Shukri Conrad On "Grovel" Remark Controversy: "No Malice Intended" After India ODI Series Win

South Africa head coach Shukri Conrad addressed the storm over his controversial “grovel” comment about India during last month’s Test series, where Proteas swept 2-0. Post India’s 2-1 ODI series win in Visakhapatnam, Conrad clarified no malice intended but conceded better word choice needed: “On reflection, it was never my intention to cause malice. I could have chosen a better word… Being humble is cornerstone of South African Test team.”
The Controversial Remark Revisited
Day 4 second Test presser: “We wanted India to spend as much time on their feet… really grovel, to steal a phrase, bat them out the game.” Meant forcing fielding fatigue via prolonged batting, but “grovel” (creep face-down) evoked racial history—England’s Tony Greig 1976 vow to make West Indies “grovel,” sparking racism accusations from Clive Lloyd and fans amid WI’s 3-0 series whitewash.
India backlash amplified after Kohli’s perceived handshake snubs (clarified for Rohit).
Conrad’s Post-Series Reflection
After SA’s ODI loss: “My thinking was India spending more time on field… careful about choosing word. No malice.” Humility emphasized post-Test success, ODI reverse.
Series context: India won Ranchi opener (Kohli 135), SA dew-aided Raipur chase (Markram ton vs Kohli 102, Gaikwad 105), India dominated Visakhapatnam (Rahul toss win post-20 streak, Jaiswal ton).
Conrad’s admission diffuses tension ahead T20Is, underscoring word sensitivity in cricket’s charged India-SA rivalry.
Historical Context: Greig’s 1976 “Grovel” Legacy
Aspect | Details |
|---|---|
Series | England vs West Indies 1976 home Tests |
Greig Quote | “Make them grovel” pre-series (BBC) |
Reaction | WI captain Clive Lloyd: “West Indians everywhere insulted” |
Outcome | WI 3-0 whitewash; Greig accused racism |
Term’s apartheid-era baggage (white SA-born Greig) lingers.