De Villiers inspired by accidental remark

JOHANNESBURG, (Reuters) – An “accidental” remark he  wished he had never made is behind AB de Villiers’ rapid ascent  into the top-rank of the world’s leading batsmen, the South  African told Reuters yesterday.

De Villiers scored an epic 278 not out, the highest  individual test score for South Africa, against Pakistan in Abu  Dhabi to rise to an all-time high of fifth in the ICC test  rankings.

The 26-year-old is also second in the one-day rankings,  having been pushed off the number one spot by team mate Hashim  Amla.
Just over two years ago, De Villiers told a news conference  he wanted to be the best batsman in the world, a comment that  was generally greeted with amused scepticism as he had not been  a consistently heavy scorer at international level.

“I sort of said it by accident, what I meant was that it  should be the dream of any international player to be the best  in the world, otherwise you’re playing for the wrong reasons. At  the time I felt really stupid, I was saying to myself ‘oh my  word, now I’ve gone and put all this pressure on myself’,” De  Villiers told Reuters.

“But I had this vision and I put it out there, I was open  and honest and it was the best thing I could have done. I had  been in a comfort zone, scoring the odd fifty and just doing  well enough to stay in the team.

“But I need to challenge myself, I need to raise the bar the  whole time. Now I’m pushing myself and I’m chasing it [the  number one ranking] now,” De Villiers said.

De Villiers made his test debut against England in 2004,  playing two games, the first as an opening batsman and the  second as a wicketkeeper during which he scored an unbeaten 52  to help save the match. His breakthrough came in 2005, when he  scored three centuries, but 2006 and 2007 brought low returns of  just 957 runs in 20 tests.

De Villiers lowered his head as he leans forward on his  chair.
“Things have changed in the last two years, not so much in  terms of technique or physically, but rather in terms of belief.  I still play with the same positive mindset, but I’ve learnt how  to play situations and, even on flat decks or against minor  teams, I challenge myself.

“I’ve definitely matured as a batsman, it comes with  experience and I’ve travelled round a bit, it’s now my seventh  season of international cricket and I can read pitches and  situations better. I’m a lot more patient and it’s the best  feeling knowing you can stick it out for a long time.”

FUTURE CHALLENGES

De Villiers is thoughtful when asked where his career is  headed to now, where the future challenges lie. The answer is in  South Africa’s forthcoming series against top-ranked India.

“I’m not a massive one for stats and records, but to get the  highest score for South Africa was unbelievable, a massive dream  come true.
“Playing against India is going to be a great challenge,  it’s number one in the world against number two and, form-wise,  probably the two strongest batting line-ups in the world.

“It’s going to be an amazing series and we have to see who’s  up to the challenge on our pitches, where a 150 all out is  always on the cards. It’s never easy here for batsmen, you’re  never in and it will be good to see who cracks first,” De  Villiers said.

The athletic, blond-haired cricketer is an ex-scratch golfer  and junior provincial rugby and tennis player, and is a member  of a pop-singing duo that has just brought out their first CD.