Klusener left out of SA squad to tour England

Is this the end of his career?

Klusener left out of SA squad to tour England](http://uk.cricinfo.com/link_to_database/ARCHIVE/CRICKET_NEWS/2003/MAY/183688_RSA_19MAY2003.html)

As widely expected, Lance Klusener has been left out of South Africa’s squad to tour England this summer. Klusener’s form of late has been poor, **and he was dealt a second blow with the news that he wasn’t being awarded a central contract by the South African board (UCBSA), putting his international future in doubt. **

Even before Klusener’s omission, the South Africa side was missing some familiar names with Allan Donald and Jonty Rhodes having both retired after the World Cup.

The Test squad includes two uncapped players – fast bowler Monde Zondeki and Thami Tsolekile, a wicketkeeper. Zondeki is still short of full fitness following a car crash in March. Morne van Wyk, another wicketkeeper, and fast bowler Dewald Pretorius are the only two uncapped members of the one-day squad.

Graeme Smith, who succeeded Shaun Pollock as captain following South Africa’s World Cup humiliation, was confident that the side would do well in England. “We are a young side with plenty of exciting talent,” Smith said. “But we are also starting on a new era with South African cricket and we see this tour as another step forward on that path.”

South Africa squad for Tests and ODIs Graeme Smith (capt), Mark Boucher (v-capt/wkt), Paul Adams, Herschelle Gibbs, Jacques Kallis, Neil McKenzie, Makhaya Ntini, Shaun Pollock, Dewald Pretorius, Jacques Rudolph.

One-day only Nicky Boje, Allan Dawson, Andrew Hall, Charl Langeveldt, Andre Nel, Martin van Jaarsveld, Morne van Wyk.

Tests only Boeta Dippenaar, Gary Kirsten, Robin Peterson, Thami Tsolekile, Charl Willoughby, Monde Zondeki

Klusener is in the same boat as Wasim and Waqar in that he can still do a good job but he's on the decline so won't be around for the next world cup. It makes sense to try and rebuild for SA just like it did for us.

This guy is immensely talented but seems way too laid back for modern cricket. The new age cricket requires tremendous amounts of motivation to play cricket all year around. From what I have read and heard from Zulu, he would rather be raising cattle in Swaziland than spending months on a mowed field.

I think thats good because he wasn't performing well....

I thought he did a decent job in the WC, specially with the bat, his late inning against West Indies in the opener was an amazing inning tto watch.

Yeah he did very well with the bat anbd I guess players like him and Afrdid should never be dropped from any one day line up ncuz u never know with them.

So now we have a two-day old captain talking about Klusener's negative inlfuence in the locker room. I would agree somewhat- he's not really notorious for his cohesion-building exercises among team members. He would've been an automatic inclusion as long as he's in form. Othar than that, he's no Jonty Rhodes when the players leave the field.


Smith: Klusener can "ruin a team"

Wisden CricInfo staff - May 27, 2003

Graeme Smith, South Africa's new captain, has launched a remarkable verbal attack on Lance Klusener, describing him as a disruptive influence on the side.

Last week, Klusener was left out of the South African squad for the forthcoming tour of England and also not awarded a central contract. When asked about the reasons behind the decision at a business breakfast in Cape Town, Smith did not hold back. "We decided Lance as a team man can only cause hassles and we want to move forward in SA cricket," Smith said. "To be honest Lance, as fantastic as he is, can sometimes ruin a team.

"His ability as a cricketer is very good, but his ability as a team man is not very good and he kind of can infect a team and bring down the youth."

Klusener expressed surprise at Smith's remarks, saying that the only official comment he had received came from Omar Henry, the chairman of selectors, who had told him the reason for his omission was the need to bring in new blood. "It's becoming a joke," Klusener told South Africa's Star newspaper. "Does anyone really know what's going on out there? For the current captain, who's played a couple of games with me, to come out with the so-called real reason at a cricketing breakfast is almost laughable. What's really disturbing is that, whatever the reason for my being dropped, no one in authority has made any effort to sort it out."

© Wisden CricInfo Ltd

source: Cricinfo

So any examples of Klusener's 'disruptive' force?

Greame Smith - The new Immature and Stup!d captain of South Africa is telling us that Zulu is a Disruptive force ?? We thought only India and Pakistan dont give their cricketers the resepect they deserve, Let’s add South Africa in this list and They are doing better. First Donald, Then Pollock and now Zulu. Anyways here is a Nice read on Zulu :-


Silencing the assassin

If ever there was a cricketer who could be described as the strong, silent type it is Lance Klusener. Shivnarine Chanderpaul is perhaps the only international cricketer today who could go one better than Klusener in the silent category – show him a mike and you can be sure he will be off in a jiffy. But then Chanderpaul is way behind when it comes to strength.

Legendary fast bowler Jeff Thomson used to describe his bowling style thus: “I just run up and go thwack.”

There was no run up of course for Klusener at the batting crease but the ball certainly would go thwack when walloped by one of the heaviest bats in cricket history.

Klusener was one of cricket’s last old-style amateurs in the best sense of the word. For him cricket was what it really should be – just a game. That attitude, it appears, has lost him a place in the South African side despite a wonderful World Cup at home, where he finished second in the South African batting averages, with 91, and fourth in the bowling averages. All this with a batting strike-rate of 118. And remember, the Great White Hope of South African cricket, Jacques Kallis, had a miserable time, both with bat and ball.

Klusener’s aversion to the media apparently was one of the factors behind his new captain Graeme Smith’s astonishing attack on one of contemporary cricket’s most dynamic players. It must hurt when your captain makes disparaging comments about your attitude and lack of team spirit at a business breakfast. And though a man of very few words, Klusener has reacted angrily to the shabby treatment at the hands of the selectors and his captain.

The few words Klusener has been reported uttering in the dressing room have, sadly, backfired on him Watching the chaotic scenes at the end of tied 1999 World Cup semi-final at Edgbaston, I was astonished to see the man who had taken his side to the brink of an unlikely victory with another barnstorming innings (31not out from 16 balls) simply peel off his gloves and walk straight back to the pavilion, head unbowed.

In his wake the Aussies were going berserk with joy, as the tie had guaranteed their entry into the final while last-man Allan Donald, who had frozen at the crease at the crucial moment, looked utterly shattered.

“Nobody died,” were Klusener’s seemingly callous words at the end of it all as his teammates slumped in despair all around him. He was right, of course, though perhaps the timing was not quite right. Hosts and joint-favourites South Africa once again saw their chances crushed by a tie, this time self-inflicted, in their final group game against Sri Lanka at Durban last March. Once again it was Klusener who was at the crease at the end, brought about by rain. This time, though for some unknown reason, he had calmly pushed back seven of the eight deliveries he had faced for his solitary run.

“At least I’ll have two extra weeks for fishing,” were his words this time around in the dressing room as the nation fell into a pall of gloom.

Brought up by a Zulu nanny with her sons for childhood companions, he has always been a country boy at heart. Growing up near Durban he admitted, in a 1999 interview, shortly after being chosen as Player of the World Cup, that solitude always appealed to him – something that Smith and coach Graham Ford now hold against this uncomplicated soul. And yes, fishing has been a passion since childhood.

“It’s important to get away and be by yourself and have the opportunity not to see anyone or hear anyone for quite a while. It’s a nice escape for me.” The strength mentioned at the start of this article is not only physical – three years in the army straight after school would have seen to that. It’s also mental, the ability to rescue his side time and again with brutal hitting.

His debut Test, at Kolkata in 1996, showed that side of ‘Zulu’, though with the ball rather than the bat. In the first innings he took a pasting from captain Mohammad Azharuddin, including five fours in succession, for figures of none for 75 from 14 overs. In the second, he stormed back to grab 8 for 64, bowling South Africa to victory on the back of Gary Kirsten’s twin centuries.

I saw another glimpse of that amateur spirit in 2000 when Klusener was in New Delhi for a celebrity golf tournament featuring cricketers from around the world. I decided, rather mischievously, to ask him to sign the ticket I had retained from that 1999 World Cup semi-final. He did so without a moment’s hesitation and handing it back to me, said, “Thank you sir,” even before I could thank him.

Ever heard a cricketer thank an autograph hunter?