South Africa switch hit problem reveals why raw power can fall short when modern attack squeeze angles habits and field access late in games
South Africa can still hit the ball with frightening force.
That has never been the problem.
The problem is what happens when a smart bowling side knows where that force wants to go.
Modern white ball cricket is built on traps now. Captains protect habits. Analysts map scoring zones. Bowlers do not always need to beat power. They just need to guide it toward the fielder already waiting.
That is why the switch hit matters.
Not as a party trick. Not as a highlight shot. As a warning that the field does not own the batter.
South Africa had AB de Villiers, Quinton de Kock, Heinrich Klaasen, David Miller and now Tristan Stubbs. The talent is there. The next step is turning range into a system.
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