By GARY LEMKE in Johannesburg
There's a huge billboard that immediately catches the eye as you arrive in Johannesburg.
The stark, two-worded message might confirm visitors' worst fears that they have arrived in the new Wild West, but South African sport has never been known for its subtle approach.
"Die Aussies," it screams. On closer inspection, in much smaller print, comes the explanation - "Available in both English and Afrikaans".
It's a radio station drumming up interest in the World Cup. The word "die" (pronounced "dee") means "the" in Afrikaans.
Allan Donald, nicknamed "White Lightning" epitomises that attitude.
"We are doing this for Hansie Cronje. We are dedicating this World Cup to Hansie, unashamedly so," Donald repeated last week in a comment that brought a swift rebuke from the president of the United Cricket Board, Percy Sonn.
"We don't want players winning for individuals; we want them to do it for all the people of South Africa," came the official's reply.
Yet the shadow of Cronje looms large over a side that South Africans expect to win the World Cup.
"It's our job to get them here, it's yours to send them back," is another advertising billboard, this time that of the official carrier of the competition, South African Airways.
Alongside the text is the face of Shaun Pollock, the man who followed Cronje as captain. No pressure then.
Donald, a 36-year-old veteran of 161 one-day internationals, in which he has taken 271 wickets, is in his fourth World Cup and held together by more Elastoplast than you will find in a hospital ward. But he will be the man Pollock turns to when the going gets tough.
Once a tearaway quick, who even on the wrong side of 30 reduced England to two for four on a Wanderers greentop, he has mellowed, but the desire remains.
"We will make the [South African] public proud of us,"he said. "We have a very good side this time and we genuinely feel we can go all the way.
"In 1999 we had the best team in the competition by a mile. Then, in the semifinals, it all went wrong ... "
The moment "it all went wrong" is burned into the memory of every South African, and only a World Cup victory on home soil will dull the senses.
Sport is taken seriously here, and that radio advertising billboard is a reminder that Australia remain the eternal enemy.
Donald, famously, was at the crease when he and Lance Klusener attempted a single that would beat Australia and ensure passage into the final.
Donald, by general consensus, was the one who cracked, dropping his bat and making the 20m to the other end of the pitch seem like a trek across the Outback. Only on this occasion he was not back.
"I didn't hear the call," Donald has consistently said.
Perhaps, like so many secrets that went with his close friend Cronje the moment his plane crashed into a mountain range last year, we will never know what went on in the middle on the afternoon of June 17, 1999, at Edgbaston.
Given the form and calibre of players available for Pollock to call on, it is no surprise that South Africa are second favourites, behind those Aussies, in the official betting.
Winning is supposed to become a habit, but Donald, a bit more sedate in his run-up to the crease but with an old head on over-worked shoulders, puts an interesting spin on the theory.
"In 1999 we quickly built our momentum. There were some soft touches in the early part of the competition and we held a number of team meetings to decide whether we should rest some players or play our best team throughout.
"We chose the latter. But what that does is make you think too much.
"You win six or so matches in a row and, privately, you start to wonder.
"The law of averages dictates that you are going to lose at some stage. When is that defeat going to come? It would be better early in the tournament than later, but when you go through unbeaten ... "
Pollock's team have nothing to fear from the opposition. Not even "die Australians". But the evidence of that 1999 semifinal is compelling: do South Africa have what it takes to succeed?
"Yes ... we do," Donald offers. "There's no question that the three inches here [digit and thumb pressed against his forehead] will determine the world champions."
To this end South Africa embarked on a three-day camp in the Drakensburg mountains last week in a team-building exercise.
The tasks were similar to those on television's Survivor series - all with the intention of ensuring the minds of the players don't go soft under the harsh African sun.
Donald, dropped off kilometres away from base camp, was asked to find his way back, but couldn't.
Should his compass let him down in the World Cup, South Africa will surely again lose theirs. For supporters of the team, and country, the thought is too ghastly to contemplate.
- INDEPENDENT
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