SOUTH AFRICA TEAM HISTORY
The South African cricket team toured England Nottingham , Captain Alan
Melville and vice-captain, Dudley Nourse achieved a Test match
record for a third wicket partnership of 319. The following year Nourse,
38-year-old captain of Natal , was appointed
Captain for the 1948 MCC Test matches in South Africa 
In 1970, the ICC voted to suspend South Africa
from international cricket indefinitely because of its government's policy
of apartheid, a policy which led them to play only against the white
nations (England, Australia, New Zealand), and field only white players. This
decision excluded players such as Graeme Pollock, Barry Richards and Mike
Procter from partaking in international Test Cricket. It would also cause
the emigration of future stars like Allan Lamb and Robin Smith,
who both played for England ,
and Kepler Wessels, who initially played for Australia ,
before returning to South
  Africa 
Since South Africa South Africa  had the highest winning percentage
in ODIs of any team, but they were knocked out of the 1996 World Cup in the
quarter-finals, and then were eliminated on countback after tying their
semi-final against Australia South Africa 's first test match after
re-admission was against the West Indies  in
April 1992. The match was played in Bridgetown , Barbados  and South Africa 
They have also had bad press for failing in
vital matches in global tournaments including the 2002 ICC Champions
Trophy and the 2007 ICC World Twenty20.
With Donald retiring, Cronje banned for
match-fixing and later dead in a plane crash, and Pollock also retiring from
international cricket, the team once again changed shape. Graeme Smith was
made captain, although following injuries to Smith and Jacques Kallis, Ash
well Prince deputised as Test captain on 12 July 2006. At the age of 29,
he became the first non-white man to captain the once all-white South African
cricket team. Due to a racial quota policy, the side was once required to
contain black players, unlike the past. However, that policy was rescinded in
2007.
After many of the major players in the Australian side
that had dominated the early 2000s had retired, the number one place in
the ICC Test Championship was a wide open race, with India  and England South Africa 
toured England South Africa 
During this time of dominance in the Test
arena, the ODI and T20I performances were far less consistent, as South Africa New Zealand  at home in January 2013, and a
further loss in Sri Lanka  highlighted
South Africa 's recent difficulties. Exits from
the 2012 ICC World Twenty20 and the 2013 ICC Champions Trophy only
served to improve South
  Africa South Africa Galle  in Sri Lanka 
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