Graeme Smith has been representing South Africa
since 2002 and the Test captain believes the current crop of players
are the finest of his generation.
Smith's side have a commanding
lead at the top of the world rankings after completing a 3-0 Test whitewash of
Pakistan on Sunday.
"This is the best team I have played in as a South
African cricketer, we have all our bases covered," the skipper told
reporters.
"Part of that is the maturity and professionalism with which
they approach every match and the pride they put into their
performances."
South Africa have won in England, Australia and New
Zealand in recent times and beaten Pakistan, Sri Lanka and New Zealand but
Smith's hunger has not yet been satisfied.
"There is still more I want to
achieve with this side," said the opening batsman who averages 48.62 in 110 Test
appearances.
"We want to create a team that plays the game hard but in
the right spirit.
"What has been most pleasing about this summer is how
clinical we have been, we have never let our intensity drop. That is how we set
out to play our cricket."
Of the regular Test line-up, only Jacques
Kallis (37), Smith (32) and Alviro Petersen (32) are in their 30s.
Coach
Gary Kirsten has urged all-rounder Kallis to give up the shorter formats of the
game in order to prolong his test career and that looks likely to
happen.
The strength of the first-class domestic competition has helped
fuel success for the test side.
When injuries have robbed South Africa of
Kallis, Morne Morke, JP Duminy and Vernon Philander, their replacements have
excelled.
The latest is Kyle Abbott who returned match figures of nine
for 68 on his debut in the victory by an innings and 18 runs over Pakistan in
the third test.
"I think the domestic circuit at the moment is the
strongest it has been," said the 25-year-old paceman.
"It is credit to
the South African system.
"The high performance centre is fantastic and
the South African A side has been running really well for the last two or three
years. By the time guys reach test level they are ready."
The next
challenge for the Test team is a two-match series against Pakistan in Abu Dhabi
in November.
"Preparation for Abu Dhabi will be key," Smith
said.
"You cannot keep guys at the top of their game for eight months
when they are not playing Test cricket so it will be about how we approach the
build-up to the series."
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