Cricket Country Staff
Editorial team of CricketCountry.
Gary Kirsten, who guided India to the Cricket World Cup title two months ago, has been named coach of his native South Africa on Monday. The 43-year-old will have the official title of head coach and team director and be assisted by ex-South Africa fast bowler Allan Donald and Eastern Cape Warriors handler Russell Domingo.
Written by Cricket Country Staff
Published: Jun 06, 2011, 08:24 PM (IST)
Edited: Jun 06, 2011, 08:24 PM (IST)
Gary Kirsten will replace Corrie van Zyl as the coach of the South African cricket team ©
Johannesburg: Jun 6, 2011
Gary Kirsten, who guided India to the Cricket World Cup title two months ago, has been named coach of his native South Africa on Monday.
The 43-year-old former Proteas opening batsman will have the official title of head coach and team director and be assisted by ex-South Africa fast bowler Allan Donald and Eastern Cape Warriors handler Russell Domingo.
Kirsten succeeds Corrie van Zyl, whose caretaker role since early last year after Mickey Arthur quit came to an end when New Zealand shocked South Africa in the World Cup quarter-finals.
His first challenges will be a multi-format home series against arch rivals Australia from October and Sri Lanka are also scheduled to play in South Africa this year.
A Cricket South Africa media conference here also announced that batsman-cum-wicketkeeper AB de Villiers will become one-day and Twenty20 skipper while opening batsman Graeme Smith continues as Test captain.
Kirsten had no formal coaching experience beyond running a Cape Town academy when he was surprisingly put in charge of Sachin Tendulkar and his fellow Indian superstars.
The reign reached a perfect climax before a sell-out 33,000 crowd at Wankhede Stadium in Mumbai as India defeated Sri Lanka by six wickets in the World Cup final.
Taking charge of the Proteas is the culmination of a dream for Kirsten, whose 101 Test appearances between 1993 and 2004 produced 7,289 runs, 21 centuries and a highest score of 275 against England in Durban.
“I would love to coach the South African team — it’s my people. It will be a natural progression. I would consider it a massive honour,” he said ahead of an appointment widely predicted by the media for several weeks.
Donald, nicknamed ‘White Lightning’ during a 72-Test career that reaped 330 wickets because of his fearsome pace, brings a wealth of international experience having been bowling coach of England and New Zealand.
Domingo rose through the ranks, coaching South Africa at under-19 and ‘A’ level while handling the Warriors in his native Port Elizabeth for the past six years.
Australia arrive in October for a tour comprising two Tests, three ODIs and two Twenty20 games and Sri Lanka land two months later to play three Tests and five one-day internationals.
© AFP
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