logo
Kolisi returns as Springboks select uncapped front row to tackle Georgia

Kolisi returns as Springboks select uncapped front row to tackle Georgia

News24a day ago
Boan Venter, Marnus van der Merwe and Neethling Fouche will all make their Test debuts for the Springboks against Georgia.
Regular captain Siya Kolisi is also back to lead the team for the first time this year.
After Saturday's Test, the Boks will have employed 46 players so far this season.
The Springboks have selected an uncapped starting front row for Saturday's Test against Georgia in Nelspruit.
Boan Venter, Marnus van der Merwe and Neethling Fouche will make their Test debuts as regular captain Siya Kolisi returns to lead the Boks for the first time this year.
READ | Bok No 8 Jasper Wiese cops hefty ban for headbutt
Venter, who plays for Edinburgh in Scotland, was called into the Bok squad in June as injury cover at prop. Van der Merwe and Fouche had their first taste of Springbok rugby in the non-capped game against the Barbarians in Cape Town last month.
'We wanted to make sure that Siya is 100% fit before selecting him, so it's great to have him back in the squad, while Boan, Marnus and Neethling have been training hard and deserve their chance,' said Springbok coach Rassie Erasmus
'Marnus and Neethling played against the Barbarians, so they have an idea of what international rugby is about, while Boan has shown great potential at club level and with the squad in the last few weeks, and we are looking forward to seeing him play.
'Building squad depth has been one of our pillars as a squad since 2018, and they are all undoubtedly ready to make the step-up.'
The uncapped trio will increase the number of newly capped players this season to seven after Vincent Tshituka (flanker), Cobus Wiese (loose forward), Asenathi Ntlabakanye (prop), and Ethan Hooker (utility back) all made their Test debuts against Italy.
Only five players who started against Italy last weekend - and eight in the match-day 23 - have retained their places.
The five players who retained their places in the starting line-up are Edwill van der Merwe (wing), Canan Moodie (utility back), Grant Williams (scrumhalf), Pieter-Steph du Toit (flank) and Ruan Nortje (lock), while Wiese, who replaces his suspended brother Jasper as eighth man, and Sacha Feinberg-Mngomezulu (flyhalf) are promoted from the bench to starting team.
The inclusion of Kolisi and Venter in the squad increases the size of the group used by Erasmus so far this season to 46 players.
Up front, Eben Etzebeth also returns at lock to partner Ruan Nortje, while Erasmus opted for a five-three forwards-backs split on the bench.
Springbok team to face Georgia:
15 Aphelele Fassi, 14 Edwill van der Merwe, 13 Canan Moodie, 12 Damian de Allende, 11 Kurt-Lee Arendse, 10 Sacha Feinberg-Mngomezulu, 9 Grant Williams, 8 Cobus Wiese, 7 Pieter-Steph du Toit, 6 Siya Kolisi (captain), 5 Ruan Nortje, 4 Eben Etzebeth, 3 Neethling Fouche, 2 Marnus van der Merwe, 1 Boan Venter
Substitutes: 16 Bongi Mbonambi, 17 Thomas du Toit, 18 Vincent Koch, 19 RG Snyman, 20 Kwagga Smith, 21 Faf de Klerk, 22 Handre Pollard, 23 Damian Willemse
Regarding his team selections, Erasmus elaborated: 'We know how passionate and intense this Georgian side is, and they will be determined to make a strong statement, so we selected some experienced players who we would like to get more game time before the Rugby Championship, and a few of the younger players, who have put up their hands another run, so we are pleased with the balance we have in this group.'
The Springboks have won their last two matches against Georgia - the last of which was in 2021 before the British & Irish Lions series - but the world champions are not underestimating their opponents.
'Georgia are a tough outfit, and they pride themselves on their physicality and brute force in the collisions, so the set pieces, mauls, and breakdowns will be key areas,' warned Erasmus.
'They also have quality backline players to round off their team, so we need to be sharp in all the departments of our game to ensure that we continue to lift our standards, build momentum, and get the desired result.'
Saturday's match at Mbombela Stadium kicks off at 17:10.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

The swing-off stole the show at the All-Star Game. Should MLB go further than that?
The swing-off stole the show at the All-Star Game. Should MLB go further than that?

New York Times

timean hour ago

  • New York Times

The swing-off stole the show at the All-Star Game. Should MLB go further than that?

While the inclusion of an automated ball/strike challenge system drew outsized attention ahead of the MLB All-Star Game, it was the swing-off that stole the show Tuesday night in Atlanta. As the National League's lead evaporated in the late innings, not even the players in the dugout knew this Midsummer Classic might turn into a miniature Home Run Derby. Marlins outfielder Kyle Stowers only found out when National League manager Dave Roberts asked him to lead off in the three-on-three swing-off. Advertisement 'I had no clue this was a thing!' Stowers said from the on-deck circle to The Athletic's Ken Rosenthal on Fox's broadcast. The swing-off was included in the latest MLB/MLBPA collective bargaining agreement to end a tied All-Star Game in thrilling fashion. And, boy, did it deliver. With both All-Star teams gathered on the dirt outside their dugouts and with two-time Home Run Derby champ Pete Alonso waiting in the batting cage, ready to be the closing act, NL teammate Kyle Schwarber blasted three homers on three pitches to win the event and capture the All-Star Game MVP trophy. In the celebratory aftermath, Giants starter Logan Webb said the feedback he'd gotten via text from other players was: We should never play an extra-inning game again. In the American League clubhouse, Yankees infielder Jazz Chisholm Jr. advocated for adding the swing-off in the regular season. 'Especially if we're playing at Yankee Stadium,' he said, mimicking a long blast toward the right-field porch. 'Hello!' (It was unclear how seriously he meant his support of the swing-off.) Among the significant rule changes floated or implemented by MLB commissioner Rob Manfred in recent years, bringing a swing-off to regular-season games has never seemed like an eventuality. Manfred has already made his mark on extra-inning games, introducing a rule in 2020 that places a runner on second base to start each extra inning. It has had its intended effect: avoiding marathon games. The question that's being raised after the All-Star Game: Would the swing-off be a better way to end regular-season ties? The extra-innings runner rule is already a significant gameplay intervention. How much less Mickey Mouse is a ghost runner than the overtime rules in other sports — hockey shootouts, soccer penalty kicks, college football's shortened fields and mandatory two-point attempts? Advertisement If Manfred ever hoped to show the incredible possibility of a swing-off, this All-Star Game was the perfect image: Schwarber dropped to a knee as his third consecutive homer sailed through the air; his teammates celebrating; his opponents rallying one last attempt to force Alonso to the plate; and the fans who stayed all on their feet. American League manager Aaron Boone acknowledged that 'there's probably a world' where the swing-off could come to the regular season. 'I wouldn't be surprised if people start talking about it like that,' Boone said. 'Obviously, I don't think that should happen, necessarily, or would at any time in the near future. But I got to say, you know, it was pretty exciting. Like all of a sudden, here we go.' Roberts said he doesn't want to see the swing-off in regular-season games: 'I think that it was great for this exhibition, but in the regular season? I don't mind how it plays out in the regular season with the man on second base. But this was the first time in history we got to do this, and I think it played pretty well tonight.' In clubhouses and comment sections, the swing-off will spawn many more debates than any other aspect of this year's All-Star Game. So let's ask you, readers, what you think. (Top photo of the National League team celebrating: Daniel Shirey/MLB Photos via Getty Images)

Robinson and fast bowlers earn New Zealand a 21-run victory over South Africa
Robinson and fast bowlers earn New Zealand a 21-run victory over South Africa

Yahoo

timean hour ago

  • Yahoo

Robinson and fast bowlers earn New Zealand a 21-run victory over South Africa

HARARE, Zimbabwe (AP) — An unbeaten century stand between Tim Robinson and debutant Bevon Jacobs earned New Zealand a 21-run victory over South Africa in a T20 tri-series match Wednesday. Robinson smashed 75 not out off 57 balls and Jacobs smacked three sixes in his unbeaten 44 to propel New Zealand to 173-5 after it crumbled to 70-5 inside the first half of its innings. Advertisement South Africa, which made three changes from the team that beat Zimbabwe, was bowled out for 152 in 18.2 overs with fast bowlers Jacob Duffy (3-20) and Matt Henry (3-34) sharing six wickets between them. South Africa falls well short Lhuan-dre Pretorius provided South Africa with a brisk start by hitting six boundaries in his knock of 27 before Henry and Duffy hit back with two quick wickets. Pretorius tried to guide Henry's slower ball down to third man but got a thick outside edge to wicketkeeper Tim Seifert, while Rubin Hermann was outdone by Duffy's short ball and was caught at mid-wicket for just 1 run. Advertisement South Africa promoted debutant left-arm spinner Senuran Muthusamy to No. 4, but the left-hander got his middle stumped knocked over by Ish Sodhi soon after the batting powerplay. Captain Rassie van der Dussen (6) was brilliantly run out by his counterpart Mitchell Santner at the non-striker's end as South Africa slumped to 62-5 in the ninth over. Dewald Brevis put the chase back on track with 35 runs off 18 balls and George Linde made a brisk 30 off 20 balls but both holed out in the outfield while looking for big hits against Henry and Duffy, respectively. Duffy was on a hat trick when he dismissed Linde and Kwena Maphaka off successive balls but No. 11 Lungi Ngidi survived the hat-trick ball before Henry finished off the game by having Gerald Coetzee caught at mid-wicket. Advertisement Robinson and Jacobs revive Black Caps New Zealand's top order crumbled against short balls as Devon Conway's (9) return to T20s after three years lasted only seven balls before he top-edged Maphaka (2-38). Daryl Mitchell and Mitchell Hay both fell for single digits while James Neesham got his seventh duck in T20s when he pulled Maphaka to deep square leg and was caught by Corbin Bosch. But Robinson and Jacobs revived the Black Caps with their 103-run partnership and got the perfect finish by scoring 63 runs off the last five overs. Robinson completed his half-century with a six against Coetzee, who came back to international cricket after a nine-month injury layoff and conceded 19 runs in the final over to finish with 1-39. ___ AP cricket:

Robinson and fast bowlers earn New Zealand a 21-run victory over South Africa
Robinson and fast bowlers earn New Zealand a 21-run victory over South Africa

Associated Press

timean hour ago

  • Associated Press

Robinson and fast bowlers earn New Zealand a 21-run victory over South Africa

HARARE, Zimbabwe (AP) — An unbeaten century stand between Tim Robinson and debutant Bevon Jacobs earned New Zealand a 21-run victory over South Africa in a T20 tri-series match Wednesday. Robinson smashed 75 not out off 57 balls and Jacobs smacked three sixes in his unbeaten 44 to propel New Zealand to 173-5 after it crumbled to 70-5 inside the first half of its innings. South Africa, which made three changes from the team that beat Zimbabwe, was bowled out for 152 in 18.2 overs with fast bowlers Jacob Duffy (3-20) and Matt Henry (3-34) sharing six wickets between them. South Africa falls well short Lhuan-dre Pretorius provided South Africa with a brisk start by hitting six boundaries in his knock of 27 before Henry and Duffy hit back with two quick wickets. Pretorius tried to guide Henry's slower ball down to third man but got a thick outside edge to wicketkeeper Tim Seifert, while Rubin Hermann was outdone by Duffy's short ball and was caught at mid-wicket for just 1 run. South Africa promoted debutant left-arm spinner Senuran Muthusamy to No. 4, but the left-hander got his middle stumped knocked over by Ish Sodhi soon after the batting powerplay. Captain Rassie van der Dussen (6) was brilliantly run out by his counterpart Mitchell Santner at the non-striker's end as South Africa slumped to 62-5 in the ninth over. Dewald Brevis put the chase back on track with 35 runs off 18 balls and George Linde made a brisk 30 off 20 balls but both holed out in the outfield while looking for big hits against Henry and Duffy, respectively. Duffy was on a hat trick when he dismissed Linde and Kwena Maphaka off successive balls but No. 11 Lungi Ngidi survived the hat-trick ball before Henry finished off the game by having Gerald Coetzee caught at mid-wicket. Robinson and Jacobs revive Black Caps New Zealand's top order crumbled against short balls as Devon Conway's (9) return to T20s after three years lasted only seven balls before he top-edged Maphaka (2-38). Daryl Mitchell and Mitchell Hay both fell for single digits while James Neesham got his seventh duck in T20s when he pulled Maphaka to deep square leg and was caught by Corbin Bosch. But Robinson and Jacobs revived the Black Caps with their 103-run partnership and got the perfect finish by scoring 63 runs off the last five overs. Robinson completed his half-century with a six against Coetzee, who came back to international cricket after a nine-month injury layoff and conceded 19 runs in the final over to finish with 1-39. ___ AP cricket:

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