hunt, capitulating in the 17th over in front of 82,507 fans. Ravichandran Ashwin took 3-22 for a rampant India.
Suryakumar Yadav hit a blazing unbeaten 61 as India set up a Twenty20 World Cup semi-final against England by crushing Zimbabwe by 71 runs at a packed Melbourne Cricket Ground on Sunday.

Latest News

Change privacy settings
This page might use cookies if your analytics vendor requires them.