ICC Champions Trophy: AB de Villiers defiant as Proteas choke vs Virat Kohli's India
Indian captain Virat Kohli though played down the significance of South Africa's reputation for under-performing in big games.
Birmingham: South Africa captain AB de Villiers was in defiant mood after his team suffered a humiliating eight-wicket loss to India on Sunday which ended their ICC Champions Trophy campaign and enhanced their long-held reputation as "chokers" in big matches.
The Proteas have won only one global one-day title, the inaugural Champions Trophy in 1998, and the world's top-ranked team crumbled under pressure at The Oval in a straight shootout for a semifinal place.
"I can take us to win a World Cup, I believe," De Villiers told a news conference. "I'm a good captain and I can take this team forward.
"There's more than enough talent and we've just got to get it right when it matters most."
Reflecting on the team's performance in the game against India, the Proteas skipper revealed that although there were major errors in judgments, the team was composed throughout the duration of the game.
"In my mind, that (composure) wasn't the problem. It wasn't a mental thing. We just didn't play well. We were really in a good position there with the batting end early on, and through soft dismissals we lost our way and that was the part for me that hurt the most," he said.
South Africa lost a 1999 World Cup semifinal against Australia when they needed one run to win from the last four balls and were eliminated in the group stage on home soil in 2003 after misunderstanding the Duckworth/Lewis scoring system.
The loss to India was another major disappointment because South Africa started well and moved smoothly to 116 for one after being put in to bat before three batsmen were run out and they were dismissed for 191 in the 45th over.
De Villiers, the world's top-ranked one-day batsman who scored only 20 runs in three innings in the tournament, is focused on the 2019 World Cup.
"Not a lot of people believe that but I think that (winning a tournament) is not that far away," the 33-year-old said.
"It is very difficult to sell it on this kind of performance but that is what I believe in. We are very close as a unit and we have just got to make it work when in matters the most."
South Africa coach Russell Domingo admitted the pressure on the side would continue to grow.
"There's always going be questions until we do get it right," he said. "The longer it takes to get over that the harder it will be."
India, who cruised to their target with 12 overs to spare, joined England and Bangladesh in the last four and will know their semi-final opponents after the final Group B game between Sri Lanka and Pakistan on Monday.
Their captain Virat Kohli played down the significance of South Africa's reputation for under-performing in big games.
"To me, their batsmen looked pretty confident," he said. "If you get two run-outs quickly, then the mindset totally changes.
"Getting their big hitters early was a bonus. We asked our bowlers to make them play difficult shots."