SA T20 League will help retain domestic talent - du Plessis
/
0 Comments
SA T20 League will help retain domestic talent - du
Plessis
South
Africa's Global T20 league is the best way to keep players from leaving the
country in search of opportunity elsewhere, according to Test and T20
captain Faf du Plessis. A former Kolpak player himself, du Plessis
returned to South Africa in 2010-11 after two years at Lancashire and has since
become a regular across all formats and in T20 leagues around the world. He
hopes the new tournament will afford other players similar opportunity.
"I spoke about
it when the Kolpak thing started happening in South Africa - it was probably
important that South Africa looked at different ways to try and keep players in
the country. I think this is a huge step towards that," du Plessis said at
league's formal launch in London. "Players don't have to look outside
anymore, from an opportunity point of view and from a financial point of view -
they don't need to go overseas and look for other stuff. This is going to be
really important to keeping most of the players in the country."
Last season, several
recently capped internationals including Kyle Abbott, Rilee Rossouw, Dane
Vilas, David Wiese, Simon Harmer, Hardus Viljoen and Stiaan van Zyl signed
Kolpak deals, prompting fears of a player exodus. All of them cited financial
security as a primary reason for their move, but there were also undertones
that the strict transformation targets may have influenced their decision. The
new Global League is expected to solve both issues.
It
is largely foreign-owned -
with six of the eight franchises bought by non-South Africans - with players
set to be paid in US dollars. CSA have confirmed there will be no targets
besides the local-foreign quota imposed on teams, which should provide an
incentive for players to stay. But for du Plessis, it's not just the top tier
who will benefit. He explained that South Africa's domestic players could be
the biggest beneficiaries of the new tournament, because it will provide them
with exposure to a larger audience and open doors at other competitions.
"I feel the
domestic have been under-looked at sometimes," he said. "You always
just get your international players getting good opportunities everywhere
around the world, but this will be a great opportunity for the domestic players
to put their names out there to the world and somehow try and get into the IPLs
and those kinds of tournaments. If you look at the Australian system, there is
a lot more players that get picked up from there into the IPLs and that is
because of the TV exposure from the Big Bash. This will be exactly the
same."
AB
de Villiers will represent the Pretoria franchise
But
the biggest attraction of the new South African league will remain the big
South African names. For the first time in South African crickethistory, the internationals will be available for an
entire domestic T20 tournament. Du Plessis believes that will make be crucial
for the profile of this tournament. "We've always come back from long
tours and there was a lot of important cricket coming up so we haven't always been around to
play as much domestic cricket as was needed," he said. " For the
whole South African team to be available to play in this tournament is the most
important thing."
Eight marquee South
African players have each been assigned, one to each team, nearest to where
they are based. Du Plessis will play for the Stellenbosch/Paarl side following
his recent move to Cape Town. Hashim Amla, who has moved domestic franchises
from Durban to Cape Town will return to Kingsmead. JP Duminy will play in Cape
Town, where he is from, Kagiso Rabada in Johannesburg, AB de Villiers in
Pretoria and Quinton de Kock in Benoni, though he lives in Pretoria. David
Miller has committed to his new home in Bloemfontein and Imran Tahir, who has
played at three different South African franchises, will make his debut for the
Warriors in Port Elizabeth.
In addition to those
players, eight internationals - Chris Gayle, Dwayne Bravo, Kieron Pollard,
Kevin Pietersen, Eoin Morgan, Jason Roy, Lasith Malinga and Brendon McCullum -
have been confirmed to play, though they're yet to be allocated to teams. Du
Plessis was confident South Africans fans will have their interest piqued by
these well-known T20 journeymen.
"You
are starting to see different T20 leagues taking up different gaps during the
year and current international players can't participate in all of them - it's
just not possible. What that does is bring in your ex-players, as Brendon
talked about, your 'mercenaries'. South Africa is no different to any other
place. The fans would love to see Brendon McCullum, Dwayne Bravo, Kieron
Pollard and all those players," he said, adding that the foreign ownership
will also increase awareness around the event. "It will create much more
emphasis on cricket in South Africa especially for domestic
players."