Former head coach Graham Ford gives Graeme Smith's team a clean chit
Graham Ford knows a thing or two about being a part of a South African dressing room that deals with being tagged as chokers. He was assistant coach during the Edgbaston semi-final against Australia at the 1999 World Cup, after which he took over as head coach.
Ford, who is credited for guiding a host of top-class cricketers like Shaun Pollock, Jonty Rhodes, Lance Klusener and Neil Johnson, reckons there was nothing psychological about South Africa's series of chokes in the last decade-and-a-half: "There's nothing psychological to it. It's unfair to drag the current players and call them chokers.
"Most of them were kids when we played the 1999 World Cup semi-final. Obviously, the tag will follow the team because of the history, but most of those so-called chokes were in the 90s and early 2000s.
"In the last five years or so, Smith has taken the side to victories from impossible situations. If anything, such a loss will only toughen the side."
Ford pointed out that Smith had learnt a lot from watching previous South African teams lose from close situations. "He has learnt it the hard way, having made mistakes as a young captain, and now maturing into a fine leader," he said.
