logo
Rassie Erasmus picks Varsity Cup star among Bok rookies

Rassie Erasmus picks Varsity Cup star among Bok rookies

The Citizen05-06-2025
Winger Ntokozo Makhaza is one of nine uncapped players in a 54-man Springbok squad named by Rassie Erasmus for the start of the world champions' 2025 season.
The Boks face the Barbarians at Cape Town Stadium on June 28, followed by three Tests – against Italy (in Pretoria and Gqeberha on July 5 and 12) and Georgia (in Mbombela, July 9). The squad, which was confirmed today, includes 31 world cup winners and consists of 30 forwards and 24 backs.
Makhaza, who helped the UCT Ikeys win the 2025 Varsity Cup in April, is in line to represent the Boks for the first time with Marnus van der Merwe, Neethling Fouche, Asenathi Ntlabakanye, Cobus Wiese, Renzo du Plessis, Vincent Tshituka, Juarno Augustus and Ethan Hooker.
While Fouche and Hooker were members of the Springbok training squad last season, Tshituka and Augustus had a taste of the senior international structures after being included in the Springbok Showdown Green and Gold squads in 2020.
With the Vodacom Bulls, Sharks and Leinster still in the race for the URC final, along with their teammates from Bath, Leicester Tigers and Sale Sharks, who will contest the Premiership semi-finals this week, a staggered approach will be adopted to those players joining the camp.
MORE: Baa Baas get 170-cap boost for Bok clash
The available players, which include the full Japan-based contingent following the conclusion of their season, will assemble in Johannesburg on Sunday and begin their on-field preparations on Monday. The rest of the players will join the squad as they complete their club commitments.
Five players, meanwhile, were not considered for selection due to injuries: Frans Malherbe, Elrigh Louw, Ben-Jason Dixon, Deon Fourie and Trevor Nyakane.
'We used a total of 50 players last season to balance the load on them, while at the same time building towards the 2027 Rugby World Cup in Australia, and with a few more talented youngsters in this group, we hope that they will learn valuable lessons and stake a strong claim for places in what will be a challenging, yet exciting season,' said Erasmus.
The squad will train from Monday to Friday, before returning home for the weekend to spend time with their families, and will reassemble on Sunday, 15 June for the second week of training, before travelling to Cape Town for the Barbarians match.
Full Springbok Squad:
Forwards: Cameron Hanekom, Wilco Louw, Ruan Nortje, Gerhard Steenekamp, Marco van Staden, Jan-Hendrik Wessels, Cobus Wiese (all Bulls), Eben Etzebeth, Vincent Koch, Siya Kolisi, Ntuthuko Mchunu, Ox Nche, Vincent Tshituka (Sharks), Neethling Fouche, Salmaan Moerat (Stormers), Renzo du Plessis, Asenathi Ntlabakanye (Lions), Juarno Augustus (Northampton Saints), Jean-Luc du Preez (Sale Sharks), Pieter-Steph du Toit (Toyota Verblitz), Thomas du Toit (Bath), Lood de Jager (Wild Knights), Jean Kleyn (Munster), Malcolm Marx (Kubota Spears), Franco Mostert (Honda Heat), Kwagga Smith (Shizuoka Blue Revs), RG Snyman (Leinster), Marnus van der Merwe (Scarlets), Jasper Wiese (Urayasu D-Rocks).
Backs: Lukhanyo Am, Andre Esterhuizen, Aphelele Fassi, Jaden Hendrikse, Jordan Hendrikse, Ethan Hooker, Makazole Mapimpi, Grant Williams (Sharks), Kurt-Lee Arendse, Willie le Roux, Canan Moodie (Bulls), Sacha Feinberg-Mngomezulu, Manie Libbok, Damian Willemse (Stormers), Quan Horn, Morne van den Berg, Edwill van der Merwe (Lions), Damian de Allende (Wild Knights), Faf de Klerk, Jesse Kriel (Canon Eagles), Cheslin Kolbe (Tokyo Sungoliath), Handre Pollard (Leicester Tigers), Cobus Reinach (Montpellier), Ntokozo Makhaza (UCT).
This article first appeared on SA Rugby magazine.
Breaking news at your fingertips… Follow Caxton Network News on Facebook and join our WhatsApp channel.
Nuus wat saakmaak. Volg Caxton Netwerk-nuus op Facebook en sluit aan by ons WhatsApp-kanaal.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

'We were dog sh*t,' says embarrassed Erasmus after Aussie mauling
'We were dog sh*t,' says embarrassed Erasmus after Aussie mauling

The Citizen

time3 hours ago

  • The Citizen

'We were dog sh*t,' says embarrassed Erasmus after Aussie mauling

A dejected Rassie Erasmus admitted the Wallabies were better in all departments in their upset Rugby Championship win at Ellis Park. A brutally honest Rassie Erasmus couldn't hide his embarrassment after his double World Cup winning Springboks were completely outclassed by a fired up Wallabies in a 38-22 defeat in their Rugby Championship opener at Ellis Park on Saturday night. The Boks started like they had a point to prove, rushing into a 22-0 lead after just 18 minutes, before falling away over the rest of the half, leading 22-5 at the break, and then producing an abject second half, that ended with the Aussies finishing with six unanswered tries and a big bonus point win. It was a shocking team display, with a number of players producing solid efforts, but they couldn't bring it together at all, while the famed Bok 'bomb squad' failed to ignite, and instead contributed to a desperately poor final quarter that saw the visitors dot down three tries in 12 minutes to power away. Speaking after the match a dejected Erasmus said the whole coaching staff took the blame, while he praised the brilliant performance from the Wallabies, in what was their first win at Ellis Park since 1963, and just second in 12 outings at the ground. 'This is one of the most embarrassing press conferences I have done in a while. Not just because we were awful, but they were very good. I don't want to put out the old cliché of 'credit to them', because they were good, but we made them better with our performance,' said Erasmus. 'To be 22-0 up and then slip away like that. It was similar to the first Test against Italy when we were 27-3 up and then let them back in. This is worrying. We can look for excuses, but the reality is that Australia gutsed it out.' Big injury Erasmus continued: 'They had a big injury to their key forward Will Skelton, but it was us that slacked off and gave them soft tries. Overall, Australia was better than us in most departments. 'We did not scrum them, and they beat us in the lineouts. For the first 25 minutes we were good at the breakdown, but after Siya (Kolisi) got injured and Marco (van Staden) had to go for an HIA, they bullied us there too. We, as coaches, got it terribly wrong. 'It wasn't just tactical, they also physically dominated us. The longer the game went on, the stronger they got. At altitude, that's supposed to be us. It shows what (Wallabies coach) Joe (Schmidt) is building there.' Erasmus added that it was also a major blow that they allowed the Wallabies to pick up a bonus point, for scoring three more tries than the Boks, while they picked up none, and that was compounded by the All Blacks' bonus point 41-24 win over Argentina in Cordoba. 'The saddest thing is it's five (log) points for them, and we didn't even fight back to take the bonus point away. So we're on zero, they're on five. I can butter this up to sound cool and respectful, but we were just really dog sh*t on the day,' admitted Erasmus.

Gutsy Wallabies stun Boks with sensational comeback, ending 62-year Ellis Park drought
Gutsy Wallabies stun Boks with sensational comeback, ending 62-year Ellis Park drought

Daily Maverick

time10 hours ago

  • Daily Maverick

Gutsy Wallabies stun Boks with sensational comeback, ending 62-year Ellis Park drought

Australia overcame a 22-0 deficit to beat the Springboks 38-22 in the Rugby Championship opener at Ellis Park on Saturday. The Wallabies ended a losing streak of 62 years at Ellis Park with a magnificent come-from-behind effort that must rank as one of their greatest-ever victories. They turned over a 22-0 deficit after 29 minutes to run out 38-22 winners, stunning the 55,000-strong Ellis Park crowd. It's an outcome that will rock the Springboks to the core after one of their best starts was followed by a disastrous second half. The margin of defeat was the heaviest in the Rassie Erasmus era, which started in 2018. It was the first time that the Boks have conceded five tries in a half in the same period. And to compound matters, the Boks Rugby Championship defence is already in trouble as they failed to win a single log point while Australia took five from the contest. The Boks can point to being on the wrong end of a penalty count with frustration. Referee Ben O'Keeffe was hard on the Boks at the breakdown as the world champions conceded 10 penalties, while Australia somehow only infringed four times. At least two of Australia's six tries were scored after clear forward passes that went unpunished, but the reality was the visitors were the better team. The Boks mentally fell apart, the longer the Wallabies stayed in the game. Australia mined deep wells of reserve to stay composed after a ferocious Springbok onslaught in the opening quarter, which should have settled the matter. The Boks had chances to kill the game off when they led comfortably, but three times they failed to convert when on Australia's tryline either side of halftime. With each little positive outcome, the Wallabies grew in confidence while the Boks wilted. The Wallabies 'won' the second quarter 5-0 and from there their confidence grew. Erasmus will have some serious thinking to do because the drop-off in performance was alarming. From a position of total command and control, the Boks disintegrated into rabble. They were beaten at the breakdown and the lineouts fell apart. They also overplayed once they were 22-0 up, failing to control the game from a position of strength. Heart If there is one thing this Wallaby team has shown in 2025, it's that it possesses heaps of character. They were unlucky to lose the series against the British & Irish Lions 2-1, after a poor first half in the first Test. In some ways, this match was a microcosm of the Lions series, only this time Australia came out on top. They were rocked back in the first half but dominated the second, scoring five of their tries after halftime. Fullback Tom Wright, captain and No 8 Harry Wilson, scrumhalf Nic White, flanks Tom Hooper and Fraser McReight, lock Nick Frost and centre Joseph-Aukuso Sua'ali'i were immense, but singling out individuals is unfair. This was a collective effort that resulted in a stunning win against the odds. The Springboks produced a near-perfect opening quarter, scoring three tries as they rocked the Wallabies, but didn't quite break their spirit. The bombardment started from the kick-off. Lock Lood de Jager gathered White's kick and set up a ruck. Scrumhalf Grant Williams launched a contestable kick, which Wallaby fullback Wright spilled on the 10-metre line to give the Boks possession. The Boks then launched into attack mode, taking the ball through multiple phases, utilising both power and finesse. Marco van Staden, centre André Esterhuizen, lock Eben Etzebeth and others featured prominently, before Kurt-Lee Arendse finished in the left-hand corner. The time on the stadium clock read 1:33. The game was barely two minutes old and the Wallabies were on the rack. The restart to the try followed the same pattern, with De Jager collecting and Wright spilling Williams' kick, leading to Australia being buried in their own territory without a way to escape. It was almost painful to watch as Wallaby defenders were smashed back in contact as the Boks warmed to their task. It was relentless. Manie Libbok, who conducted the brutal orchestra from a comfortable lectern created by his forwards, landed a tenth minute penalty to grow the lead. Minutes later Esterhuizen scored his first international try in his twenty-first Test after another breathtaking build-up featuring Libbok, Jesse Kriel and Pieter-Steph du Toit in the final phase. It was rugby from another level. Captain Siya Kolisi added the team's third try after 18 minutes, when he was alive to a small hole around the fringes of a ruck close to the Wallaby line after another period of Bok assaults. When Libbok converted the score was 22-0, and it seemed there was no way back for the shell-shocked Wallabies. Comeback kids But if there is one thing Australia showed in the series loss to the British & Irish Lions, it's that they possess resilience and no shortage of nous. They stemmed the bleeding, thanks to a slew of breakdown penalties against the Boks – four in seven minutes – while Van Staden was off the field for a head injury assessment. This was the Wallabies' best period of the first half, and they were rewarded with the try for left wing Dylan Pietsch, after some clever manipulation of space down the short side. It was also a wake-up call for the Boks to tidy up their breakdown work after a lull. It was a warning they never heeded. The home team ended the half strongly and came close to scoring again, but valiant Wallaby defence kept them at bay and allowed the visitors brief sanctuary in the changeroom. But after halftime, when the Boks again failed to score when deep on the attack, Australia started to chance their arm and scored some superb breakout tries. Wilson scored the first of his two tries from what was a forward pass by prop Angus Bell. No matter, it stood, and suddenly there were only 10 points in it. When Sua'ali'i intercepted a Libbok pass 40m out to score, there were only three points in it. Wilson grabbed a second try minutes later from another linebreak to unbelievably give the Wallabies the lead. When wing Max Jorgenson scored the fifth try, which had its genesis inside Australia's 22 and from a wildly forward pass, the game was up. Wright added a sixth try as the Boks tried to run from deep and spilled the ball, to sum up their second-half display and a serious bout of soul-searching. DM Scorers:

Springbok player ratings from 38-22 defeat to Australia at Ellis Park
Springbok player ratings from 38-22 defeat to Australia at Ellis Park

The Citizen

time13 hours ago

  • The Citizen

Springbok player ratings from 38-22 defeat to Australia at Ellis Park

Some of the Bok players performed well individually, but as a team they were well beaten on Saturday. The Springboks suffered a shock 38-22 defeat to the Wallabies in the Rugby Championship opener at Ellis Park on Saturday. After scoring three early tries and being 22-0 up after 20 minutes, the reigning champions conceded six tries and 38 unanswered points to go down to the Wallabies at the stadium for the first time since 1963. Here is how The Citizen rated the performance of the Bok players, out of 10. Aphelele Fassi 5: He tried hard on attack, without making much ground, while his kicking out of hand was poor. Didn't get too many opportunities to show his true potential. Edwill van der Merwe 7: He was excellent in defence, chasing back on two occasions to nullify dangerous situation. Looked dangerous with ball in hand. Jesse Kriel 6: He made one excellent line break which led to a try by the Boks, made a few tackles and missed a few as well – one resulting in an Aussie try. André Esterhuizen 8: He was excellent in defence, making good reads and tackled hard, while he also carried well over the gainline, with one good break, scored a first Test try. Kurt-Lee Arendse 7: He scored a try, was excellent in the air contesting for ball and made a few good defensive plays, one of which prevented a potential try. Manie Libbok 6: His distribution was good, he made one quality line break, while his kicking, to goal and out of hand, was decent. He made a poor pass which resulted in an Aussie try. Grant Williams 7: His service was good, he looked dangerous with ball in hand without ever really threatening, while his kicking game was top notch. The dejected Springbok players at the end of the match against Australia at Ellis Park on Saturday. Picture: Sydney Seshibedi/Gallo Images Siya Kolisi 7: He carried strongly on a number of occasions and cleaned rucks, while he also did well to pick up and score a try. Left the action after 45 minutes. Pieter-Steph du Toit 8: He played a role in Andre Esterhuizen's try with a good offload, he stole a lineout ball with Aussies on attack and made several big carries and tackles. Marco van Staden 7: He made a number of big carries early on to get the Boks on the front foot and he tackled hard, but faded as the game went on. Lood de Jager 7: He carried strongly in the early stages, and made a number of tackles, especially in dangerous situations. Eben Etzebeth 8: One of his best Tests in some time. He was all over the place; he carried well and tackled superbly, and was a menace in the lineouts and jumping for high kicks. Wilco Louw 6: He scrummed well on the few occasions he had to, but otherwise enjoyed a quiet game. Needs to get more involved in general play. Malcolm Marx 6: He missed his lineout target on three occasions, but won a breakdown penalty and was busy in the tight-loose, often collecting loose ball and carrying. Ox Nche 6: He scrummed well when he had to, and carried on one occasion and made a few tackles. Bench 4: Not the best outing for the 'bomb squad'. Kwagga Smith was the busiest of them all, while Canan Moodie missed a tackle which led to a try and Damian Willemse was stepped for a try. Bongi Mbonambi missed a lineout, while Boan Venter, Asenathi Ntlabakanye, and Franco Mostert were back-pedalling. Cobus Reinach made a late appearance.

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