What stands out about Rabada’s performance, given that context, is how tight he has been. In his eight matches so far, he has conceded 4.83 runs to the over, which makes him the fourth-most economical seamer in the tournament. The discipline he has brought has benefited other members of the attack, three of whom have more wickets than him, but Rabada is past the phase where he measures his success by stats.”Wickets, they just come. You don’t necessarily plan for them. If you are a natural wicket-taker, you will take wickets,” he said. “Here, the guys have been starting really well upfront and that allows me to come into the game.”He was full of praise for the opening pair. Jansen, he said, has been doing “phenomenally well”, and has urged him to “follow his gut feel”. Ngidi, he said, has a “lot of skill and control”.”The one thing we have as an attack is that we have the ability to take wickets,” Rabada said. “That’s something that’s been given unto us. We can do it. I don’t think it’s a matter of being overconfident but it’s a matter of having that strong belief that we can bowl opposition teams out.”That’s not just Rabada talking his own attack up. South Africa have bowled their opposition out seven times out of nine in this tournament, and taken 82 of a possible 90 wickets, second only to India.”They’ve been bowling really well,” Rabada said of the hosts. “They are hitting their lines and lengths and they are not giving batters much to work with. They are playing close to their best, if not at their best.”

Asked if the Indian attack has broken through a ceiling when it comes to setting standards in the one-day game, he would not be drawn to exaggeration. “It’s nothing new. It’s an international standard,” he said. “It’s a high standard and to beat a high standard, you have to match your opponents in whatever they bring to the table; match it or even exceed it.”That could be the next challenge for South Africa, if they come through the semi-final against Australia and end up meeting India in the final. Given that they were not even tipped to make the semis, that they are in the reckoning to be there at the end is an achievement in itself. Though that’s not how it will seem: against the backdrop of South Africa’s other successes this year – the women’s team reaching the final of the T20 World Cup and the Springboks winning the rugby World Cup – there is now an expectation this team can go all the way, which might weigh on them.”We are constantly in this performance environment, and that is not taken lightly,” Rabada said. “All the spectators see is how we play on the day but everything that turns us into how we play on the day – hours and hours of work, grinding, meeting, planning and sticking together – people don’t see that. That’s what we go through as a team.”We face a lot of criticism as a group. We get all the praise as a group. Being a sportsman, you go up and you go down. It’s either ‘You are the best cricketer in the world’, or a s**t cricketer. There’s nothing in between.”But we know people want to see us win and we want to see ourselves win too, and we’ll fight tooth and nail for it. We know what it means. And all we are looking to do is to win.”Read on its own, it could sound like desperation but Rabada is not a desperate player. He is a quietly passionate one, who has found a balance between wanting the trophy as badly as South Africa do and being willing to accept and enjoy the experience as it unfolds.”Finding that medium is important,” he said. “At the end of the day you realise that cricket is not really everything, but it everything. It’s what you dedicate your life to, but it’s not what makes you breathe.”

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