«I wouldn’t say it’s harder [to pace your innings lower down the order]. I have understood my game a lot better as I’ve gone on — about when to pull the trigger. Nowadays guys are taking on bowlers a lot earlier. The game has evolved so quickly. I still feel like there’s space for taking your time, summing up the situation. You might need six an over on a tricky wicket and have to finish the job. It’s just about understanding what’s in front of you, as opposed to a completely different situation. Where you need 12 an over and have to kind of go straightaway. I feel when I’m really comfortable, I’m not going to stop. It’s just about getting myself into that mindset.»Miller finds himself in that mindset more and more often, and stays in it longer. Since the last World Cup, no one who bats at No. 5 or lower comes anywhere close to his batting average, and only Klassen surpasses his strike rate. Eleven of Miller’s 27 innings have been half-centuries; no other batter in his situation comes close to matching that consistency. Pair that with his fearsome power and there’s perhaps no batter in ODI cricket who offers such middle-order potency.»It’s difficult to explain why [I have success with power-hitting], but I always believe when I’m batting that the bowler panics before the batter. I just have to stay nice and calm and wait for the ball to be in my area, making sure I’m putting it away. If I do so, I do feel the bowler changes their plans quite quickly. Even to our bowlers, [my advice] often is to just keep it simple and stick to their plan a little bit longer as opposed to changing it quite quickly.»Just like Miller, though, South Africa have rarely had ODI problems between World Cup cycles, but rather at the tournaments themselves. In the last four years Miller’s numbers may have soared, but at the 2019 World Cup, clad in a pale imitation of the resplendent green South Africa generally sports, he and the team were pale imitations of the quality they serve up in bilateral series. Miller managed only 136 runs in six innings at a strike rate of 86, and South Africa were eliminated after winning only one of their first seven games.»I believe we’ve got a great team. It’s just about making sure that we’re switched on as a team. You do need luck in certain games along a journey. But I’d never say it’s a chokers kind of situation»•Steve Bardens/AFP/Getty ImagesThe word that must not be spoken hangs heavy in the air. Even the light breeze that stirs the surface of the swimming pool seems to have subsided. We sit staring across from one another, each knowing what the other is about to say. Then, with a resigned sigh, Miller rips the band-aid off.»I genuinely believe that we’re not chokers,» he says. «How that tag affects people is an individual thing, but it’s never, ever bothered me. I’m honestly not just saying that.»Obviously there’s been history and there’s been games that we’ve not played well in that have let us down. But I would never say the ‘chokers’ tag applies to us, although that’s what everyone says. I’ve never really believed that at all.»I believe we’ve got a great team. At the end of the day, cricket is cricket and you can lose games from nowhere outside of the World Cup. Upsets are part of the game. It’s just about making sure that we’re switched on as a team. You do need luck in certain games along a journey. But I’d never say it’s a chokers kind of situation.»In 11 World Cup innings, across 2015 and 2019, Miller has 460 runs at a strike rate of 118•Getty ImagesStill, it’s undeniable that South Africa have an ageing batting line-up. Markram is the only specialist batter in the side under 30, while Quinton de Kock, who is 30, announced he was retiring from ODIs after the World Cup to «top up» his T20 franchise earnings.Miller himself, 34, doesn’t look like he’ll be walking away from South Africa soon, though, even as the T20 offers have continued to pile in.»It is a demanding sport, but I really do love playing cricket. I love playing for my country; that’s my priority. That has never wavered, not at all. Doing well for my country opens up opportunities outside around the world. As long as I’m staying relevant and doing my trade really well for South Africa, it keeps me in demand outside of South Africa. Whatever the case, my priority is South Africa. I suppose it can be demanding, but as long as I’m mentally in tune as to where my movements are and what I need to do, then I’ll stick to it.»With South Africa co-hosting the 2027 ODI World Cup, it’s hard to rule out Miller, at 38, taking another stab at it. For now, the man who missed out on South Africa’s final squad for the 2011 World Cup has unfinished business in India.

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