Mumbai: South Africa stand-in skipper Aiden Markram believes the soon-to-retire wicketkeeper-batter Quinton de Kock is a "free-spirited guy" who should be allowed "to fly". The explosive lefthander smashed 174 off 140 balls, his third century in five innings, to propel South Africa to 382/5 against Bangladesh before the Proteas sealed a thumping 149-run win here on Tuesday.
De Kock's century was complemented by fifties from Heinrich Klaasen (90; 49b) and Markram (60; 69b) as South Africa racked up 144 in the final 10 overs. We all know Quinton to be the free-spirited guy that he is, but he actually has a fantastic cricket brain on him, Markram told reporters in the post-match interaction.
De Kock, who had earlier said he would retire from the ODIs after the World Cup, has now overtaken Virat Kohli (354) to be the leading run-scorer with 407 runs. "And then you never want to clip his wings, really. You just want to let him fly. He structures it the exact way he feels (the) need, and we back that completely as a unit, Markram added.
Continuing his rich praise on De Kock, Markram further said: "He assesses conditions really well and communicates that to us off the field even before we have walked out to bat. It adds a lot of value in that regard." Markram said taking good decisions on the field has also been a driving force behind the team's success.
I know that word (process) is thrown around quite a bit, but that really is what it is. And like I have mentioned, for us as a batting unit, even as a bowling unit, we try to take really good options out there and make good decisions, Markram said. "If those options speak to the conditions, we feel like we will be in the game. If we can do that for long periods of time and move forward each game, then we hope it puts us in a good position," he added.
If their defeat to the Netherlands batting second is set aside as a blip in the larger scheme of things, South Africa's campaign so far has perhaps been as impressive as India's or even New Zealand's for that matter -- two of the strongest teams whom the Proteas are yet to face.
Peaking is, suppose, a result of playing good cricket. And if we are going into each game trying to play good cricket, then we can see where it gets us, said Markram who stood in for Temba Bavuma for a second match in a row. But the things that we have been doing well, we have put a lot of emphasis on those things and those sort of processes, for lack of a better word, he said.