South Africa coach Russell Domingo insisted his side had faced up to their unwanted tag of cricket's serial "chokers" ahead of a World Cup quarter-final with Sri Lanka in Sydney on Wednesday.
Despite boasting some of the world's most outstanding one-day players during the past two decades, the Proteas have not won the World Cup since being allowed into the 1992 edition ahead of the end of apartheid.
That tournament infamously saw South Africa lose in the semi-finals to England at the Sydney Cricket Ground after the rain rule in use at the time left them with the impossible task of scoring 22 runs off one ball.
"I was in Matric (secondary school), I was 16-years-old. There's nothing we can do about what happened in 1992, all our energy is focused on what we need to do leading into this game," said the now 40-year-old Domingo at the SCG on Monday.
"The legacy of 1992 has very little bearing on now, we want to play our game on Wednesday."