The South Africa opener on the challenges of captaincy, working with a new coach and the changing landscape of cricket in the country

Firdose Moonda24-May-2020Dean Elgar has made his name as a gritty opening batsman, with a safe pair of hands in the slips and an ever-ready enthusiasm to turn his arm over when the going gets tough. He is also just about the senior-most batsman in South Africa’s Test team (Faf du Plessis debuted one Test before him) and crucial in its transition over the next few years. He spoke about the challenges of the past season, the Test captaincy role, and the changes in cricket over the eight years of his international career.It was a quite an eventful summer for South African cricket. How would you sum it up?
Honestly, I had actually even forgotten who we played this last season. Before this interview, I asked the media manager to remind me. I think we went through two or three different phases as a team where we had retirements, then injuries, and then new players coming in. It’s been like that for the last five years. And then we also had a change of coach and that requires the buy-in of players, so it has been a little bit of a roller coaster. Hopefully it will settle down, for the players’ sanity.How did the change of coach impact the players?
Mark Boucher has brought in a totally different environment during a difficult time. He is quite reliant on players he has worked with in the past and has used that to fast-track the team culture. It hasn’t been that easy for him, and I think he is still trying to finalise a Test XI, or finalise a squad of players to work with.