Wednesday, February 25, 2015

South Africa confident from recent series win over West Indies: du Plessis

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Last updated on Wednesday, 25 February, 2015, 06:24 AM
  • Faf du Plessis says the recent series win against the West Indies at home gives South Africa confidence ahead of their clash in Sydney.
  • Du Plessis said the team will work hard to ensure AB de Villiers does not miss a game.
  • The criticism of the fans after their loss to India was justified, according to du Plessis.
Faf du Plessis believes South Africa will have plenty of confidence ahead of their clash against West Indies in Sydney.
Faf du Plessis believes South Africa will have plenty of confidence ahead of their clash against West Indies in Sydney. 
South Africa's Faf du Plessis has said the team will draw confidence from their good showing against West Indies in the recent series at home when they lock horns in the ICC Cricket World Cup 2015 in Sydney on Friday. He also said the team copped the blame for slow over-rate and would stem the rot.
"Whatever we did against them in South Africa means absolutely nothing," du Plessis said. "What we can do is draw confidence from that series win at home. From their perspective, they lost to us quite badly. But, we have to be on top of our game on Friday and if we are not, they are the kind of team that will beat you on that day."
Du Plessis smiled when he said it was unfortunate Zimbabwe had decided to bowl Chris Gayle into some really good form. "We played them in a series in South Africa and we know the kind of team they are. They are very, very dangerous and have a lot of match-winners," he said. "We are aware that we have to be on top of our game. Gayle is world-class player, one of the best. I know his ODI stats are probably not as good as his T20 stats but he is still a very dangerous player. On the day he gets in and scores runs, he will score quickly and take the match away. It is very important for us to try and get him out early," he said.
Talking about the fine for slow over-rate, du Plessis said the team would strive to see that de Villiers would not miss a World Cup game. "As a team, we are guilty. It is unfortunate for us because we have a lot of seam bowlers in our attack and they will take a bit longer. We are all to blame for it and not just one guy. We have tried everything we can. I wish there was an answer but if you have something, please share it," he said.
On a day when South Africa moved their optional net session indoors because of a persistent drizzle, du Plessis said it would not have an impact on the preparation.
"We are used to playing series where there are one or two days practice between games. Obviously, you like to practice and get the plans in place. One session is not going to make a huge difference."
Du Plessis said words like 'should beat' and 'would beat' are definitely not part of his cricketing lexicon. "I have been on the other side too many times. Nothing can be taken for granted. Any team can beat you on a day. There have been a couple of small teams that have done that in this tournament," he said.
He said the team was aware of the criticism back home. "If you lose like that, you should get some criticism. If it was a close game, it would have been a different thing. We haven't had a lot of games where we have not battled till the end. It was poor that we lost by that margin. It was a poor performance and the public has a right to feel like that," he said.
South Africa, however, are backing themselves to come good at SCG on Friday. "I saw the stats the other day. We scored the most hundreds in the last year. The average of the top six in the last year is also the highest. Consistency is always the biggest thing you look at. Stats don't lie. Look at the positives, we have been batting brilliantly the last 16 months," he said.
"It is very important. The younger guys look at senior players and see how they react, what they say and what they do. So the kind of stuff that you talk about is really important. If you start pointing fingers or blaming people or being negative, that filters to the team. It is like cancer. It is important to say the right things and stay positive," he said.