JONATHAN  TROTT'S creed, his mantra, may help to explain how he is able to return to  Newlands, Cape Town's magnificent cricketing bowl in the shadow of Table  Mountain, with such confidence... batting, if you'll pardon the expression, for  the other side. 
 
The former Western Province batsman -  perhaps we should call him an all-rounder after his performance in the second  One-Day International triumph over South Africa on Sunday - plays at his old  home ground for the tourists on Friday expressing this philosophy: "I'm always  trying to better myself."
 So far, Trott (pictured) is successfully treading the  path broken so controversially by Pietermaritzburg-born Kevin Pietersen in 2005.  And he is bettering himself with every  innings
 Trott scored 87 at Centurion over the  weekend to help Paul Collingwood put England 1-0 up in the five-match ODI series  after the opening game at The Wanderers on Friday was  monsooned-off.
 He also bowled seven overs for 21 runs,  earning Ian Botham's heartfelt praise: "As an all-rounder, he was a  revelation."
 And who can forget his Test debut in the  summer when, with KP in hospital and Ricky Ponting on the sledge, he scored 41  and 119 in the final Test at The Oval against Australia to help seal the Ashes  for his adopted country? Instant runs, instant confidence at the heart of the  storm.
 Between those two innings, while he was  mysteriously left out of the one-day humiliation against the Aussies, he was  accused by former captain Michael Vaughan of celebrating with the South Africans  after their Test series win in England last year, a week after being 12th man  for the home side.
 Nasty stuff which put huge pressure on a  tour rookie, but it sold books, I  guess.
 Ian Jonathan Leonard Trott, who also managed  33 and 51 in the drawn Twenty20 series last week, appears unfazed. He says  before Friday's showdown in the town of his birth: "It adds a little edge to it  for me. But I'm going to have to put the emotions of coming back here to one  side. Everyone wants to play at Lord's and the SCG but for me, I always wanted  to come and play back at Newlands and be part of a winning England  side."
 So South Africans - including coach Mickey  Arthur who insists Trott wouldn't make his current top six batters - can now  rearrange these words into a commonly used phrase: "Colours, mast, nailed,  firmly, the, to."
 Promoted to opener in place of Kent's Joe  Denly, Warwickshire's Trott, whose father Ian coaches in Leatherhead, nails  things down still further, insisting in his still-heavy Seffeffriken accent:  "I'm really happy to be sitting here part of an England team which has just won  in South Africa.
 "It's just the same as when I walked out  against Australia in that first Test match. I try not to get too wound up about  it. I just try to bring my Warwickshire processes into playing for England. Just  like all the other guys in the team, I'm always trying to better  myself."
 Let's just get the Trott story right. Yes,  he went to Rondebosch High on the slopes of Table Mountain. Yes, he attended  Stellenbosch University, home of the Afrikaner intellectual and yes, he  captained South Africa's Under  19s.
 But like so many others in South Africa, he  grew up with the knowledge that his grandparents were solidly British. England  were not necessarily the enemy. Remember Basil D'Oliveira, Tony Greig, Robin  Smith and Allan Lamb had gone there before, not to mention Zola Budd and Gary  Bailey, long before KP. It's tough to understand that if you haven't lived over  there.
 Trott's two early Twenty20s against the West  Indies in 2007 didn't go too well but after averaging 90 in the County game last  year, he was always going to be the next up once Pietersen had gone down with an  Achilles problem and Ravi Bopara had failed one too many  times.
 Forget Mark Ramprakash and Marcus  Trescothick, at 28, Trott had to be the future. Has been ever since he made his  debut for the Warwickshire 2nd XI in 2002 and scored 245. A year later he scored  134 on his first team debut. And along the way he grabbed a seven-wicket haul  with the seamers the South Africans failed to deal with last  Sunday.
 Trottsky is  likely to be joined the fit-again Pietersen, Matt Prior and Andrew Strauss over  the coming weeks. But, like the other three South African-born Englishmen, he  has nailed those colours to the mast.
 The man who  came through the South African schoolboy ranks with currently injured Jacques  Kallis, Protea's captain Graeme Smith, Herschelle Gibbs - recalled to the South  African side today - and Ashwell Prince leaves no room for doubt: "I won't let any outside  emotions affect my decision-making on the field. I'm looking forward to  contributing to another win. For England."   
 
 
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