It’s been a hard, injury-studded slog to the top for South Africa’s brightest pace-bowling hope, and now he’s looking to turn up the heat

Firdose Moonda22-Apr-2020Pace is pace, .While the modern bowler is interested in developing a slower ball or learning the art of reverse swing, for Anrich Nortje, speed is key to his craft.”Pace, especially for me, is crucial,” Nortje says from his family farm in the Eastern Cape during South Africa’s Covid-19 lockdown. “When you don’t have the pace, you have to focus so much on skill because it’s so difficult to teach someone pace at a later stage in their career.”So pace was always Nortje’s baseline and the rest, like control and consistency, came later.By the time he began to focus on technique, he had been bowling for several years, had played for age-group provincial sides, and had had a smorgasbord of injuries. He was 17 when he broke his collarbone and came to the realisation that “my body wasn’t really built for rugby”. At 1.88 metres tall and with a wiry frame, Nortje had more fast-twitch fibre than big muscle, which steered him towards bowling.He made his first-class debut in 2013, in Namibia, where he opened the bowling and took a wicket in his second over. He was 19, “quite shy and reserved”, according to his team-mate Jon-Jon Smuts, “but he had white-line fever”. He was also very proud of his Afrikaans background, a quality that was immediately evident. “I think the most English music he listened to was Jack Parow,” Smuts said.ALSO READ: Close your eyes to reality, and imagine this South Africa dream teamAfrikaans rapper Parow makes what he calls “dangerous” music that stings with satire, while wearing a leopard-print peak cap with a ridiculously long visor, a 70s ‘tache and a smirk. What might someone like that have in common with Nortje? “It’s a never-say-die, never-stop-fighting attitude,” Nortje says, when asked what underpins Afrikaans culture.A self-styled “proper Dutchman”, Nortje, like Parow, wants to be someone who stands out. “When times are tough, I want to put my hand up and try and make a change,” he said. “I want to be the player that stands up when it’s 40 degrees and it’s flat. That’s how I see it.’In his first full season as an international, Nortje achieved exactly that. During one of the tougher periods in South African cricket, in which they won only one of five home series, he was one of the bright spots. Nortje was South Africa’s highest wicket-taker of the 2019-20 summer, and has one of the best strike rates among ODI bowlers since January 2019. To the international cricket community, he surged onto the scene overnight, but his bowling was a product many years in the making.