logo
Will Rassie's Springboks be rusty against the hardened Wallabies or hit the ground running?

Will Rassie's Springboks be rusty against the hardened Wallabies or hit the ground running?

IOL News9 hours ago
The Springboks' experimental build-up contrasts sharply with the Wallabies' bruising Lions series — will Rassie Erasmus' rotation gamble pay off in the Rugby Championship? Photo: Backpaghepix
Image: Backpagepix
COMMENT
The form of the All Blacks and the Wallabies in their respective series Down Under raises the question of whether the Springboks will be undercooked in the Rugby Championship compared to their chief rivals.
The New Zealanders won a close-fought series against France 3-0; the Wallabies have been going hammer and tongs with the British and Irish Lions, while the Boks had comparatively low-key games against Italy and Georgia.
The other Rugby Championship team, the Pumas, had a disappointing start to their international season, losing a home series to an England side bereft of a host of players who are in Australia with the Lions.
Perhaps, more pertinently, the Springboks used their block of four matches for experimentation, with coach Rassie Erasmus making 10 changes per match and giving nearly 40 players game time. He also blooded newcomers such as front-rowers Asenathi Ntlabakanye (Lions), Marnus van der Merwe (Scarlets), Boan Venter (Edinburgh), Jan-Hendrik Wessels (Bulls), and utility forward Cobus Wiese (Bulls).
The South Africans have indeed taken a different route to the Rugby Championship compared to New Zealand and Australia, and it is difficult to say who is right or wrong — there are different ways to skin a cat when it comes to preparing for a tournament.
It could be argued that the chopping and changing has denied what will be the first-choice Springbok team any opportunity to play as a combination and build form.
A counter-argument is that Erasmus' ideal team has played together so much over the last few years that they do not need warm-up matches as a unit, and keeping the players fresh is a greater priority — especially given that the Boks will play 14 matches this year, between July and November.
The Bok combination that plays Australia at Ellis Park on 16 August will back themselves to hit the ground running because they know each other so well.
The one thing Erasmus perhaps wasn't counting on was that Australia would be much better than he probably anticipated during his planning.
The Wallabies went into their series against the Lions ranked eighth in the World Rugby rankings — an embarrassing position for a team that has won two World Cups. It was predicted they would lose the series 3-0, and while that might still happen, the Wallabies should have won last week's second Test.
They were 30 seconds away from levelling the series thanks to a magnificent performance that was a world away from their disappointing showing in the first Test.
Coach Joe Schmidt has done a fine job in fixing the Wallabies, and he will remain in charge for their two matches in South Africa before handing over to incoming coach Les Kiss.
It will be interesting to see whether the Aussies kick on in South Africa after the high of the Lions series, or whether they find the Rugby Championship an anti-climax.
Looking at a possible Bok side for the first Test, it is difficult to see beyond proven match-winners. The half-back combination is one of the few areas of debate. At 10, the three horses running neck and neck are Sacha Feinberg-Mngomezulu, Manie Libbok, and Handré Pollard. It won't matter a great deal whom Erasmus picks.
Ditto scrum-half, although form would suggest Grant Williams is a short head in front of the other two nines in the squad, Cobus Reinach and Morne van den Berg.
Possible Springboks team v Australia
15 Damian Willemse 14 Cheslin Kolbe 13 Jesse Kriel 12 Damian de Allende 11 Kurt-Lee Arendse, 10 Sacha Feinberg-Mngomezulu 9 Grant Williams 8 Kwagga Smith 7 Pieter-Steph du Toit 6 Siya Kolisi (captain) 5 Lood de Jager 4 Eben Etzebeth 3 Wilco Louw 2 Malcolm Marx 1 Ox Nche.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

England's Lionesses party with thousands of fans after Euro 2025 triumph
England's Lionesses party with thousands of fans after Euro 2025 triumph

IOL News

time24 minutes ago

  • IOL News

England's Lionesses party with thousands of fans after Euro 2025 triumph

The bus carrying the England women's national football team drives along the Mall during the homecoming victory parade near Buckingham Palace in London on Tuesday to celebrate the team winning Euro 2025. Photo: Adam Davy/AFP Image: Adam Davy/AFP England's victorious Lionesses celebrated their dramatic women's Euro 2025 triumph along with tens of thousands of ecstatic fans outside Buckingham Palace on Tuesday. Sarina Wiegman's team successfully defended their European crown by beating world champions Spain on penalties in the Swiss city of Basel on Sunday, sparking an outpouring of national joy. They flew home on Monday and were immediately whisked to 10 Downing Street, the working home of British Prime Minister Keir Starmer, for a reception. On Tuesday it was the turn of supporters to celebrate the astonishing success of the Lionesses, who repeatedly defied the odds during their run to glory in Switzerland. Get your news on the go, click here to join the IOL News WhatsApp channel. Two open-top buses emblazoned with the words "European Champions" set off from the bottom of The Mall, the road leading to Buckingham Palace, under grey skies shortly after midday. Captain Leah Williamson held the Euro 2025 trophy aloft and supporters responded with cheers and by waving their flags in a sea of red and white. The decibel count rouse as the bus crawled along the road, lined with Union flags and the St George's Cross, led by a military band. The Football Association said at least 65,000 were packed onto The Mall. The huge crowds then swarmed down the road towards the palace – King Charles III's official London residence – to party with the squad, with two large screens showing tournament highlights. 'Still we rise' An emotional Williamson was first to speak from a stage at the Queen Victoria Memorial, saying she had been crying all the way down The Mall. "There's lots of ways to win a football match, and we repeatedly did it the hard way," she said. "But I think that you can see how much we care about playing for England, how much we love it. "(Victory in) 2022 was a fairytale, but this feels really hard-earned, and we're very proud of ourselves." The skipper said the team had overcome adversity, including defeat to France in their opening match: "Nasty things to deal with, and still we rise." She added: "Everything we do, obviously we do it for us and our team, but we do it for the country, and we do it for the young girls. "This job never existed 30 or 40 years ago, and we're making history every single step. Thank you so much, thank you so much for being with us. Stay with us, this story's not done yet." Wiegman told the cheering crowds that her players "showed up" when they had to before dancing on stage with Nigerian singer Burna Boy. "I had hoped for a little less chaos but they didn't keep their promise to finish things quicker," she said. "But as we always have a plan, and we try to execute that, and the players on the pitch, and we just kept having hope all the time, and belief, and they just showed up when it was really necessary and urgent." Williamson lifted the trophy beneath red fireworks and Neil Diamond's "Sweet Caroline" was played over the speakers. Fans had queued for hours to celebrate their heroes – the first senior England team to win a major football tournament on foreign soil. Signs included: "In Sarina we trust" and "So nice had to win it twice". Sue Plummer, 57, a company director from the Isle of Wight, said: "They're just the epitome of British resilience and resolve. "It's nice to see the total spectrum of people that have come out especially for this." London retail worker Naomi Rumsby, 30, said she used to play football. "It's nice to see so many people here," she said. "I never thought it would be like this. It's nice to see so many little kids with ladies' names on the back of their shirts." Victory in Switzerland was sweet revenge for Wiegman's team, who suffered bitter defeat against Spain in the World Cup final two years ago. The Lionesses were hosted at number 10 on Monday by Deputy Prime minister Angela Rayner and Sports Minister Stephanie Peacock while Starmer was in Scotland meeting US President Donald Trump. Rayner hailed the players as a "shining example of talent and excitement for women's football". AFP Get your news on the go, click here to join the IOL News WhatsApp channel.

From TMO madness to English ‘pies' — why did they have to go and make things so complicated?
From TMO madness to English ‘pies' — why did they have to go and make things so complicated?

Daily Maverick

time3 hours ago

  • Daily Maverick

From TMO madness to English ‘pies' — why did they have to go and make things so complicated?

Several huge sports events suffer from complex rules, leading to anticlimactic viewing. Somewhere in a time long ago (2002 to be precise), my oldest child drove me slightly crazy by constantly demanding a particular song by Avril Lavigne. The chorus of that hit came echoing back this weekend as I attempted to indulge in what I thought would be a cornucopia of top-level, global, highly competitive sport – the second Test between the Wallabies and British & Irish Lions, England versus India Test cricket, the climax of the Tour de France and the Belgian Formula One Grand Prix. As each of those events progressed (or didn't) in increasingly bewildering ways, I found myself channelling Lavigne and singing loudly: 'Why'd you have to go and make things so complicated?' At one point I was switching between elite F1 drivers doing the first four laps of the mere 44 they were going to be allowed in a 20-minute uncompetitive procession behind a safety car, elite cyclists drifting through the countryside drinking champagne and elite cricketers arguing about whether they should be on the field at all given that the Test was grinding towards a draw. The day before, the thrilling series-deciding second rugby Test between the Wallabies and Lions ended up, inevitably, with everyone watching lengthy slow-motion TV replays to determine whether the Lions' last-gasp try would stand. What we saw was a highly dangerous assault on a Wallaby neck or a perfect clean-out, depending entirely on your bias. My conclusion was that it was probably both. It was legitimate but shouldn't be. And it was definitely anticlimactic and unsatisfactory. The entire thing was the apex of the television match official (TMO) madness which has descended on rugby and means its myriad complex laws are being second- and third-guessed all the time. The authorities need to be asked the Lavigne question. 'Why'd you have to go and make things so complicated?' Judgement calls TMO's should be for groundings over the try line and seriously dangerous or foul play which the on-field officials have not seen (an important qualification). Leave the rest to the judgement of the guys with a whistle and flags. If the occasional marginally forward pass, tiny knock-on, head-on-shoulder contact or truck-and-trailer side-entry channel block (I made that up but it could be a thing for all I know) gets missed, then so be it. If the disciplinary committee post-match wants to reassess dangerous-play calls and impose bans, then that's okay, but let's not stop the game for a Supreme Court hearing. Meanwhile, back at the venerable Spa-Francorchamps F1 circuit (a legendary track beautifully set in the Ardennes Forest which could soon be replaced by a soulless expansion venue in Thailand), the torturous rules of that sport were, yet again, getting in the way of a decent contest. Rain was causing issues but watching cars parked for an hour in sunshine and then not compete for one-10th of the shortened 'race' before a 'rolling start', which is nothing like the drama of a normal start, probably made cautious sense somewhere in a rule book but made none at all to an average punter like me. I still do not understand what happened to Lewis Hamilton back in 2021 when he was cruising to a world title over Max Verstappen until some random behind him crashed and his substantial lead was wiped out by the safety car and some drivers were 'unlapped' and some changed tyres but he couldn't. F1 measures things to milliseconds on lap times and milligrams of vehicle weight and yet cannot contrive a system where a safety car means the gaps remain the same as they were before it came out. And then we have the compelling yet bizarre dance that is the Tour de France. So many questions. Why don't they race properly for most of the final day? Why do the main riders stop when a leader crashes? Why are some teams complaining that one team 'wins too many stages'? Why is it unacceptable to attack in a particular way but not in others? Why is the best rider on the day often reined in to help his teammate rather than going for the stage win? In short, 'why'd you have to go and make things so complicated?' And then, the world-champion sport on rules and etiquette complexity, Test match cricket, really kicked in. England were frustrated on the final day at Old Trafford by some superb rearguard batting from India, which gained them a draw and kept an excellent series alive. Once a decisive outcome was impossible, the English team felt everyone should shake hands and get off work early. India captain Shubman Gill, rightly, was having none of it because he wanted his not-out batters to reach their hundreds and to tire out his opponents (who had invited this fate by putting them into bat after winning the toss) before the decisive Test starting on Thursday. The English then sulked and bowled what we used to call 'pies' – part-timers delivering rubbish. It was an unedifying and completely uncompetitive spectacle. And one that is almost impossible to explain to anyone other than a Test cricket tragic.

Itoje's Lions dreaming of peak performance in third Wallabies Test
Itoje's Lions dreaming of peak performance in third Wallabies Test

TimesLIVE

time3 hours ago

  • TimesLIVE

Itoje's Lions dreaming of peak performance in third Wallabies Test

British & Irish Lions captain Maro Itoje says the tourists have not yet played their best rugby in Australia and are looking to this weekend's dead rubber third Test to produce a landmark performance and sweep the series. The Lions locked up series honours with a dramatic victory over the Wallabies in Melbourne last weekend but Itoje said there was no shortage of motivation heading into Saturday's clash at Stadium Australia. 'I guess we want to be part of something very special,' the lock forward told reporters on Tuesday. 'Winning a Test series, obviously, is extremely special, but what would be an absolute dream would be to go out there and perform to the level we think we can perform to and win the third game 'While the first two games have been great because we've got two wins, there's still a feeling that we probably haven't put it together in the way we know that we can. The moment that clinched the Series... #Lions2025 — British & Irish Lions (@lionsofficial) July 26, 2025 'And I think that's the exciting thing for us. We want to chase down that, that performance that we've been searching for.' The Lions got back to training in Sydney on Tuesday after celebrating the series-sealing triumph at the Melbourne Cricket Ground. Itoje, who was part of the Lions squad that drew the 2017 Test series in New Zealand and lost narrowly in South Africa in 2021, said the achievement was 'right up there' in his career highlights. 'You want to be a part of being a Lion, that in of itself is a humongous achievement, but you want to be a part of a series-winning side, 'Speaking to some of the guys from 2013, speaking to some of the golden oldies from '97, they look back and have such fond memories. Incredible support at the @MCG last night 🌊🔴 #Lions2025 — British & Irish Lions (@lionsofficial) July 27, 2025 'You want to be a winning Lion. You want to be part of that esteemed group.' No Lions squad since the 1974 tour of South Africa has managed to go unbeaten through a Test series, while the Wallabies have not been swept by the tourists since 1904. 'This is a huge game,' said Itoje. 'The Wallabies ... have shown the quality side they are and I know they're going to be hungry. They're going to be up for it. 'But we also want to make some history this weekend. If we can get another win, that would be amazing.' Lions centre Garry Ringrose has been ruled out of the third Test against Australia as he goes through the 12-day concussion protocols. Lions boss Farrell focused on series sweep after Melbourne victory 'These are one of the moments in your life you will cherish, this will live long in the memory' Sport 23 hours ago Ringrose was initially selected to play in last weekend's second Test in Melbourne, which the Lions won to seal the series, but withdrew after experiencing concussion symptoms in training. Saturday's match was probably his last realistic chance of playing a Test for the Lions and assistant coach Andrew Goodman said the 30-year-old was devastated. 'Garry was playing some amazing rugby through this tour, and it's been a dream of his for so long to represent the Lions, and he's managed to do that,' the New Zealander said in Sydney. 'But he wanted to be a Test match Lion, so it's been devastating for him. Everyone knows Garry's a great lad and a great team man. The boys have all been disappointed for him.' Goodman said the other players who were unavailable for selection for the second Test because of injury — winger Mack Hansen (foot), lock Joe McCarthy (foot) and centre Sione Tuipulotu (hamstring) — all took part in training on Tuesday.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store