‘Electric vibe' among Springboks as Rassie Erasmus delighted with alignment camp
Rassie Erasmus Springbok coach Rassie Erasmus. Photo: BackpagePix
Image: BackpagePix
Springbok coach Rassie Erasmus is in the starting blocks for the looming international season after a second alignment camp concluded in Cape Town on Friday afternoon.
The two-day camp featured a series of boardroom sessions and a gym session on Friday, while a bunch of overseas-based players joined the boardroom sessions virtually.
The players also participated in a series of Outfox virtual training sessions to familiarise themselves with the new structures.
Outfox is a video game devised by Erasmus.
The former loose forward shared the excitement among the players after he and the Bok assistant coaches made a series of presentations over the two days.
He said that with the season starting in little over a month against the Barbarians in Cape Town in the first match between the sides in South Africa, the vibe among the players and coaches was electric.
'We are fast approaching the international season, and although most of the players have big matches lined up in their respective competitions before we assemble at our training camp in June, we were pleased with what transpired at the first and second alignment camps,' said Erasmus.
'We believe we are on the right track in terms of our preparations and planning for the season.
'The coaches have been working tirelessly to improve our structures to ensure that we can improve on our performances last season.
'It was great to see how the players responded to the adaptations and changes we have made to our structures.
'We have said time and time again that we have to continue to evolve to remain a force at the top level of the game.
'We are under no illusions about the challenging season ahead.
'But we are pleased with the progress we have been making off the field, and we are really looking forward to the season.'
Erasmus was also pleased to see the enthusiasm among the new players in the group – Vincent Tshituka, Ntokozo Makhaza and Juarno Augustus, who tuned in virtually from England – and he believed that this experience would benefit them immensely to grow even further in their careers.
Star wing Kurt-Lee Arendse has already completed his Japanese club season, and was spotted in attendance at the camp too.
'They are all very talented players, and it was evident how proud they were to have this opportunity to rub shoulders with this group of players, some of whom have been with us since 2018, and to learn from them and the coaches,' said the Bok coach.

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles

IOL News
4 hours ago
- IOL News
Kgothatso Montjane reclaims French Open doubles title at Roland Garros
South African wheelchair tennis player Kgothatso Montjane (right) and Japanese partner Yui Kamiji at Roland Garros in Paris after winning their second French Open double title together. South African wheelchair tennis star Kgothatso Montjane reclaimed the French Open doubles title with Japanese partner Yui Kamiji in dramatic fashion at Roland Garros on Friday night. It was a fourth doubles Grand Slam title for the South African ace, who fell short of reaching the singles final in an earlier semi-final. Montjane and Kamiji faced the Chinese pairing of Xiaohui Li and Ziying Wang, the No 2 seeds, in the women's doubles final. They had to dig deep, fighting back from a set down to secure a 4-6 7-5 (10-7) victory. They reclaimed the trophy they lifted at Roland Garros in 2023. The duo also won the US Open title together in 2023, as well as the Wimbledon crown last year. Montjane and Kamiji beat top seeds Manami Tanaka of Japan and Zhenzhen Shu of China 6-1 6-4 to reach the decider. Earlier on Friday, in the men's quad doubles final, Donald Ramphadi of SA and Turkish partner Ahmet Kaplan lost 6-3 6-4 to Guy Sasson of Israel and Niels Vink of the Netherlands.


The Citizen
5 hours ago
- The Citizen
Bafana's Broos content despite Tanzania draw
'It was a totally new team, with players who hadn't played together except for the same team (club),' said the Bafana head coach. Hugo Broos was happy with what he saw in Bafana's goallessdraw with Tanzania on Friday. Picture: Alche Greeff/BackpagePix Hugo Broos was satisfied with the performance of his new-look Bafana Bafana side, even though they could only manage at goalless draw at home to Tanzania in an international friendly at the Peter Mokaba Stadium. ALSO READ: Tepid Bafana held by Tanzania The Bafana head coach gave several players their senior international debuts in the match, as Bafana defended well, but failed to create much against a well-organised Taifa Stars. Bafana's Broos – 'About eight jerseys' 'After every game we give a jersey to each player getting his first cap,' said Broos. 'I think today we gave out about eight jerseys. It was a totally new team, with players who hadn't played together except for the same team (club). 'So it was not easy, and that is why I said before the game that the result was not important. We wanted to win, and we could have, we had chances. But the performance was more important. And I am happy with what I saw today.' Of the Bafana players who started Friday's match, goalkeeper Ricardo Goss, captain Fawaaz Basadien, Pirates duo Thalente Mbatha and Patrick Maswanganyi and forward Oswin Appollis could be considered regulars in the Bafana squad. 'The defence, without Basadien, all the rest was new,' added Broos. 'Even Ricardo (Goss), he is always with us but it is always Ronwen (Williams) who is playing. In the midfielder (Simphiwe) Selepe was now, up front (Tshepang) Moremi was new, (Ashley) Cupido was new. What can I ask more than the performance we put up tonight? It was very positive for me and I hope to see the same thing on Tuesday and that we win. 'A better feeling' 'It is a better feeling when you win.' ALSO READ: Pirates release Chiefs-linked defender Bafana will play Mozambique in another friendly at the Peter Mokaba Stadium on Tuesday, where Broos is expected to give even more players their senior national team debuts.

IOL News
7 hours ago
- IOL News
Bulls, Sharks to serve another epic at Loftus
THE Loftus crowd will add colour to the epic semi-final clash between the Bulls and the Sharks. | BACKPAGEPIX A BULLS v Sharks knockout/playoff clash will always be one for the ages and the United Rugby Championship semi-final between the two at Loftus Versfeld on Saturday at 6.15pm, is sure serve another epic storyline. Judging by the quarter-final scorelines, Bulls beat Edinburgh 42-33 while Sharks had to be clinical in the penalty shootout to go past Munster after a 24-24 extra time draw, there is no denying the home side a favourite's tag. The good news for South African rugby is that Mzansi already has a team in the final. Independent Newspapers rugbby writers Mike Greenaway and Leighton Koopman look at which side will win and why. WHY THE BULLS WILL WIN Leighton Koopman As South Africa's form side in the United Rugby Championship, boosted by home advantage and team that peaked at the right time of the year, the Bulls are in the inside lane to win the semi-final against the Sharks at Loftus Versfeld on Saturday evening. Their dominating scrum and physical forwards will give them the edge over the Sharks who had a thing of late to only arrive in the second half. While the competition at scrum time will be the perfect test of strength versus strength, it's the Bulls' overpowering scrum that will drive the visitors into submission. While there is an all-Bok front row for the Sharks too, tighthead Wilco Louw has been a destroyer up front and Nche will have a hard time keeping him in check. And on the other side, the young Jan-Hendrik Wessels will stand strong against veteran Vincent Koch. Then, the superiority of the Bulls in the lineout will outshine their opponents. Captain Ruan Nortjé will lick his lips at poaching balls but also securing them longside JF van Heerden and Cobus Wiese. The Sharks losing Eben Etzebeth and Jason Jenkins will be music to the ears of the Bulls' lineout. It is a risk bringing Johan Goosen back from injury and dropping him straight into the starting side, but he can pull the strings to set the backline running. Along with fullback Willie le Roux, they can open the gaps to set the likes of Canan Moodie and Sebastian de Klerk away. De Klerk and Moodie's prowess under the high kicks, and there will be plenty up and unders coming from Goosen and scrumhalf Embrose Papier. The Bulls' overall gameplan, they vary their tactics way better than the Sharks, should see them be too strong for their visitors, and they will progress to another final. WHY THE SHARKS WILL WIN Mike Greenaway The Sharks are a team tailor-made for high-pressure knockout games. John Plumtree has created a culture where the team loves to triumph over adversity. The Sharks have won their last six games without reaching anywhere near their potential. They are a dogged side that enjoys pulling the contest down into the trenches for unarmed combat. It won't worry them in the slightest that they are not scoring tries. Any way to the winner's podium will do, and if that means leaving the cork in the champagne rugby approach, so be it. The Bulls have been scoring an average of five tries per game at Loftus as their impressive backs cash in on the sparkling possession coming their way, but semi-finals and finals are different beasts. The pressure cranks up; defences get tighter; the aerial game is preferred to adventurous attack. All of this suits the Sharks and their street-fighter approach. They will drag the Bulls into an arm wrestle. This is the way the Sharks have been playing all season. In a sense, they have been playing finals rugby for most of the URC. There is also the significant fact that they have seven double World Cup-winning Springboks in their team, including four in their pack. Even without Etzebeth and Jenkins, this is a Sharks pack that can stand up to the Bulls. Leading them is Siya Kolisi. The Springbok captain's experience of making good decisions in the heat of battle will stand the Sharks in good stead, while his inspired move from flank to No 8 allows for Plumtree to pick a genuine fetcher in James Venter and an exceptional blindside flank in Vincent Tshituka, who was recently called up to the Springbok squad. It means the Sharks have an underrated loose trio to go with a solid tight five, so the Sharks' backs will get their fair share of decent possession. There is also the nagging suspicion that the Sharks' backline could click when it matters most. There are too many superstars in that back division for cohesion to evade them much longer.