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Cricket News - by Craig Hill

Injured captain Graeme Smith might be irreplaceable but his return to South Africa has not had an adverse effect on the Proteas' spirits as they prepare for the limited overs phase of their tour.

That's the view of paceman Morne Morkel, who believes the competition for places in a rebuilding South African one-day side will ensure the mood within the camp remains upbeat ahead of Sunday's KFC Twenty20 clash with Australia at the MCG.

The visitors will be led by all-rounder Johan Botha, who was not part of the Proteas' history-making Test wins in Australia, in Smith's absence for upcoming KFC Twenty20 and the Commonwealth Bank Series against Ricky Ponting's side.

"His presence in the changing room and out on the field you can't really replace that," Morkel said of Smith.

Morne Morkel South Africa Twenty20


"He's an unbelievable guy to work with as you've seen with all our young guys."

"He knows how to push the right buttons. He's definitely going to be missed."

Like Australia, the Proteas' one-day side is undergoing a transitional period ahead of the 2011 World Cup.

Herschelle Gibbs continues his international career in the one-dayers but gone are senior pacemen Shaun Pollock and Charl Langeveldt, who have both been mainstays in the Proteas one-day set-up.

"They've been really big players for us, one with the new ball and also in the death overs. I think it's just a matter of finding the right mix as bowlers to replace them," Morkel said.

"We've definitely found guys who can do the job but it's a matter of playing it out on the field in those situations."

"It's a good opportunity to test ourselves against the best one-day side in the world to see where we are in terms of that."

Among the next generation of players are names such as Morkel, his brother Albie Morkel, paceman Lonwabo Tsotsobe, teenager Wayne Parnell and Vaughn van Jaarsveld.

Albie Morkel is on the comeback trail from a shoulder injury which has forced him to remould his throwing action, but at his best is a hard-hitting batsman and a handy medium-pacer.

He is looking forward to resuming bowling on Sunday in front of a crowd in excess of 70,000.

"I'm feeling much stronger and much better," he said.

"I haven't bowled in a game yet. I've done a lot of bowling back home and unfortunately the last two domestic games have been washed out."

Tsotsobe and Parnell are likely to get opportunities if Proteas selectors decide on a rotation policy with their bowlers in bid to have Dale Steyn, Makhaya Ntini and Morne Morkel fresh for the return Test series against Australia in South Africa starting next month.

"It's quite draining, especially after the last Test with back-to-back Test matches," said Morne Morkel.

"I think it's going to be more vital to get in all the recovery and getting ourselves ready to run in for the Twenty20."

"Our skills are more or less there, it's just adapting to our slower balls and working on the death bowling a bit."
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South Africa captain Graeme Smith intends to wait until after next month's home Test series against Australia before undergoing surgery for a chronic tennis elbow condition.

On arriving back in South Africa after leading the Proteas to a historic 2-1 series win in Australia, Smith revealed he will be seeing a surgeon on Saturday to settle on the right course of action.

"It is really a matter of resting it and then finding a window of eight to 12 weeks so that I can have surgery. In the meantime, we will just be treating it and keeping it manageable," he told a news conference.

South Africa's Graeme Smith To Delay Surgery


The first Test against the Australians gets under way in Johannesburg on February 26.

Smith is currently recovering from a fractured hand he suffered in his side's third Test defeat in Sydney earlier this week, but hopes to be fit when Australia comes looking for revenge in February.

"I am really looking forward to being involved in the Test series back home," he added.
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South Africa coach Mickey Arthur has warned his buoyant team to be on guard against Australia opener Matthew Hayden when the third Test gets under way in Sydney on Saturday.

The Proteas have already clinched their first-ever series victory on Australian soil by establishing an unassailable 2-0 lead in the three-Test series.

Arthur's men can secure a whitewash with a third victory at the Sydney Cricket Ground, but the coach is wary of a Hayden resurgence.

"We are fearing a resurgent Matthew Hayden here," Arthur said.

South Africa Coach Mickey Arthur
South Africa Coach Mickey Arthur


"I know he trains hard, I know he is a fighter. It looks like his Test career might be on the line."

And Arthur is backing the burly Queenslander to come good and play a part in the Ashes series in England this summer.

"I think Australia are going to need him in the Ashes," Arthur added in the Sydney Morning Herald. "That is my personal opinion."

"You need all the experience you can have through a series like that, especially if you are changing the side and bringing a few new guys in. I think Matthew Hayden is one of those experienced heads.

"Matty Hayden playing well is a huge presence. Graeme Smith and him are the two guys in world cricket with the most presence at the wicket."

"When they play well it seems that the others follow. We expect Matty Hayden to come out fighting and I am certainly expecting him to be around for the Ashes series."
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