A Symbol of Hope – Wanderers Krieketklub Player from Hopefield
CCN Editor and Reporter – George April
HOPEFIELD:- Last year, in 2025, Wanderers Krieketklub in the small West Coast town of Hopefield, quietly marked it’s 50th anniversary.
No big celebrations, no trophies paraded, no speeches or events organised by the current committee. Many founding members, the men and women who built the club from dusty fields and sheer passion have passed away over the decades.
For some, their absence was felt deeply, and the lack of recognition left a quiet sadness in the air. Yet, amid that silence, one treasured item still stands as a beacon of what cricket can mean to a small community: a framed, Castle Lager-sponsored South African Proteas team jersey from the golden era of 1997.
That jersey comes from the 2nd Test against India at Newlands, Cape Town, played from 2-6 January 1997.
Under Hansie Cronjé’s captaincy, the Proteas delivered one of their most dominant performances. South Africa batted first and piled on 529/7 declared, with Gary Kirsten scoring a patient 103, Brian McMillan an unbeaten 103 (earning him Man of the Match), and Lance Klusener adding fireworks.
The bowling attack, led by Allan Donald, Shaun Pollock, and Paul Adams, then dismantled India twice, first for 359 in the follow-on, and then for a mere 144 in the second innings, sealing a crushing 282-run victory.
India fought hard in their first innings, especially through two legendary visitors. Sachin Tendulkar, captaining for the first time on that tour, produced a masterful 169 (his first Test century as skipper), full of trademark drives and resilience against a relentless South African pace attack. Mohammad Azharuddin blazed 115 in support, and their 222-run partnership pulled India from a precarious 58/5 to respectability. Other Indian stars like Rahul Dravid, Sourav Ganguly (on debut tour), Venkatesh Prasad, Javagal Srinath, and Anil Kumble were in the side, but the Proteas’ depth proved too much.
The match remains one of the highlights of that 1990s Proteas era – a time when South African cricket felt invincible at home.
After the triumph, the signed team jersey, bearing the iconic Castle Lager logos, the Proteas emblem, and autographs from the full squad including Hansie Cronjé, Gary Kirsten, Allan Donald, Daryll Cullinan, Shaun Pollock, Brian McMillan, Lance Klusener, Paul Adams, Dave Richardson, and others – became a special keepsake.
Framed as a trophy and carefully preserved in glass (measuring 1.30m long by 1m wide), it made its way from the Newlands dressing room, flown to Cape Town, and eventually found a home in Hopefield.
For the passionate cricket lover who received it, that jersey was never just fabric and ink. It symbolised possibility: that even from a quiet corner of the Western Cape, you could connect to the biggest stages in the game. It inspired local players at Wanderers over the years, reminding them that cricket is about heart, community, and shared memories, not always about silverware or headlines.
Twenty-eight years later, as Wanderers reflects on its milestone without fanfare, this jersey endures as a living piece of history.
It carries the echoes of Newlands roars, the fight of visiting icons like Tendulkar and Azharuddin, and the unbreakable spirit of small-town cricket in places like Hopefield.
Who still remembers that summer of 1997?
Who recalls the thrill of those Proteas victories and the magic under Table Mountain? 🏏


