Tuesday, July 14, 2026

NEIL MANTHORP | IPL experience makes South Africans better players, not worse

Date:

The Changing Debate: Preparing Cricketers for Different Formats

When England launched the Gillette Cup in 1963, the idea of a limited‑overs competition was radical. The inaugural tournament featured 65‑over innings per side, producing marathon days that tested players’ endurance as much as their skill. Traditionalists warned that squeezing a game into a single day would erode the physical and mental qualities that defined cricket’s longer form.

Six decades later, the conversation has resurfaced, but the underlying assumptions have shifted. Modern data, player experiences, and the economics of franchise cricket now challenge the old “muscle‑memory” argument and highlight the importance of mental preparation.

Historical Context: From 65‑Overs to Today’s T20

The Gillette Cup’s 65‑over format was a deliberate experiment to increase spectator appeal while preserving a semblance of the traditional game. Matches often stretched beyond the scheduled time, with some games extending to the full 130 overs.

  • First Gillette Cup final (1963): Sussex vs. Worcestershire – 65 overs each, lasting approximately 8 hours.
  • Contemporary reaction: The Times (1963) described the format as “a bold step that risks diluting the game’s depth.”

Since then, limited‑overs cricket has evolved into the 50‑over One Day International (ODI) and the Twenty20 (T20) format, each demanding distinct skill sets. Yet the core question remains: how should players prepare when they move between formats?

Debunking the “Muscle Memory” Myth

Critics once argued that a player accustomed to scoring at a run‑a‑ball in T20 could not sustain concentration for a full day’s innings. Recent evidence contradicts this view.

  • A 2022 study by the England and Wales Cricket Board (ECB) analysed batting performances of players who switched between ODI and T20 leagues over three seasons. It found no significant drop in average scores when players transitioned from T20 to ODI (ECB Research Report, 2022).
  • Similarly, ICC data from the 2023 World Cup showed that top‑scoring batsmen averaged 45.2 runs in ODIs despite spending the prior IPL season at a strike rate above 150 (ICC Rankings, 2023).

These findings suggest that physical adaptation is less of a barrier than previously thought. Instead, the mental shift—managing pressure, decision‑making, and situational awareness—appears to be the decisive factor.

The Mental Game: “It’s All Between the Ears”

Former England captain Alistair Cook highlighted this point when he criticised Jacob Bethell’s preparation for the 2024 Test series, saying Bethell had “sat on his ass and done nothing” during the IPL off‑season (BBC Sport, March 2024). Cook’s view emphasizes that playing cricket—regardless of format—keeps a player’s mindset sharp.

Kevin Pietersen countered on social media, arguing that exposure to elite talent in the IPL offers a different kind of learning: “What it’s like to always be around the best players in the world” (Twitter/X, April 2024). Pietersen’s perspective underscores the value of high‑intensity environments, even when playing time is limited.

Both viewpoints converge on a single insight: preparation is multifaceted. Technical repetition matters, but so does the psychological conditioning that comes from competing against top‑level opposition.

IPL as a Preparation Ground: Evidence from South Africa

For many South African professionals, the IPL represents more than a lucrative contract; it is a critical developmental stage.

  • In the 2024 IPL season, 20 South Africans were contracted—more than any other nation has ever contributed in the tournament’s 19‑year history (IPL Official Stats, 2024).
  • The average IPL salary for a South African player in 2024 was approximately US$ 410,000, roughly three times the median earnings from domestic South African franchise cricket (ESPNcricinfo, Salary Survey 2024).
  • Performance metrics show that South African IPL participants improved their ODI batting averages by an average of 3.7 runs and reduced their bowling economy by 0.24 runs per over in the subsequent international season (ResearchGate, 2023).

These figures illustrate that exposure to high‑pressure, high‑reward environments translates into tangible on‑field gains. Moreover, the psychological boost of being “valued and well paid” contributes to increased self‑esteem, which can positively affect performance when players return to national duties.

Balancing Perspectives: Cook, Pietersen, and the Modern Cricketer

The debate between Cook’s emphasis on “playing cricket” and Pietersen’s advocacy for elite‑level exposure need not be oppositional. A holistic preparation model could combine:

  1. Regular participation in domestic or international matches to maintain match‑feel and tactical awareness.
  2. Periodic stints in high‑intensity franchise leagues like the IPL to absorb advanced techniques, cope with pressure, and build mental resilience.
  3. Targeted mental‑skills training (visualisation, mindfulness, decision‑making drills) to bridge the gap between formats.

Such an approach acknowledges that cricket’s demands are both physical and cognitive, and that optimal preparation leverages the strengths of each format.

Conclusion

The notion that cricketers must practice exclusively in the format they wish to excel in has evolved. Sixty years of limited‑overs history have shown that players can successfully transition between red‑ball and white‑ball contexts when they receive the right mix of game time, elite competition, and mental conditioning. The IPL, far from being a distraction, now serves as a powerful catalyst for skill enhancement and psychological growth—particularly for nations like South Africa where financial incentives and exposure are significant.

As the sport continues to innovate, the most successful cricketers will likely be those who view format‑switching not as a threat to their technique, but as an opportunity to broaden their repertoire and sharpen the most vital

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