T20 World Cup 2021 – Kagiso Rabada
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The fast bowler says South Africa enter the tournament without any baggage and can hopefully end the trophy drought
“That would be extremely special,” he said on Monday. “Hundred per cent – It would be my biggest life achievement in sports, that’s what it would be. That would also be one of the highest achievements in cricket, that’s what is missing. It would be the icing on the cake. We hope we are the generation that can bring it [the trophy home].”
In the six T20 World Cups, South Africa finished twice as semi-finalists – in 2009 and 2014 – and failed to advance to the knockout stages four times. Rabada understood his team’s history with ICC events but he preferred not to dwell on it too much.
“I don’t even actually like to talk about that [baggage] and what’s happened in the past, happened in the past,” he said. “I don’t want to talk about it too much, we have a challenge in front of us. No one in the past tried to lose games. We are coming in with the same mentality, whether we have baggage or not. I just think it’s not worth talking about, it’s just worth playing.”
“I just think it’s not worth talking about.”
Kagiso Rabada on South Africa’s past performances in the World Cups
“I guess, it’s something that I have to do,” he said. “It is not something that I am desperate to do. But it is something I am eager to do when there is a need for it.”
“It feels great,” Rabada said. “Obviously, there are a lot of good memories from the U-19 World Cup. It would be great to replicate that with the senior team.”
South Africa begin their T20 World Cup campaign with a practice game against Afghanistan on October 18, the same day their Social Justice and Nation-Building hearings resume back home. The first round featured testimony from several former players, coaches and administrators about their experiences of racial discrimination. The next two weeks will see those who were adversely implicated respond to the allegations.
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