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F/D
21 Apr 2006, 21:35
The Lowdown - Dale Steyn

Raw and rapid, and only 22

Andrew Miller

April 20, 2006

With so much cricket played these days it is often difficult to keep track of who is who and what they are doing. In this weekly feature Cricinfo will take a look at one player who is making the news, whether at the highest level or an aspiring talent, and tell you what they are all about. This week, it's the turn of Dale Steyn, South Africa's latest pace prospect.

A measured sprint to the crease, an athletic leap in delivery stride, and a natural length that's full, fast and swinging. These were the attributes that made Allan Donald a hero for South Africa's post-Apartheid generation, and though many have sought to emulate him since, few have been worthy of filling his boots.


It's a tough act to follow, but in Dale Steyn, a raw and rapid 22-year-old whose maiden Test five-for helped defeat New Zealand at Centurion on Wednesday, South Africa may finally have hit upon Donald's natural heir. Comparisons are odious and invariably unfair, but in partnership with the tireless Makhaya Ntini, Steyn provided South Africa with a cutting edge that any side in the world would envy.


Not that this is news to South African supporters, of course. Steyn has been waiting in the wings for 18 months now, ever since he was plucked from obscurity by South Africa's up-and-at-'em coach, Ray Jennings, in December 2004, before being dropped gently back where he'd come from after two defeats and a draw in his first three Test outings.


By all accounts, he made a favourable impression in his brief foray, with pace that consistently pushed 145kph and a penchant for glowering that Donald himself made a trademark. But he leaked runs as well, not least through a nervy tally of 16 no-balls in his debut innings. The general consensus was that he needed more meat on his slender frame if he was to make it at the very highest level.


So when, in April 2005, news reached Steyn that Essex were on the lookout for a temporary replacement for Danish Kaneria, he was onto his agent like a shot. Not for the first time, the speed at which events unfurled left him in a daze: he had already arrived at Chelmsford before he realised that Darren Gough was to be a team-mate - and neither did he know that Gough was the man who had recommended him to the club.


One year on, however, and now it's his own speed that's causing the daze. New Zealand didn't like what they came up against one little bit, as they crashed to 28 for 6 in their second innings at Centurion, before recovering somewhat to 120 all out. And it was Steyn who sealed the victory, with figures of 5 for 47 including the last man, Chris Martin, who lost his middle stump in emphatic fashion.


Timeline


2003-04 Joins the Centurion-based Northerns as a 20-year-old rookie


October 2004 Nine-wicket haul at East London propels him into spotlight ahead of England visit


December 2004 Named in squad for first Test against England at Port Elizabeth, after just seven first-class outings


December 2004 Takes three wickets on debut, including Marcus Trescothick in the first innings and Michael Vaughan to a sublime legcutter in the second


January 2005 Dropped for New Year Test, and again after defeat in a decisive match at Johannesburg


April 2005 Signs for Essex as stand-in for Danish Kaneria. Arrives in country just two days after end of South African season


May 2005 Essex debut against Leicestershire at Chelmsford. "Initially had more fire than direction" wrote Wisden, but three wickets in 20 balls set up a six-wicket victory


August 2005 One-day "international" debut, for Africa XI in Afro-Asian Cup at Centurion


April 2006 Recalled to Test team against New Zealand, and takes seven wickets in a 128-run victory, including career-best 5 for 47 in second innings.


What he says
"Everything happened so quickly. Before I opened my eyes I was in the South African side and when I opened my eyes again I was out of the side!" Steyn on his rapid progression from outsider to Test cricketer and back again.

What they said - No. 1
"I want to fight fire with fire ... If England fire a rifle, I want to fire a cannon. If they fire a pea-shooter, I want us to be firing a bazooka." South Africa's former coach, Ray Jennings, explains the thinking behind Steyn's selection for the first Test at Port Elizabeth in December 2004.


What they said - No. 2
"He's a high-risk bowler. There are going to be days when he goes for runs but he does create opportunities and that's what we are looking for. His role is to run in and be quick. I wouldn't like to see him out of the team." Graeme Smith sings Steyn's praises after the Centurion victory.


What you may not know
Steyn originates from Limpopo Province, on the Zimbabwean border in the far north of the country. There haven't been too many cricketers from that region, let alone Test cricketers, but two of them played and starred in Wednesday's win over New Zealand. Steyn was one, and AB de Villiers, who made a match-turning 97, was the other. Coincidentally, they both made their debut in that same match at Port Elizabeth.


What you may also not know
Though his surname would suggest otherwise, Steyn is not a native Afrikaans speaker, and consequently had no idea what was being said to him when Nantie Hayward, one of his many predecessors in the Test team, starting sledging him in a domestic match.



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After hearing about youngsters from RSA that want to leave for England, I thought this should be put him. IMO has tha makings of a top 5 bowler and a very good swing bowler.

I am glad that the bloke that hasnt left is a bloke who bowls 145K and gets swing whenever he wants.

Will be a star.



Thoughts?

F/D
21 Apr 2006, 21:36
http://content-usa.cricinfo.com/southafrica/content/story/244853.html

Grimreepah
21 Apr 2006, 22:13
The Lowdown - Dale Steyn

I prefer the phonetically correct 'Dale Stain'.

ablettjnr
21 Apr 2006, 22:21
I saw him play against the Poms and was surprised they didn't bring him out here. Or was he injured?

F/D
21 Apr 2006, 22:27
I saw him play against the Poms and was surprised they didn't bring him out here. Or was he injured?
He has had a past with injuries, wouldnt have surprised me.

Grimreepah
21 Apr 2006, 22:47
I saw him play against the Poms and was surprised they didn't bring him out here. Or was he injured?

I think he's still undergoing therapy after Phil Jaques smoted him to all parts of Docklands Stadium.

Browney
21 Apr 2006, 22:50
They did bring him out here didnt they? I really didnt follow the VB series at all, but didnt he play in some of the One dayers and get absolutely spanked?

Hes a good young talent he just needs to be coached properly, mold him into more of a 'cricketer', you dont want another Athletic, Fast paced bowler, with ability, but just cant play cricket eg Brett Lee.

Very inconsistent, but has the abilty to something special for the Safs.

johnnyhoward
21 Apr 2006, 22:55
A "High-risk bowler" prone to inconsistency.

Sounds like a Brett Lee clone.

Cooldude
21 Apr 2006, 22:57
Was wondering why he didn't even play a single Test against us

Watched him a few years back in England, he was raw but very very promising, and thought he was a bit unlucky to get the chop in the first place. They were playing Willougby FFS

His pace and fire lights up what is otherwise a one paced, flat and lifeless pace attack consist of Ntini, Pollock and Nel

And he allows Pollock to be the first change bowler that he ideally is

crownie
21 Apr 2006, 23:47
alan donald clone?

so he'll be good for 5 years then end up withering into nothing?

F/D
22 Apr 2006, 00:10
alan donald clone?

so he'll be good for 5 years then end up withering into nothing?
Alan Donald is one of the best fast bowlers in the last decade.



He started cricket at test level age 25.


So I'd expect 5 Gun years.

the_mighty_pies_3733
22 Apr 2006, 09:15
Steyn will be great in time. Has a terrific action, swings the ball a fair bit at pace.

peternorth
22 Apr 2006, 10:13
when the proteas came back to international cricket i remember some guy named shultz being touted as another donald.....but never eventuated into anything.

davey_magik
22 Apr 2006, 11:49
Looking at the world scene now there isn't a stockpile of really good bowlers, but in terms of pace in a few years it is looking pretty good: Steyn, Asif, Pathan, Patel, Streesanth, Tait, Anderson, Gul etc etc.

crownie
22 Apr 2006, 14:22
when the proteas came back to international cricket i remember some guy named shultz being touted as another donald.....but never eventuated into anything.


wasnt he a spinner?

the_mighty_pies_3733
22 Apr 2006, 15:58
Looking at the world scene now there isn't a stockpile of really good bowlers, but in terms of pace in a few years it is looking pretty good: Steyn, Asif, Pathan, Patel, Streesanth, Tait, Anderson, Gul etc etc.
Add Plunkett and a fit Mark Davies to that list.