Dan Nicholl is full of praise for Bafana Bafana after last night's performance against Brazil.
England still undecided
Article By:
England's cricketers fly home from India on Saturday in the wake of
the shootings and explosions that killed more than 150 people in Mumbai
and will take time to decide whether it is too dangerous to return for
the Test series.
Because of reports that the gunmen were targeting foreigners, there
are fears that the England cricket team could become a major target if
they return for the two tests next month.
The last two limited-overs internationals, scheduled for Saturday
and Tuesday, were called off in the aftermath of the coordinated terror
attacks in Mumbai that started overnight Wednesday. That has given the
team time off ahead of the test series, which is due to start Dec. 11.
Although the Board of Control for Cricket in India has switched the
second test venue from Mumbai to Chennai and the England Cricket Board
has given assurances it will proceed with the series, there is
speculation that the England players, after talking to
their families,
may decide that they won't return.
"I haven't a clue," England captain Kevin Pietersen said Friday,
before the players started their journey home. "We'll have to get all
the logistic stuff sorted first but the decision to go back to London
will buy us some time and if we need to fly back to India on Monday or
Tuesday or Wednesday next week then so be it.
"Right now, all we want to do is go home because of what we've seen
and the fact we've woken up this morning and the saga is still
continuing in Mumbai."
Pietersen said the players enjoyed their last visit to Mumbai. But
they had been taking lots of calls from concerned friends and relatives
since the shootings on Wednesday.
"The guys were happy as anything in Mumbai in the two weeks we were
there," Pietersen said. "The way of life in Mumbai is fantastic and
that way of life, which is the best way of life in India, has now gone.
"I bet all the guys lost a whole
battery on their mobiles yesterday
with calls from friends and relatives and kids wanting to know where
daddy is. It's a real situation and we're being taken out of the
situation and we'll make a decision on it over the next 48 to 72
hours."
Ian MacLaurin, the former England and Wales Cricket Board chairman,
said he believed the security staff that travel with the team would
advise them not to go back. The team's security expert, Reg Dickason,
will do an assessment in India.
"It was absolutely the right decision to come home," MacLaurin said.
"The England cricket team are very high-profile individuals.
"If these fanatics are going to target people then the England
cricket side could be a very big target for them. My own view is that I
would be very, very surprised if the security people will give them the
OK to go back."
Pietersen conceded there would be pressure on the players to return
for the test matches.
"I do
think the BCCI will make every single effort to get us back
here playing test match cricket in India. There are TV rights and
financial considerations and they run world cricket don't they?"
Pietersen was quoted as saying by Britain's Press Association. "But we
will not come back to this country if it's not safe. My life means more
to me than anything else and I won't come back if it's not safe."