logo
Matt Williams: Bulls have a simple, winning game plan, and Leinster must simply smash it

Matt Williams: Bulls have a simple, winning game plan, and Leinster must simply smash it

Irish Times13-06-2025
In the decades since Joel Stransky's drop goal sailed over the Ellis Park crossbar to win the 1995 RWC Final, South African rugby teams have refined that famous day's game plan into an owner's manual for winning finals.
Across the decades, in repeated winning finals performances, South African teams have implemented that original 1995 winning plan with little deviation from its basics. At its heart, this gameplan's genius is designed to place game-winning pressure on their opponents in the most extreme environment of elite rugby finals.
Like all great plans, it is very simple. It is based on the truth that, in big games, the team that makes the least mistakes wins.
In rugby, there are only three ways to move the ball forward: either by kicking, mauling or running the ball.
READ MORE
Springboks' Joel Stransky is congratulated by head coach Kich Christie after their 1995 Rugby World Cup Final victory against New Zealand at Ellis Park in Johannesburg. Photograph: Shaun Botterill/Allsport/A running game requires passing, which carries the highest risk of the three forms of 'go forward'. So, in finals, the South Africans all but eliminate the running game from their play.
Selection is paramount and the South Africans choose as many giant forwards as the laws allow. The bigger, the better. The ignorant tolerance from World Rugby that allows the exploitation of the loophole in our safety laws for a 7-1 or 6-2 bench has been a giant bonus to the South Africans' game plan.
This is because the foundational principle of the SA plan is to completely dominate all scrummaging with the sole purpose of winning penalties.
The second key factor is to select a goal kicker with a long-range boot and an exceptionally high success percentage. Any kickable scrum penalty is gladly taken, and the three points accumulated to put scoreboard pressure on their opponent.
While the current generation of South African backline players are immensely gifted athletes, any attacking ability is a secondary consideration behind their ability to chase kicks.
[
Six of the best games between Leinster and Bulls ahead of URC final
Opens in new window
]
The aim of the South African kicking game is to trap their opponent in their own half so that any error will be punished with a shot at a penalty goal. If a shot at the posts is not possible, then a kick to touch will be followed by a lineout that almost certainly will be mauled.
While the basis of this plan has been around for 30 years, that does not mean that it is outdated. When we are considering tactics and strategies, the term 'old school' does not exist. The only question that needs to be answered is, 'Does it work?' As the South African game plan for finals remains highly effective, the answer to that is a big 'Yes'.
As the late Australian Billionaire Kerry Packer once said of Genghis Khan, 'He wasn't very lovable, but he was bloody effective.'
The same can be said of the South African finals game plan. It creates spectacularly ugly games of rugby, but it wins trophies.
John Smit, coach Jake White and Bryan Habana celebrate winning the 2007 World Cup rugby final between England and South Africa. Photograph: Liewig Christian/Corbis via Getty Images
The South Africans will argue that the ends justify the means. Which is understandable from their point of view. While acknowledging its effectiveness, we have to also state that it does create turgid viewing on rugby's biggest days.
The Bulls are guided by the 2007 World Cup-winning coach Jake White. Vastly experienced and tactically astute, with an extraordinarily high rugby IQ, White has played a big role in refining the game plan that has provided so much success for South African teams.
As the Bulls have lost two UFC finals in 2022 and 2024, I expect White to implement the tried-and-tested South African finals game plan in full this weekend.
Usually, an Irish team blessed with the golden opportunity to perform on the hallowed turf of Croke Park against an opponent who has been forced to travel up from South Africa would be the red hot favourites. Yet, after so many heartbreaks in semi-finals and finals, the psychological trauma of those torments has damaged Leinster's confidence as a club.
Confidence is contagious. So too is the lack of it.
The Bulls are aiming to rip open every psychological scab and make all of Leinster's past mental slashes bleed once again. As the men in blue walk out on to Croker, they will be under an almost unimaginable mountain of pressure. Buoyed by the fact that in the past two URC finals the away team has lifted the trophy, the astute mind of Jake White will have the Bulls aiming to maximise the pressure thumping inside the minds of the Leinster players. So, against all logic, it will be the Bulls who will hold the psychological advantage.
Twenty-four years ago, at the first Celtic League final, which was the forerunner of today's URC, Leo Cullen was a young Leinster second-rower.
Leinster's Jamie Osborne scores his side's fifth try at the URC semi-final between Leinster and Glasgow Warriors at Aviva Stadium. Photograph: Ben Brady/Inpho
That day at half time, Leinster were in deep trouble. With a player sent off and trailing on the scoreboard to a talented Munster, no one in the rugby world gave that Leinster team any chance of winning. The only individuals on the planet who did were the only people that mattered – the players inside the dressingroom. To their great credit, that Leinster team believed they could win and put in a spectacular second-half shift for a famous victory.
If Leo Cullen can make today's Leinster players believe that they have the talent to overcome their past, then they will win because, despite their history, this remains an excellent team.
[
Leinster's Dan Sheehan says it is time to get physical in Saturday's showdown with Bulls
Opens in new window
]
While the Bulls are bringing some potent tactics, to paraphrase Mike Tyson, Leinster must smash the Bulls' plans with a D4 punch to their Pretorian noses. To do this, Leinster must remain true to who they are, their heritage and their DNA. At every opportunity, they must relentlessly physically attack the Bulls, forcing the psychological pressure back on the South Africans. Remembering that the Bulls are also scared, having lost two finals in recent years.
On Saturday, the long-suffering Leinster faithful have a giant role to play. While D4 is doubting their team, the Bible advises them to 'act as if you have faith and faith will be provided'. Or, in modern parlance, 'Fake it till you make it.'
So to all the 'Molly Malones', leave your doubts at home and yell yourselves hoarse to inspire your team inside that glorious sporting cathedral.
For Leinster to banish the past four seasons to the waste paper basket of history, they will have to overcome a Bulls game plan that has been proven capable of winning finals. Despite the enormity of that task, with belief, courage and hearts of fire, it can be Leinster's day.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

We were really dogs*** - Rassie Erasmus on South Africa's collapse v Australia
We were really dogs*** - Rassie Erasmus on South Africa's collapse v Australia

Irish Daily Mirror

time40 minutes ago

  • Irish Daily Mirror

We were really dogs*** - Rassie Erasmus on South Africa's collapse v Australia

Rassie Erasmus didn't hold back in his criticism of South Africa's surprise collapse against Australia in the Rugby Championship opener in Johannesburg. The Springboks raced into a 22-0 lead in the opening quarter, with Kurt-Lee Arendse, Andre Esterhuizen and skipper Siya Kolisi scoring tries. At that stage it looked like it was going to get embarrassing for the Wallabies but Joe Schmidt's charges staged a remarkable comeback to claim their first win at Ellis Park in 62 years. Australia's skipper Harry Wilson led by example with a brilliant display at the breakdown and scored two tries, while Dylan Pietsch, Max Jorgensen and Joseph Suaalii also scored without reply from the shell-shocked hosts. "I must be honest, it is probably one of the most embarrassing press conferences I've done in a while," said Boks head coach Erasmus. "Not because we were awful, they were really good and I want to put the old cliché out there, credit to them, they were good - but we made them better with our poor performance. Harry Wilson runs with the ball to score a try as South Africa's fly-half Manie Libbok misses a tackle during the Rugby Championship first round Test match between South Africa and Australia at the Ellis Park Stadium (Image: WIKUS DE WET/AFP via Getty Images) "To be 22-0 up, we did the same against Italy, 27-3 up and then we let teams back in. Yes we gave them one or two soft tries but overall they were just better than us on the day in most departments and yeah, we as coaches got it terribly wrong, and we have to look first at ourselves before we point fingers at the players. "We know that from now to next Saturday we have to take a lot of flak and we're very disappointed, we feel bad for our supporters and are feeling bad for our players overall for what we produced. "I don't think they tactically out-smarted us, I think they also physically dominated us. The saddest thing is we didn't even fight back to take a bonus point away. Listen man, I can butter this up to sound cool and respectful, but we were really dogshit on the day." A jubilant Schmidt gave his reaction after his side picked up five precious points to start their Rugby Championship bid on the back of their 2-1 series loss to Andy Farrell's British and Irish Lions. "At 22-0 down after the first quarter, there was real courage again from the players," Schmidt said. "We were forced to play catch-up and take a few risks, and there were a few lucky bounces for us, so we are not going to get too carried away. "But at the same time I am incredibly proud of the group. I am realistic about getting a little bit of luck, but delighted we came back. 1963 was a long time ago, so the players are delighted."

Joe Schmidt hails Australia's dramatic fight back to stun South Africa in Rugby Championship opener at Ellis Park
Joe Schmidt hails Australia's dramatic fight back to stun South Africa in Rugby Championship opener at Ellis Park

Irish Independent

timean hour ago

  • Irish Independent

Joe Schmidt hails Australia's dramatic fight back to stun South Africa in Rugby Championship opener at Ellis Park

It ended a 62-year wait for Australia to claim victory at the Springboks' spiritual home, one that had looked unlikely following an excellent first quarter from the home side in their Rugby Championship opener. Schmidt admitted the first 20 minutes 'was not good for the heart', but Australia then took control of the game for a win that will rank among their best in test rugby. 'At 22-0 down after the first quarter, there was real courage again from the players,' Schmidt told SuperSport. 'We were forced to play catch-up and take a few risks, and there were a few lucky bounces for us, so we are not going to get too carried away. 'But at the same time I am incredibly proud of the group. I am realistic about getting a little bit of luck, but delighted we came back. 1963 was a long time ago, to the players are delighted.' Australia took the lead around the hour-mark, but that is usually when the Springboks come into their own with their powerful replacement forwards off the bench. But the buoyant visitors kept coming and Schmidt saw no repeat of a previous loss to the Springboks in similar circumstances. 'This win is right up there, I came here with an Irish team and I think we were 26-10 up with 20 minutes to go and got steamrolled and beaten,' he said. 'So to get what we did tonight at Ellis Park is testament to the character of the group.' Australia will be sweating over two players who left the field injured ahead of another Rugby Championship clash with the Springboks in Cape Town next Saturday. Dylan Pietsch injured his jaw and captain Harry Wilson, who scored two tries, pulled up lame as the number eight crossed for his second score.

Australia fight back to stun South Africa with bonus-point win at Ellis Park
Australia fight back to stun South Africa with bonus-point win at Ellis Park

Irish Times

time3 hours ago

  • Irish Times

Australia fight back to stun South Africa with bonus-point win at Ellis Park

Rugby Championship: South Africa 22 Australia 38 Australia rallied from 22-0 down as captain Harry Wilson scored two tries in a stunning 38-22 bonus-point victory over South Africa in their Rugby Championship opener on Saturday, the Wallabies' first victory at Ellis Park since 1963. South Africa raced into a commanding lead through tries by winger Kurt-Lee Arendse, centre Andre Esterhuizen and number eight Siya Kolisi, but their Achilles heel has been the breakdown and it was there that Australia began to take control. The Springboks led 22-5 at halftime but Australia came alive in the second period and were excellent in soaking up pressure and hitting the world champions with fast breaks as they won on South African soil for the first time in 14 years. Winger Dylan Pietsch, centre Joseph Suaalii, winger Max Jorgensen and Tom Wright also crossed for the visitors in one of Australia's greatest test wins. READ MORE 'This [victory] is right up there, it has been 60-odd years since the Wallabies have had success in Joburg. We worked hard and had confidence in ourselves,' Australia prop James Slipper said. 'We had a slow start, but credit to the boys, they stuck in there. It was a good squad effort tonight and one we can be proud of. It is a special moment for the group.' You seeing this?! — Wallabies (@wallabies) South Africa did not score a point after the 18th minute in a performance that will provide much soul-searching as they could not handle Australia's accuracy in the tight and broken play. 'We let ourselves down,' Springboks captain Kolisi said. 'Things we worked on, discipline, the breakdown ... they won the breakdown battle. We have to take it on the chin, but it is unacceptable the way we performed. 'We would get into their 22 and they would steal the ball [at the breakdown]. Credit to Australia, they kept fighting and never gave up. They deserved it.' Australia looked all at sea at the start, but thanks to several outstanding individual displays they clawed back to secure a comprehensive victory. When Arendse, Esterhuizen with his first Springbok try, and Kolisi crossed, it was early one-way traffic but by the half-hour mark the momentum had swung Australia's way. They scored first in the second half to close the gap to 10 points when Wilson burst into a gap in the Springbok defence and flyhalf James O'Connor added the conversion on his return to test rugby after three years. Australia then took control against the rattled home side, whose increasingly desperate attacks were countered with further tries by the visitors. Australia coach Joe Schmidt hailed his side's courage as they fought back from 22 points down to score five second-half tries. Australia's head coach Joe Schmidt. Photograph: Phill Magakoe/AFP via Getty Schmidt admitted the first 20 minutes 'was not good for the heart', but Australia then took control of the game for a win that will rank among their best in test rugby. 'At 22-0 down after the first quarter, there was real courage again from the players,' Schmidt told SuperSport. 'We were forced to play catch-up and take a few risks, and there were a few lucky bounces for us, so we are not going to get too carried away. 'But at the same time I am incredibly proud of the group. I am realistic about getting a little bit of luck, but delighted we came back. 1963 was a long time ago, to the players are delighted.' 'This win is right up there, I came here with an Irish team and I think we were 26-10 up with 20 minutes to go and got steamrolled and beaten,' he said. 'So to get what we did tonight at Ellis Park is testament to the character of the group.' (c) Copyright Thomson Reuters 2025

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