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Temba Bavuma of SA bats during day three of the first Test against New Zealand at Hagley Oval in Christchurch on Saturday. Picture: KAI SCHWOERER/ GETTY IMAGES
Temba Bavuma of SA bats during day three of the first Test against New Zealand at Hagley Oval in Christchurch on Saturday. Picture: KAI SCHWOERER/ GETTY IMAGES

Captain Dean Elgar refused to make excuses, blaming neither losing the toss, the 10-day quarantine on arrival in New Zealand nor the matter of head coach Mark Boucher facing a May disciplinary hearing over charges of racism.

SA arrived in New Zealand on a high note after a hard-fought home series win over India, but a punishing defeat in their first Test against New Zealand in Christchurch on Saturday served as a sobering reality check.

“Being a touring party, we are always going to be up against home conditions, and rightly so,” Elgar said of having to bat first on a Hagley Oval pitch that had a nice covering of grass and offered plenty of assistance to the always relentless Black Caps’ pace attack.

“If the shoe was on the other foot, we would like to have utilised it to our strength.”

Opener Elgar contributed one run in two knocks, but he was not alone in failing with the bat, with no SA batsman totalling even 50 runs.

The top four batters combined for a miserable 45 runs in total.

Without a specialist spinner, the bowling attack lacked penetration at times, though sloppy fielding and numerous dropped catches made matters worse.

“We were totally outplayed by a classy New Zealand outfit in all three departments of the game,” Elgar said.

He acknowledged that the pre-Test lockdown as mandated by the government’s Covid-19 regulations was less than ideal.

“It would have been nice to have played a warm-up game but ... we are a professional outfit and ultimately we need to be firing by the time match day comes.

“We have to respect the rules and regulations in New Zealand.”

And the Boucher situation was not a distraction, he insisted.

“As a group we’ve worked through that and kind of worked it out already. I don’t see that as being an excuse in our camp.”

SA has never lost a Test series against New Zealand and need to win the second match of the short two-Test encounter to avoid that fate.

The match starts on the same ground on Friday, giving SA a few days to figure out how to improve against a team that are not reigning world Test champions through luck.

“Why we were lacking in that intensity department I’m still trying to process,” Elgar said. “We should be a helluva lot more competitive out there.

“We’ve achieved a lot over the past few months as a unit and clearly what we produced out there the past few days is not a reflection of us as a squad.”

Reuters

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