With the likes of Kagiso Rabada, Jasprit Bumrah, Gerald Coetzee, Mohammed Siraj, Marco Jansen, Lungi Ngidi and Shardul Thakur - particularly after his final sequence right here - within the combine, you'd count on the sequence between South Africa and India to be headlined by bowlers. But South Africa's captain Temba Bavuma has a unique concept.
"We understand conditions a lot better so you'd expect us to adapt a lot better but their bowling is quite strong," he mentioned in Centurion, the place the primary Test begins on Boxing Day. "The fact that they've been able to achieve such success is because of their bowling attack and that kind of nullifies the advantage we have. It's more between the batters and how the batters take on that challenge."
And it might make one of the fascinating storylines of the sequence, even when it doesn't appear so at first look.
"For me as a batter, the bowlers are going to put you under pressure and their batting line-up as well, they [India] have got renowned Test players and guys who performed in all conditions"
Temba Bavuma
Both have spoken in regards to the significance of sustaining South Africa's unbeaten residence file in opposition to India, and Bavuma expanded on that by referencing the distinctive pressures that include taking part in India.
"There's a lot of pride attached to that - that we've been able to keep that record intact as a South African team... all of us as players also feel that," he mentioned. "But we understand playing against India comes with certain challenges and it's those types of challenges we would like to focus on. Playing against India comes with a lot more eyes and a lot more scrutiny in terms of everything we do. So it's accepting that. And the other, more obvious one, is the skill factor on the field. For me as a batter, the bowlers are going to put you under pressure and their batting line-up as well, they've got renowned Test players and guys who performed in all conditions. They are a determined team as well, who want to be able to say they've won a Test series here in South Africa so with that extra bit of drive and motivation, we'll really need to be at our best."
And for Bavuma himself, the final a part of that sentence rings notably true after a troublesome World Cup, the place his kind was beneath the microscope. He has not had any recreation time since South Africa's semi-final loss to Australia greater than a month in the past so it is tough to say what sort of contact he's in. He was because of play in a first-class match from December 14 to 17 however withdrew to attend a funeral, which implies he has not performed any long-format cricket since March.
In the time since, he has turn out to be a father, led South Africa at a World Cup, and can now take up his place as skipper and middle-order batter in opposition to India. Is he prepared? "Mentally I am as fresh as ever," he mentioned. "I didn't get any red-ball cricket. Things happened with a bereavement at home. But I've enjoyed the time being at home, with the wife and the little one but I missed the cricket and was watching the guys in T20Is and ODIs. We don't usually get breaks this long, especially in-season so I'll take the break."
And from right here on, it is a full summer season and a busy 2024, through which South Africa will play ten Tests and Bavuma will look to create historical past with the red-ball aspect.
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