South Africa secure atonement as Paarl warms to the World Cup party

Hosts make up for failings against Sri Lanka to give home support a night to remember

Firdose Moonda13-Feb-2023South Africa knew South Africans deserved better than the performance they put on in the World Cup opener at Newlands.They said so privately, at a team meeting they held immediately after their three-run loss when they discussed “everything and decided we’ll leave it there,” as Chloe Tryon revealed and they said it publicly, with an emotionally-charged tweet from Marizanne Kapp that read almost like an apology.”We spoke about it just after the game. We sat up in the changing-room and we spoke about everything and we said we’ll leave it here,” Tryon added. “We have a quick turnaround and we know we’ve got to go and make sure that we’re doing the right things. Everyone came with the mindset that today we’re just working really hard.”Everyone including the Paarl faithful. Even though they numbered little more than half the 8,000-plus that turned up in Cape Town for the first match, they made more of an impression with a passionate display of patriotism that started on the grass banks and ended in the president suite with a group of women singing a victory cry to the tune of Bonnie Tyler’s “It’s a heartache”. That may sound confusing, but you need to hear the lyrics. So hum the tune in your head and sing (with translation):They could belt that out at the end, but for large parts of the match, South Africans were fairly worried.Their top four continue to struggle, both with the fluency of their run-scoring and their ability to form partnerships. Captain Suné Luus is the only one to have passed 20 – and she’s done so in both matches – and they appear to be over-reliant on a middle-order that may still come to regret not having Dané van Niekerk or Mignon du Preez in it.