Home Sport Cricket Tabraiz Shamsi has complete faith in his Proteas teammates

Tabraiz Shamsi has complete faith in his Proteas teammates

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‘I have a lot of confidence in my teammates, the management and myself as well. That’s the reason why I’ve always been vocal about it’ – Tabraiz Shamsi

South Africa captain Temba Bavuma (right) celebrates the wicket of Mitch Marsh with teammate Tabraiz Shamsi (left) during their match against Australia at Atal Behari Vajpayee stadium in Ekana, Lucknow in Uttar Pradesh on October 12, 2023. Picture: Prakash Singh, Shutterstock (14145044ca)

From the word go, Proteas leg-spinner Tabraiz Shamsi has been one of the few players who have publicly been vocal about the abundance of quality in the side.

Even when South Africa were 2-0 down in a five-match series against Australia in September, Shamsi backed the Proteas to make a comeback. When the team completed the 3-2 series heist at The Bullring, Shamsi did not shy away from showing his unshakeable belief and trust in his teammates.

“I have a lot of confidence in my teammates, the management and myself as well. That’s the reason why I’ve always been vocal about it,” Shamsi said during a practice session in Kolkata on Monday.

“Maybe people from the outside haven’t been able to see or didn’t want to see the quality that we have within the group. We have just gone on quietly doing our work because we do believe that we can do it.”

South African men’s teams have a rather painful memory of World Cup knockouts.

Shamsi said that the past has no effect on the current crop of players as they are a different bunch from any other Proteas World Cup team.

“That doesn’t matter one bit, we’re a different group of players. Before we got to the World Cup, nobody said that we’d be in the semi-final and here we are. We’re just excited for the opportunity,” he said.

“That’s what propels this team – instead of feeling pressure, we see it as an opportunity to do something special. No South African men’s team has been in the World Cup final and that, for us, is very exciting because it is an opportunity to do something that no other team has done.

“Instead of it being restricting to the guys, I think it’s going to make the guys be even more free-flowing than they have been because we’re aiming to do something that no men’s team from our country has been able to do.”

Reaching the semi-final alone is an achievement for this group of players, a group that took the last automatic qualification spot to squeeze into the showpiece event.

It’s an achievement that the 2019 World Cup squad could not match despite having star players such as Faf du Plessis, Hashim Amla and Shamsi.

“In that competition we had a lot of our guys that were just out of form. Unfortunately, it happened during the World Cup,” said Shamsi.

“We had a great team – so many guys in the top 10 batters list, so many guys in the top 10 bowlers list – but we just had a lot of players that happened to be out of form at the wrong time during the World Cup.

“Whereas now, as we’ve seen, there’s been different guys putting their hands up. There’s no pressure on any single individual to win it for the team – we’re all doing it together.

“The greatest strength of this team – we just worry about making sure that we’re doing our bit and have the trust that the next guy is going to do his bit.”

Trust in each other will certainly be a big factor at Eden Gardens on Thursday and the mighty Australians, boasting five World Cup trophies, will be out for the kill in the second semi-final.

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