Cape Town curator has free rein this time

South Africa have seemingly stuck to their vow not to influence the pitches produced for the series against Australia, at least for the Test in Cape Town.

A dangerous pitch that became an international embarrassment has triggered somewhat of an epiphany in South Africa, with curators no longer being coerced or constrained like they were earlier this year.

Australia will confront a challenging green-tinged wicket in Cape Town, where the four-Test series continues on Thursday.

There will be plenty of seam movement, especially early on, and reverse-swing should be hard to generate because of a lush centre-wicket block that will impede efforts to scuff the ball.

They're all normal characteristics of Newlands.

The deck isn't expected to have as much pace and bounce in it as the pitch produced for a Test at the ground in January, when 18 wickets fell on a single day as the Proteas defeated India.

Nor will it come close to the frightening bounce on offer in Johannesburg during the same series, when a Test was temporarily stopped and almost called off because umpires harboured concerns about batsmen's safety.

That Wanderers wicket, a product of the Proteas' push for a paceman's paradise on which they hoped to unsettle India, was rated poor by the match referee and received widespread condemnation.

Proteas captain Faf du Plessis and coach Ottis Gibson both suggested prior to the current series, now level at 1-1, their camp won't make any demands of groundsmen.

Newlands curator Evan Flint confirmed to AAP that's been his experience.

"The Indian series was pretty unique in a sense that we'd never had instructions quite that clear before," Flint said.

"It backfired ... it went horribly wrong.

"Our Test was kind of the least controversial (of the three) but to me it still wasn't a great Test. It finished in three days, nobody got a hundred. That's not what you want.

"They've definitely stepped back. There doesn't seem to be as big a focus on getting it exactly how they want it."

The pitch produced for the Test in January came to life after heavy rain, ironically in the midst of a major drought, robbed Newlands of its first full day of Test cricket in 82 years.

Flint hopes a day-five finish is on the cards this time around.

Australia and South Africa both produced unplayable spells of reverse-swing in the opening two Tests, but now the impetus will be on Josh Hazlewood and Vernon Philander to bust the game open with the new ball.

"It'll definitely (seam around early). This time of year it's cooler in the mornings, so there's more moisture," he said.

"We might get a bit of reverse late, days four and five, but generally this isn't a reverse-swing kind of ground."


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Source: AAP



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