Jun 29 2009

2 Springbok legends, Joost van der Westhuizen and Ruben Kruger were hospitalized over the weekend.

Both were Springbok legends, Blue Bull heroes and members of the 1995 world cup winning Springbok side. Both epitomised everything that a Blue Bull and Springbok should be. They were remarkably similar in that they both played the game extremely hard, had a never say die attitude and simply did their talking on the field.

Both have gone through plenty of turmoil recently, with Joost being embroiled in controversy over drug allegations. I believe someone was trying to defame and blackmail him, and they should leave him alone. No doubt the stress has contributed to his recent collapse.

Ruben Kruger on the other hand has had a tumour removed from his brain and had been recovering well. He apparently became unconcious whilst driving and is in a critical condition.

My heart goes out to both players and their families. Both are Blue Bulls, both are Springbok legends, and great role models. I hope they have a speedy recovery and get well soon.

Jun 29 2009

Springboks Schalk Burger and Bakkies Botha were both suspended after the Springboks v the British and Irish Lions second test at Loftus Versfeld.

Schalk Burger was given an 8 week suspension for eye gouging Lions winger Luke Fitzgerald. After only 27 seconds of play, Schalk had his hand in Fitzgerald’s eyes which was picked up by touch judge Bryce Lawrence.  Lawrence stated to the ref  that it was “At least a yellow card”. In other words he was telling the ref to give a yellow card. 

Looking at the evidence, Schalkis guilty of eye gouging. He has never been a dirty player, but then he has never performed so badly in a season as he has now. In my view he looks a frustrated player, as evidenced by his arguing with referees. He was playing his 50th test, and instead of going down as a Springbok legend, he has tarnished his image forever. Sure he has had plenty of yellow cards, but they have come about from over zealous and reckless play not thuggery and maliciousness.

I believe he should have been shown a red card, and struggle to understand why Bryce Lawrence didn’t make the recommendation. I sympathise with Lions supporters, but I as a Springbok supporter I was happy he stayed on the field for 70 minutes, else we would have struggled! An Italian player got 8 weeks in New Zealand for a similar incident, so at least there is consistency, but I think Schalk can feel lucky it was only 8 weeks. In future I believe eye gougers should get a a lot longer than that.

Bakkies Botha meanwhile was cited and given a 2 week suspension for a dangerous tackle. At a ruck he came charging in from an onside position and this dislocated the shoulder of prop Adam Jones. He didn’t bind on to another player at the ruck, but then again who does?

Bakkies is unfairly treated in my view. That was good cleaning out, and unfortunately a Lions player was too soft and got hurt. He should go back to his knitting classes not complain about it. This is rugby.

The Lions management and British tabloids are screaming out about the Springbok dirty play. However there were plenty of high tackles by Lions players in the second test, and after the first 2 Springbok tries, both players were tackled late.

JP Pietersen was dangerously pushed after he had dotted the ball down, and Bryan Habana was jumped on after he had placed the ball for his try too. Why weren’t any Lions cited?

It seems to me that the Springboks and minnow sides are unfairly treated by citing commissioners and the judiciary. Take this years super 14 and Sione Lauaki and his coathanger tackle on Bryan Habana. Brett Sheehan and his shoulder charge. Or the 2007 world cup when Schalk was suspended, and others weren’t for similar offences. Where is the consistency? Oh well, I shall take comfort with a series victory over the Lions for the next 12 years, that should be enough to keep me happy!

Jun 28 2009

In general the Boks were disappointing. Lack of discipline cost them in penalties, lack of execution caused costly errors, whilst lack of energy and passion simply produced a substandard display. However the last 20 minutes showed what they are capable of us Morne Steyn, Jacque Fourie and Heinrich Brussow seemed to lift the players around them.

Springbok Player ratings:

1. The Beast – 7

Had a strong effort in the loose, but came off second best in the scrums against Gethin Jenkins.

2. Bismarck du Plessis – 6

Did the basics well enough, and while many criticised his quick penalty tap late in the second half, the Lions were never back 10m, and more should have come from that from the ref.

3. John Smit – 8

Led well from the front. Always gives 100% and keep the team composed right until the end. A cool, calm and collected captain.

4. Bakkies Botha – 6

Had a couple of strong runs with ball in hand. We need to see more of that, and as the Springbok enforcer, allowed the Lions to dominate our pack.

5. Victor Matfield – 7

Had a high work rate, but didn’t get the usual steals on opposition throw in the lineout. Always performs well but not one of his more exceptional tests.

6. Schalk Burger – 4

Could have been lucky to play 69 minutes. Not the player he once was. Jake White says he is the best player he ever coached, but for all his enthusiasm and commitment, lacks the quality of execution in my book. Gave away a silly offside penalty also in the second half, and ultimately cost the Boks at least 6 points.

7. Juan Smith -6

A fairly quiet game or Juan Smith. Not prominent on attack of defence, maybe he needs a rest or prehaps it is time to give Dewald Potgeiter a chance bearing in mind the 2011 world cup.

8. Pierre Spies – 7

Strong with ball in hand, made some some telling runs. His covering of the line improved from Durban, and made a try saving tackle late in the first half. Was still slightly anonymous however.

9. Fourie Du Preez – 6

Never has a bad game, but like Spies has been slightly anonymous this series. Didn’t dominate with his kicking game, but in the second half started to run the ball back at the Lions more and more, creating momentum for the Boks.

10. Ruan Pienaar – 4

Had a bad day with the boot. Missed too many easy kicks, and also failed to find touch from a lineout when the Boks were under pressure. Do we drop him for Morne Steyn? If de Villiers loves him so much, he should be persisted with, which is tough on Morne.

11. Bryan Habana – 7

Contributed to the Lions try by coming off his wing, but had a high workrate. Good to see him involved and running onto the ball in the second half, although with little room to move. It’s not the best ball, but it’s a start. Took his try well.

12. Jean de Villiers – 5

Hasn’t regained the high standards he set in 2008. Defence was average, and not breaking the line on attack. Time to try the in form Wynand Olivier?

13. Adi Jacobs – 6

Improved his defence by showing greater commitment. Had some good runs on attack, just failing to link up with other runners. Has done nothing wrong, but Fourie’s exceptional showing should demote him to the bench.

14. JP Pietersen – 7

A much stronger game, running onto the ball more courtesy of better ball. Gave away a silly penalty however in the first half.

15. Frans Steyn – 5

Once again inconsistent with his kicking, although they are long range attempts. Inconsistent at the back and produce enough contestable kicks, which allowed Kearney to get the Lions into Bok territory.

16. Chiliboy Ralepelle -

Did not play

17. Deon Carstens -

Did not play

18. Andries Bekker – 5

Gave away a crucial penalty which almost gave the Lions a draw. Doesn’t make enough impact to warrant his inclusion.

19. Danie Roussow – 4

Got concussed almost immediately.

20. Heinrich Brussow – 9

Made 3 crucial turnovers in the 20 minutes or so he played. Probably benefited from the Lions being tired for the last 20, but provided the spark the Bok forwards needed.

21. Jacque Fourie – 9

Super sub Fourie took his chance exceptionally well. Has earned the right to wear the 13 jersey, at least for now.

22. Morne Steyn – 10

The hero! Kicked every goal, including 2 very tough kicks. Strong with ball in hand, got the backline going. Did everything that was asked of him, and then took it upon himself to win the series. I’ve said Morne is a great player for the last few years, so i’m pleased to see him do so well. I’d keep Ruan at flyhalf and play Morne at inside centre, as he simply has to be in the side.

Jun 28 2009

The 2nd test between the Springboks and the British and Irish Lions was played at Loftus Versfeld in Pretoria.

The Springboks emerged victorious 28-25, courtesy of new Springbok legend, Morne Steyn.

The game had many twists and turns, starting with the controversial Schalk Burger sinbinning after just 27 seconds. Schalk was playing his 50th test match and is not a dirty player. He plays hard, but in the spirit of the game. I have reviewed the incident and the footage is not conclusive to me, although he is alleged to have eye gouged Lions winger Luke Fitzgerald. Some of the South African commentators have suggested he will get a lengthy ban, which would indicate he is guilty.

If Schalk was guilty of eye gouging, the question must be asked, “why was he only awarded a yellow card?” If Schalk is indeed guilty, I’d agree with the Lions, and feel very aggrieved it wasn’t a red card, which would have had a marked outcome on the result of the test.

The Lions then dominated the opening 10 minutes, and scored a try through a beautiful move on the right hand flank. Habana came off his wing to help Adi Jacobs, and once the Lions got through the line it was all over. Once again Frans Steyn was moving backwards instead of coming forwards to take the ball carrier and shut down the space available. He did that in the first test, when I felt he could have stopped the Lions first try.

The Lions then seemed to want to run the ball from all over the field, and were making headway every time. The Boks weren’t making first time tackles, nor putting enough pressure on at the breakdown. However from a lineout around the Lions 22, a beautifully worked move put JP Pietersen through the gap to score. Inexplicably, Ruan Pienaar missed the conversion, setting the tone for the rest of his game.

The rest of the firs half saw the Boks making critical mistakes whenever they got field position or attacking chances. Inevitably the Lions stole ball at the breakdown, or managed to force an error. A couple more penalties for offside see the Lions setting up a handy lead, before Frans Steyn pulls one back with a long range penalty on halftime.

The halftime score of 16-8, saw the Lions in control. They seemed to be playing with the higher tempo, and had the edge in the scrums.

The second half saw the Boks start off withanother error. Suddenly both Adam Jones and Gethin Jenkins were injured, and now we had to have uncontested scrums. Ruan Pienaar missed a couple of penalty attempts, but the Boks were starting to get more possession, territory and build up pressure. Their biggest downfall was their aimless kicking, not putting enough pressure with their chasing. This allowed Kearney to punish them and drive them back into their own half.

A slew of substitutions saw Danie Rousouw come and go, Jacque Fourie replace Jean de Villiers,  Morne Steyn on for Ruan Pienaar, and Heinrich Brussow on for Danie Rousouw. It worked immediately with Bryan Habana scoring off a set move beautifully. Although there was a hint of obstruction. Morne Steyn kicked his first ever points for the Boks on his home ground.

A penalty goal to Morne Steyn narrowed the gap to 1 point with 12 minutes to play, and suddenly the momentum was starting to shift to the Boks. Their accuracy was getting better, and the Lions were being forced into mistakes. I dare say the altitude factor was probably starting to kick in too. They simply seemed to be running out of energy, and the spring in their step had gone.

A penalty to Jones, took the lead out to 4, and it was inevitable that the Boks would have to score another try to win this one. A kick to the corner saw the Boks work the ball through several phases, and go from the right hand flank to the left, then they worked it back right and Jacque Fourie finished beautifully in the corner after a long TMO decision. It was interesting to hear Bryce Lawrence (the touch judge) question the decision after it was awarded. Keep out of it Bryce, the decision was made! What makes him think he can do that??

Morne Steyn goaled a crucial conversion from the sideline and suddenly the Boks were ahead by 3 and ready to close the game out with 5 minutes left. A high tackle from Bekker immediately from the restart allowed Jones to level the scores, and a draw looked inevitable.

In the 81st minute, Fourie du Preez was tackled in the air and the Boks had a 53m penalty attempt. I thought they’d give it to Frans Steyn, but Morne Steyn decisively stepped forward to take the kick. He hadn’t missed a kick in the time he was on the field. In only his second test, he nailed a long range kick that will make him a Springbok legend. What a beauty! The bitter disappointment of 12 years ago can be forgotten, as for the next 12 years we can relive this magic moment from Morne.

This was almost the opposite of the first test where the Boks dominated for 60 minutes, before the Lions came storming home. This time the Lions dominated for 60 minutes, and the Boks charged home for the last 20. The Boks simply got on the right end of the scoresheet both times. Next week at Ellis Park in the 3rd test i’m hoping for the series whitewash!

Check out the video highlights

My Springbok player ratings

Jun 27 2009

Springboks v British and Irish Lions 2nd Test – Loftus, Pretoria

Live Updates

81st Min – Morne Steyn is the hero! South Africa win the series. South Africa win 28-25.

80th Min – Penalty to South Africa 5m inside their own half. Morne Steyn to take the kick. 53m.

77th Min – Jones kicks a high pressure penalty. Scores locked at 25-25.

76th Min – High tackle, a chance for the Lions to kick a penalty from the left hand sideline about 37m out and 5m in.

75th Min – Morne Steyn kicks from the sideline. Boks ahead 25-22.

74th Min – Stu Dickinson awards the try. TRY! Boks in front for the first time today. Boks ahead 23-22. Morne Steyn to take the conversion from the sideline.

74th Min – Bok try in the corner! Jacue Fourie scores after the Boks moved the ball from 1 side to the other. We are going to the TMO.

73rd Min – Bok penalty. Morne kicks for the corner.

72nd Min – Ferocious stuff. Lions get a couple of valuable turnovers. Boks must protect the ball.

70th Min – Jones kicks the penalty. Lions 22-18.

69th Min – Penalty to the Lions as Schalk rushes up in defence and is a mile offside. Jones should knock this one over.

68th Min – Morne Steyn kicks it! Awesome. Lions ahead 19-18.

67th Min – Brussow wins a penalty at the breakdown. Now the Boks are playing with some urgency, and go forward. Morne Steyn to kick at goal. C’mon buddy.

67th Min – Bismarck taps a penalty. Lions never back ten. Boks knock on.

65th Min – O’Driscoll leaves the field and replaced by Shane Williams.

63rd Min – Habana scores after a beautiful move from a scrum! Beautiful. Morne Steyn knocks over the conversion for his first ever points for the Boks. Lions now ahead 19-15. A game is on our hands.

62nd Min – Danie Rousouw off after a headclash with O’Driscoll. Heinrich Brussow on.

61st Min – Stephen Jones nails it. Lions 19-8. Morne Steyn rerplaces Ruan Pienaar.

60th Min – Kickable penalty for the Lions. Boks coming in from the side.

59th Min – Andries Bekker and Danie Roussouw on for Bakkies Botha and Juan Smith.

58th Min – Boks starting to dominate more possession and territory. But they’re playing catch up.

56th Min – Jacque Fourie on for Jean de Villiers. Adi to move to Inside centre.

54th Min – I think i’d rather see the Bulls side playing the Lions! They’d have scored 30+ points by now!

52nd Min – Penalty Boks for the Lions being in front of the kicker. Pienaar misses from in front. Lions still lead 16-8.

49th Min – Pienaar misses the penalty narrowly. Time for Morne Steyn?

48th Min – Bok penalty just in Lions territory. Pienaar to have a kick at goal.

46th Min – Boks take the ball through the phases well, but don’t make much headway. Someone needs to provide go forward. A high tackle on Habana was missed, and left O’Driscoll feeling the effects. Adam Jones and Gethin Jenkins off. Andrew Sheridan and Alun-Wyn Jones on. Uncontested scrums.

42nd Min – Kearney killing the Boks with his kick returns. Bok kicking very aimless.

2nd Half – Can the Boks wrap up the series? Or will the Lions produce a shock result?

Halftime – The Lions have dominated. Boks look shocked, and haven’t constructed a lot. Mostly because the Lions have dominated possession, and territory to a lesser extent. Is it time to try someone different off the bench? And who?

41st Min – Steyn gets the long kick! Lions lead at halftime 16-8.

40th Min – Bok penalty for crossing over. Just in his own half, Steyn to try and bang it over.

38th Min – Steyn drops the ball as Du Preez ran the ball back in space. The Boks have been shocked, and will have to come from behind to win this one. Will the altitude factor come into play for the last 20?

37th Min – Lions winning the battle of the breakdown. Bok chance with a linout in the Lions half.

36th Min – Wave after wave of Lions attack. Spies made an important cover tackle. Jones takes the drop from in front. Lions 16-5.

31st Min – Boks trying to construct something. But O’Driscoll competes at the ruck and wins a penalty. The rush defence is working well.

25th Min – Kearney hollywood as JP tackles him. Lions defensive penalty.

23rd Min – Steyn misses penalty. Lions still 13-5. Lions 70% possession so far.

22nd Min – Boks get some momentum, after Habana intercepts. Bok penalty just over halfway line. Steyn to take the long kick.

18th Min – Fourie Du Preez weights a kick beautifully. Boks scrum 5m from Lions line. But Lions get penalty from the scrum.

15th Min – Lions get a penalty straight in front of the uprights. Boks offisde. Lions 13-5.

11th Min – Beautiful move from the top of the lineout. JP Pietersen through the gap, Bok try! Ruan Pienaar misses from in front! That could be crucial. Lions 10-5.

11th Min – Schalk Burger returns to the field. Lions still up 10-0.

9th Min – Lions running the ball beautifully from all over the field. Boks have to step up and show what they’ve got.

8th Min – Conversion from Stephen Jones on the sideline.10-0. Boks under pressure.

7th Min – Try! Kearney scores a great try in the right hand corner. 8-0.

5th Min – A frenetic start, Lions starting off strong. Boks need to dominate first phase and settle down.

3rd Min – Stephen Jones penalty, first blood to the Lions 3-0.

2nd Min – Lions penalty for offside. Still not sure what Schalk was binned for.

1st Min – Schalk Burger is yellow carded

Both teams come out to a cauldron with red on one side and green on the other

Jun 25 2009

The second test match between the Springboks and the British and Irish Lions takes place on Saturday afternoon at Loftus Versfeld, in Pretoria.

Both teams will be looking to make significant improvements, after their first test efforts, but for the Lions, they have to take the hard road. After the first game in Durban, at sea level, the Lions had to move to Capetown for their mid-week game. Conditions in Capetown have been wet so far, and are entirely different to what they can expect up at Altitude in Pretoria. They will remain in Capetown for the week, and only travel to Pretoria the day before the test, to try and limit the effects of altitude.

Playing on the highveld, at the fortresses of Loftus and Ellis Park, the challenge of the altitude is just as much mental as it is physical. This is Afrikaans territory, where the crowds are extremely passionate and not altogether friendly (until after the game), and you have to cope with trying to learn the flight of the ball through the rarefied air. And if you can master that, there’s always the burning in your lungs that hits you after 20-30 minutes of chasing the Springboks around. Travelling up the day before, there are the mental games that ask you, “how will I cope in the second half?” Mentally the Lions needed to be up on the highveld at the same time as the Boks, because now they bring that mental uncertainty into the equation.

The fact that so many Bulls are in the Bok side also can’t be underestimated. The Boks grow and extra arm and leg it seems up at Altitude, and the Bulls players just love Loftus. It will motivate them, inspire them and give them the mental relaxation to believe they will win and win well. If the Lions thought that winning at Durban was tough, well things just moved to another level.

The Boks will be so much better off after having their first hit out for the year. Even they wouldn’t have known exactly where they stood, but they can learn from that and work on their shortcomings. The midfield defence will be better, even more so with the inclusion of Schalk Burger.

The side that Pieter de Villiers has named is not the strongest side in my opinion. It was interesting to see Div go with a 5-2 on the bench, as earlier in the week I wondered about the possibility of Ruan Pienaar covering the scrumhalf position seeing as Morne Steyn is also in the side. I was also thinking of a 5-2 split on the bench. The only difference is that my reserves bench wouldn’t have Chiliboy and Andries Bekker.

If the Lions are to have any chance of beating the Springboks, they’ll have to do so through their backs and creating chances through their midfield. The Boks will look to play no risk rugby first, relying on territory and dominance through the forwards. It’s a bit one-dimensional, but it worked in for 60 minutes in Durban, and it won them the world cup in 2007.

The Lions could exploit the weak defence of Jacobs through Roberts and O’Driscoll which will create chances. However they’ll need some clinical finishing unlike last week where Money and co butchered 4-5 chances. Schalk Burger will also shore up the cover defence meaning less chance from second phase. If the Lions can start well and actually take the lead, the Boks may feel the pressure. However the Boks usually start well, and once they get their noses in front, it will be hard to come back. Just as we saw with the Bulls a month ago.

I’m picking a more cohesive display from both sides, but especially the Boks. They’ll start like a house on fire and grow an extra arm and leg with the support of a strong, passionate crowd at Loftus and should have a 10 point lead at the break. The second half is where the pain will begin for the Lions as the pressure and altitude start to take effect and i’m backing the Boks by 20! Look out for strong performances from the Bulls players, especially Spies and Du Preez.

It may have taken 12 years, but finally we’ll set the record straight…

Jun 24 2009

The Emerging Springboks scored a moral victory over the British and Irish Lions in playing out a 13 all draw on a cold, wet night at Newlands.

The game started with clear conditions, although the rain had made the surface quite slippery on top. Initially it was the Lions who made the least errors and who enjoyed great field position as the emerging Boks were eager but lacking polish. Turnovers handed the Lions scoring chances, and they started off with a penalty to take a 3-0 lead.

As the game wore on the Boks started to come into the game before Zane Kirchner’s wayward attempted clearance from deep in his half found it’s way straight into the hands of Martyn Williams, who sent Keith Earls over for the try. At 10-0 down in wet conditions, the lead was always going to be worth plenty.

Slowly the game started to even up, and a penalty made it 10-3 at the break. Another penalty early in the second half made it 10-6, and the game was starting to get tight. Both teams had their chances, and both teams made vital errors with a slippery ball. With 20 minutes remaining Willem de Waal came on for the Boks, and I thought his field kicking was quite average.

Neither team was really able to dominate territory, with the game moving from one end to the other. With a penalty at the end of the game, the Boks kicked for the corner and had one last chance from the lineout. They almost scored off the lineout and set up a couple of drives, before going wide and putting Demas away in the corner. Willem de Waal nailed the conversion from the sideline and salvaged a morale boosting draw. The Lions will be very disappointed to let a game slip that they needed to win ahead of the second test.

I thought the never say die attitude of the Boks was fantastic. They were led superbly by their captain Dewald Potgeiter, and the pack played well as a whole. The lineout functioned well with Sykes and Steenkamp. Deysel was strong with ball in hand and just the type of guy the senior Boks could use to get some go forward. He’d be a great player off the bench, and i’d drop Kankowski for him. Vermueulen was also strong around the paddock too.

In the backs, Vermaak showed he is clearly the second best scrumhalf in South Africa with a very polished display, Earl Rose I thought was quick superb in tough conditions. He offers a lot of variation and has all the skills. He simply has to be given an extended run at flyhalf for a top team. I find it ludicrous that we can have such poorly performing super rugby sides (other than the champions Bulls of course) and no place can be found for Rose, when all the other flyhalves are average and the 31 year old guy who kept him out is moving to Perth!

Newman and van Rensburg in the centres were solid in defence but Newman especially made too many handling errors. The wings Vulindlu and Basson both looked dangerous with ball in hand and space to move, it’s a pity the conditions weren’t helpful. Kirchener had a solid game after his early error, and didn’t get the chance to show Pieter de Villiers just what he can do. I am certain his time is coming and he’ll be a Bok by the end of the year.

All the guys off the bench showed great enthusiasm and added impetus when they came on.

For the Lions, it will be the last game on tour for many of them. In the forwards I thought Andy Powell had a strong game with his ball carries, and I think he deserves a test spot. It’s just what the Lions were missing in the first test, someone to get them going forward.

O’Gara seems to be the backup flyhalf, but I think James Hook is quite a good player and poses more all round ability. Their midfield lacked penetration, however I thought Keith Earls had a great game at fullback. He returned the ball well with the boot, and looks to have plenty of ability to run with ball in hand.

All we have left is 2 very important test matches to go. The Lions are now camping out in wet Capetown, preparing for a test in entirely different conditions on the highveld. It’s a great schedule to favour the Boks, and they’ll be pretty confident of wrapping up the series on Saturday at Loftus Versfeld, or can the Lions produce something spectacular..

Jun 22 2009

The Lions man for man are not nearly as good as he Boks and had to rely on their midfield pairing to spark their attacks. They look dangerous and world class, and created plenty of chances, but poor finishing and desperation from the Boks couldn’t convert at least 5 chances.

Player ratings:

1. Gethin Jenkins - 5
Made no impact in the scrums

2. Lee Mears - 3
Performed dismally in the lineouts. Should have been subbed earlier.

3. Phi Vickery - 3
Got dominated by the Beast and couldn’t respond accordingly. Will struggle to make starting lineup next week.

4. Alun-Wyn Jones - 5
About what was expected when facing Botha and Matfield.

5. Paul O’Connell - 5
Led strongly, but lost his cool with the ref, and more composure needed.

6. Tom Croft - 7
Was the pick of the forwards and rewarded with two tries.

7. David Wallace - 5
Struggled to make an impact and needs to steal more ball at the breakdowns.

8. Jamie Heaslip - 5
Like Spies was largely anonymous for most of the game.

9. Mike Phillips - 7
Started to get more involved in the second half and excelled once Du Preez left and Januarie came on. Showed a lot of fight and determination.

10. Stephen Jones - 4
Selected for his goal kicking and will be disappointed. First penalty was tought, but the second was relatively straight forward.

11. Ugo Monye - 4
Missed two tries when he should have taken his chances. A lesson for the Boks about giving your left wing chances!

12. Jamie Roberts - 9
The dangerman for the Lions. Split the Springbok defence on more than one occasion and looks a good player. Combined well with O’Driscoll.

13. Brian O’Driscoll - 8
A world class player. Needs to be watched closely.

14. Tommy Bowe - 6
Didn’t offer much and in my view i’d have selected Shane Williams.

15. Lee Byrne - 6
Was solid and had limited chances before he got injured. Looks a good player.

16. Matthew Rees - 6
Made a difference to the lineouts as soon as he came on.

17. Adam Jones - 7
Improved the scrum straight away and should start at Loftus.

18. Donncha O’Callaghan – 6

19. Martyn Williams - 6

20. Harry Ellis

21. Ronan O’Gara

22. Rob Kearney - 8
Had a good game when he replaced Byrne. Was under pressure at times, but kicked extremely well.

Jun 22 2009

Whilst the Boks played well as a team for the first 60 minutes, they did not construct a lot of phases and ask enough questions of the British and Irish Lions. As individuals they all need to step up for the next 2 tests, and bring in their ball carriers more, to create some space for the backs.

Player ratings:

1. The Beast – 8
A strong game in the set pieces, dominating in the scrum against Vickery. Didn’t carry the ball strongly like he normally does although he had limited chances.

2. Bismarck du Plessis – 6
Did the basics, but also didn’t stand out around the field. Gave away a silly penalty in the second half. His discipline has always been a concern. For my mind doesn’t offer anything extra to Smit as a hooker, and if Carstens had to come on, i’d move Smit to Hooker and take off Bismarck.

3. John Smit – 9
A strong game from the captain who I think is supremely fit and doesn’t get enough kudos for his work around the field. A word to the coaches, never take our captain off! We suffer without him, and it was Dick Muir who pulled him off during a Super 14 final and saw that title slip away. Please Mr de Villiers, learn from that lesson!

4. Bakkies Botha – 8
A strong game in the tight. Did the enforcing role superbly and was possibly taken off a little 5-10 minutes too early.

5. Victor Matfield – 9
A great game again from the big man. Marked his territory in the lineouts, and got the ball away wide from a couple of rucks. He surveys the field so well and is an unsung hero around the park.

6. Heinrich Brussow – 8
Had a solid game but never dominated the breakdowns. I can’t remember him getting a clean steal in the game. Controlled the back of the maul well, and took his try superbly. I’d leave him there next week even is Schalk is fit.

7. Juan Smith – 7
Never gives anything less than 100%, making plenty of tackles and ball carries. I’d like to see him make a few more yards on attack and be a more effective link between backs and forwards.

8. Pierre Spies – 6
Did some great work on defence and had a couple of strong carries from the base of the scrum in the second half, but otherwise largely anonymous. Strange as he has been in great form. Will bounce back on his home ground next week, and needs to cover the long kicks as well so he can run and link with the backs. Too classy to have another quite game.

9. Fourie Du Preez – 6
Another Bull who was strangely quiet. His kicking game wasn’t quite on song, with his box kicks either too deep or too shallow. Will also appreciate returning to Loftus, so the Lions better look out.

10. Ruan Pienaar – 8
Had a good game. Made a couple of errors, including a spilled high kick, but answered his critics superbly with his kicking. Appears to be a de Villiers favourite which is tough for Morne Steyn, but he can be a real game breaker.

11. Bryan Habana – 6
Mostly confined to defensive work. Strange how so many Bulls were quiet. Needs ball, in space and he will score tries.

12. Jean de Villiers – 6
Had a quiet game. Made a try saving tackle on Monye that justified his inclusion, but didn’t offer much on attack. Had a few drop balls, and probably feeling his way back a bit after injury.

13. Adi Jacobs – 3
From the first player that ran at him, it was clear to me his shoulder isn’t right. Was reluctant to tackle. Please get the surgery he needs and put Jaque Fourie in. It is not helping Adi at all.

14. JP Pietersen – 6
Didn’t have much to do, but made a couple of telling tackles head. His tackling is under rated, defensively he is strong. I still prefer the attacking abilities of Nokwe however.

15. Frans Steyn – 5
Too inconsistent in my view. His kicking returns were usually too deep or too shallow to be effective. And his place kicking is either brilliant or woeful. I still can’t see why you wouldn’t want Kirchner instead.

16. Gurthro Steenkamp – 6
Limited chances, but got a vital turnover towards the end of the game.

17. Deon Carstens – 4
Weakend the scrum, and suffered an injury at just the right time. Best move he made all game.

18. Andries Bekker – 5
Too much of a light weight to be on with Matfield. Too much show pony and not enough grunt. I’d rather Rousouw covered the lock reserve.

19. Danie Roussow – 6
Worked hard, but gave away a vital penalty. Always gives 100%.

20. Ricky Januarie -3
Was quite awful. Why would you replace Du Preez with this? Made a vital error, and doesn’t deserve his place in the Bok squad ahead of Vermaak.

21. Jacque Fourie – 4
Deserves to start ahead of Adi next week, although he missed a couple of tackles too.

22. Morne Steyn – 8
Was superb when he came on, and made a match winning tackle on Monye. I’d play him at fullback instead of Frans Steyn.

Jun 22 2009

The first test turned into a thriller at the Absa stadium in Durban, with the Springboks edging out the British and Irish Lions 26-21. The Boks looked to have the game wrapped up at 26-7, before substitutions and lack of intensity almost allowed the lions to snatch an unlikely victory.

The Absa stadium was a magnificent white hot cauldron, bathed with a sea of South African flags that was a beautiful sight. However pockets of the ground were awash with red, generally in the higher levels of the stands, with what I believed were over allocated sections for Lions supporters. Surely we should ensure South Africans fill our stands, but that’s the commercial realities of the modern game, with the ability to charge higher amounts to the Lions supporters.

The match started off at a frenetic pace, with the Boks dominating the early stages. Stephen Jones had an early attempt to give the Lions the lead but missed a difficult chance. Field position, possession and a green wave of attack then carried John Smit over for the first try. The Lions almost hit back immediately, but a try-saving tackle from Jean de Villiers on Monye kept the Lions out. The early exchanges after that were relatively even but Stephen Jones second missed penalty attempt continued to give the Springboks breathing space.

2 Further penalties to the Boks, stretched the lead to 13-0, and the pressure was on the Lions. To their credit they hit right back through a superb break from Jamie Roberts. Clinical finishing ensured the try and the lead was now only 6. This was the second tackle Adi Jacobs missed, and clearly his shoulder is not right. At no stage did he tackle with any conviction, and looked as if he has no strength and confidence in his shoulder. I was surprised the coaching staff didn’t pull him off straight away and send on Jacque Fourie.

The second 20 mins saw the Boks dominate, mostly through their scrum where the Beast got the better of Phil Vickery. He was penalised twice which saw the Bok lead extend to 19-7. At this stage O’Connell was getting very frustrated, and quite stroppy with the ref. 19-7 at halftime, saw the Boks firmly in control.

The second half started in much the same manner as the first half finished, and the Boks had complete control of the game. The rolling maul was superb, and I was pleased John Smit backed the Boks to go for the corner when a kickable penalty was awarded. The resulting lineout and drive, saw Brussow score from the back of the maul. At 26-7, the game was almost sealed for the Boks.

With 20 minutes to go, all that was left to do was close the game out, and ensure a strong psychological edge remained with the Boks. Instead the coaching staff had a moment of madness. They replaced the Beast, Smit, Bakkies and Brussow with Steenkamp, Carstens, Bekker and Roussouw. The backline saw Jean de Villiers and Fourie Du Preez off with Pienaar going to the blood bin, on came Januarie, Morne Steyn making his debut and Jacque Fourie moving to centre.

I can understand a few changes, but wholesale changes weren’t needed. Why would you sub players who were dominating the opposition. Pieter de Villiers said he wanted to inject more speed, which is fine, but don’t take off your captain, your fetcher when you don’t have another to replace him with, or your scrumhalf who is the best in the world. I think too often subs are made just because they are there on the bench. They have to be able to add value.

The Boks then lost structure, intensity and direction. It allowed the Lions into the game, and their desperation was matched with good option taking and creativity. They scored in the 67th minute as a result of sustained pressure, and almost scored straight away again but Monye lost the ball in a superb try saving tackle from Morne Steyn. However they kept on coming and eventually got a try through scrumhalf Phillips who became more and more dominant once Du Preez left the field.

Luckily there was an injury to Carstens (or was there??) which allowed John Smit back on the field and he immediately tried to calm the Boks down. The Lions were now desperate but couldn’t create a match winning try. The Boks were very relieved to hear the final whistle and sneak the win.

Ref Bryce Lawrence I thought was quite average. There are simply too many inconsistencies from all the refs I’ve seen this year. he wasn’t biased, but he did have some confusing decisions.

The Boks were the dominant team for the first 60 minutes, until the mass substitutions caused them to lose their way. To their credit, the Lions capitalised beautifully and were definitely the more creative team all game. The Springboks weren’t able to construct much running rugby all day, and didn’t take the ball through more than 5 phases all game, whilst the Lions managed to 7 times. The Boks dominated the set pieces though and the resulting penalties allowed them to control the match.

There is plenty for both teams to work on heading up to the highveld. The Boks will appreciate the run and have a lot of improvements to make. The Lions will also get better, but I can’t see them winning on the highveld against a team will only get better in all aspects of the game. Anything less than 3-0 will be disappointing.

For Springbok player ratings click here.

For British and irish Lions player ratings click here.

Jun 18 2009

The Springboks take on the British and Irish Lions in an eagerly anticipated 3 test series starting in Durban this Saturday 20th June. Since 1997, the Boks have been waiting for their chance to exact revenge on the Lions for a humiliating 2-1 series loss.

There are many things that make the ‘97 series similar to this one. Both were taken at a time when the Boks were World Champions. Both Lions teams were coached by McGeechan, and both series have the Springboks as strong favourites.

This time around, I think things are quite different. At the moment South Africa has so many talented players to pick from, lots of experience, and heaps of game breakers. Last time around South Africa had a new coach, (Carel du Plessis) and a captain that was quite inexperienced at International level in Gary Teichmann. This time round the Boks, have a settled squad, settled coach, and have been focused on this series for a long time. The Lions, well they always produce a strong side being able to draw on 4 nations, but on paper they simply can’t match the class of the South Africans.

The first game sets the tone for the series, and as the Springboks found out last time; lose the first game and the pressure intensifies like something you’ve never experienced. The down side for the Boks, is the lack of game time for most of their players, but that also has it’s advantages in being well rested, and fresh. The large number of Bulls players should negate that, and the confidence they’ll bring will rub off on the rest of the squad.

The Lions under McGeechan, will once again rely on taking the Boks on physically up front. They’ll look for set-piece dominance and accurate goal kicking. In Stephen Jones and Ronan O’Gara they have sharper shooters than the Boks, but less try scoring ability out wide. There are still some dangerous backs, but they don’t have the class right through the backline, or the experience of using them against top class opposition.

The Lions have to go hard out to win the first game in Durban, as the series then moves to the highveld for the remaining 2 test matches. They struggle to win 1, let alone 2 at altitude, so they have to go up 1-0 in Durban to have any chance in the series. The element of surprise is their best hope.

I’m picking the Springboks to win 3-0. The Boks should be too strong up front. The scrum won’t dominate, but holding it’s own will be enough. The lineouts with Matfield and Botha will be much superior to the Lions and then around the field the Boks have faster and stronger ball carriers. Whilst Pienaar has his critics and many believe he’s underdone, I’m picking him to really shine this series. In my view he is a great flyhalf and has all the skills. He’s done a lot of work on his kicking, and that’ll really help the Boks.

The rest of the Springbok backline will be too good for the Lions, with Habana set to have a blinder of a series. He’s a man for the big occasion, and he’ll prove that once again. The one area that concerns me is fullback, but i’m sure Steyn will be solid if not spectacular. That’ll be enough.

I can’t wait for kickoff on Saturday, i’m sure there’s going to be a lot of niggle, physical stuff and plenty of fireworks. But at the end of it all, the Boks will emerge victorious by about 15 points…

Jun 18 2009

The first test between the World Champion Springboks and the British and Irish Lions will take place in Durban on Saturday.

Just how will it unfold? Many have their opinions, none more vocal than Nick Cain and his article British and Irish Lions have nothing to fear from South Africa.

Firstly I would like to reply by saying, the Springboks are the World Champions! Get over it Nick. Just because we didn’t play the All Blacks or Australians doesn’t make it any less of an achievement. To say that England were more deserving of their victory in 2003 is a load of balony! We beat everyone we had to, when we had to. We demolished England in the pool game! Whilst we may have taken our foot off the accelerator from the quarter final, we played winning rugby, and got the job done.

To say South Africa doesn’t deserve their World Champion status because we didn’t win the tri-nations last year is ludicrous! We had a new team, new coach and a new competition. England fell away after their World Cup victory in 2003, what then? Why doesn’t the same logic apply and Nick believe they were undeserving of their title?

The concern revolving around Ruan Pienaar and the Bok team is our problem. We will deal with it and put out the side we want on Saturday. You just worry about your own side. It’s an attempt to unsettle the Springboks, talk up the British and Irish Lions, and make the Northern Hemisphere feel better about themselves. Well face the fact. The Springboks are the World Champions, and they will demolish the Lions on Saturday. Maybe then you’ll give them some credit…or maybe you’ll need to wait until we win the second test and win the series!

Jun 18 2009

After two contrasting games against the Coastal teams, the Sharks and Western Province, the British and Irish Lions rolled into Port Elizabeth, to take on the Southern Kings as they launched their new franchise.

The Lions were coming off two wins, and the results were probably expected to be the other way around. The Game with the Sharks was a blowout, and the game with Western Province was close. Based on Super 14 form, i’d have expected it to be reversed, but it was also due to coach Ian McGeechan putting his near test side out against the Sharks, and playing a virtual mid-week side against Western Province.

So to the new Nelson Mandela stadium in Port Elizabeth. A great day for rugby in the Eastern Cape. Who cares that most of the players are ring ins from other areas around South Africa, or overseas. This was a day to celebrate Easter Cape rugby. The new Nelson Mandela stadium looked absolutely magnificent, although the surface needs a bit more work. It’s normal for a new surface to experience some teething problems and need time to bring it up to international standard.

Nelson Mandela stadium

THE NELSON MANDELA STADIUM

 
The match itself was played with great intensity, even though it was a virtual Lions “B” team. Derick Kuun led the Kings well and there were some stand out players.

Marco Wentzel and Ross Skeate showed they are quality locks and could make a great impact on provincial rugby in South Africa.

The 2 flanks, Solly Tybilika and Mpho Mbiyozo were a great flank combination and I was pleased to see quality black players given an opportunity and shining. It’s a tragedy Tybilika has had to go through what he has. He may not be Bok standard, but he is definitely a top provincial player and should be in the starting lineup of one of our top sides. Mbiyozo on the other hand is all class and showed why he is a seven’s Bok. I’d love to see him pay Super 14 next year, as he is all class and could be knocking on the door of the Boks before too long. He has all the skills and a fantastic work rate. He’s also a great role model and a truly humble man. 

Darron Nell was strong from the base of the scrum and is a player to watch in the future.

Francois Hougaard at scrumhalf had a strong game before limping off injured. The Bulls are certainly blessed at scrumhalf, and he may not get a lot of game time there, so don’t be surprised to see him move provinces.

Jaco van der Westhuyzen has always been a prodigious talent and controlled the game well. Sure he made mistakes, but he does some things so well, and is so versatile too. It’s a pity he now plays in Japan.

It was great to see local boy Tiger Mangweni playing, and he is such a solid player. I thought he linked well, and did everything expected of him.

Not one of the Kings has a bad game, and the passion and intensity they played with was awesome. The local support was great, with a crowd of about 35000, and it shows we simply have to have a Super rugby team from the Eastern Cape. It’s a pity the result didn’t go our way, but the ref, Nigel Owens, was as biased as i’ve seen. I don’t think he deliberately meant to be, or I hope he didn’t but it doesn’t excuse the fact. He was very one-sided in his policing of the breakdowns, and the Lions were hanging around offside all day which made it hard for the Southern Kings to build momentum and get over the advantage line. The yellow cards were extremely harsh, and the penalty try he awarded the Lions in the second half was a joke. The ball was out, and at best it was a penalty, but i’d even debate that. In the end the result was really secondary to the occasion however, as the Southern Kings launched, and the Lions build up to the first test with the Springboks. Check out the highlights below…

The Lions now move to Durban for the first test, and the Southern Kings go… where??? There is nothing else on for the Kings. No competitions to play in, no team to speak of, nothing to build upon…it’s a tragedy. The Kings have been a political showpiece used by SARU to gain Government support and appear as if they are doing something. Why do we have to put up with the Stormers/Western Province, the Golden Lions and the Cheaters embarrassing South Africa with their rugby teams. Give the Kings a chance to show what they can do They deserve it, and the passion of the Eastern Cape will be enough for them to make us all proud…

Jun 11 2009

Francois Steyn has confirmed, he will be leaving South Africa, to play his rugby for French club Racing Metro at the end of the British and Irish Lions series.

The announcement has been brewing for some months now, but just how big a loss is it for South African rugby?

I would suggest that the loss of Steyn is not that large. I think he is a highly overrated player, and his departure opens the way for the next youngster to step up. however it does concern me that someone so young has left South Africa to chase the dollars they can earn overseas. It sets a dangerous precedent for young players.

Steyn has a Currie Cup title and a Rugby World Cup winners medal and is still only 22. Many have argued he doesn’t have a lot left to achieve in the game. However if that were the case then people like Roger Federer and Tiger Woods should just retire.
He has yet to win a Super rugby title and moving to France must surely be a detrimental move for his rugby. But one feels he wants to get away from the pressure and limelight he experiences in South Africa.

Many will be mourning the loss of Steyn but I don’t think it’s such a great loss. Sure he has has produced some great things on the rugby field, generally in the Springbok jersey, but those are far and few between. He singlehandedly changed the game against Australia at Newlands in 2007 with his 2 superb long range drop goals.

He stepped in and covered more than adequately in Rugby World Cup 2007. His performances there were more solid than spectacular and his long range penalty in the final certainly helped the Boks out, but it wasn’t a match defining piece of play. The solo try against Italy whilst playing flyhalf was also one of the great individual tries i’ve ever seen.

But these moments of brilliance have simply
 been too far and few between to warrant me viewing Steyn as an automatic choice in any team. His performances are often erratic, mixing the woeful with the sublime.

He is too slow in his decision making and handling to be a flyhalf and his best position is inside centre or fullback.  

Many forget that he missed the vital conversion that would have won the Super 14 in 2007 for the Sharks, and then he failed to put the ball out to allow the Bulls to construct the match winning try. Whilst there were other factors that caused the Sharks to lose that day, Steyn must shoulder the responsible for not closing out the game.

At the moment South Africa is blessed with some great players who have the fullback position covered, and at inside centre we have De Villiers and Olivier. Steyn would not be in my Springbok 22 and thus from a national perspective I don’t see his absence as being a big deal. The Sharks may miss his presence, but in my opinion he offered little more than most non-international players in the Super 14 this year.

Steyn has said he would like to remain playing for the Springboks and wants to go to Rugby World Cup 2011. If I was coach or selector I wouldn’t pick him as an overseas player because I think we should only select players from overseas if they are world class superstars that we really can’t do without. Players such as Pierre Spies, Bryan Habana, Percy Montgomery.

So it’s au revoir to Francois, I just hope the French with all their style can finally manage to get Francois a decent haircut!

Jun 10 2009

I would like to respond to Nick Cain’s article “Pierre Spies still has much to prove in race to become world’s best“.
Nick is travelling with the British and Irish Lions and is probably as one eyed as I am, we are simply polar opposites.

I found his article interesting, as I simply assumed everyone would agree with me that Spies is the best number 8 in the world. I am also sure he wears a lycra outfit underneath his rugby uniform and can fly if he has to so there is no doubt in my mind he is superman!

Spies is a confident individual and wants to be the best in the world. He is a humble man, but he is not afraid to say he wants to be the best in his position. Good on him for having high aspirations.

I would have thought his recent performances would have vindicated Spies as the world’s premier number 8. Certainly in the Southern hemisphere, no one else has dominated as much as Spies has all season.

The things that have impressed me this year have been:

  • His workrate – He makes hit up after hit up and usually breaks the advantage line
  • His tackling – not ferocious, could be the one area he really needs to make count. But I can’t fault his willingness to get involved.
  • His ball handling skills – occasionally he does drop the ball, but he is  often running on at pace, and trying to execute at speed. Mistakes will happen every now and then
  • His pace – Unmatched for anyone his size. Simply sensational with a bit of space, and leaves the opposition for dead.
  • It seems to me the northern hemisphere don’t like number 8’s running around the field, leaving wingers for dead, and scoring plenty of open field tries. They prefer the tight loose forward who gets involved in the heavy stuff, grafting away and not dominating the limelight. There is no doubt in my mind Spies can do the hard yards and is an effective eighthman on slow, heavy fields. But let him prove himself before criticising him.

    This Lions tour will produce a new era of heroes. Last time it was Guscott, Jenkins, Gibbs, Howley etc. This time around i’m picking Spies to announce to the whole world, he is the world’s premier number 8. Go get him Superman!

    Jun 8 2009

    The British and Irish Lions have overcome the challenge of South Africa’s cats with contrasting victories.

    The midweek game against the Pussycats was shambolic for the home side. How a Super 14 side can perform so badly is beyond me. The British and Irish Lions however played well. Admitedly they were running into gaps and holes that appeared as if from nowhere, but they had the confidence to give the ball some air, coupled with hard and direct running that allowed them to reap the rewards.

    The Golden Lions on the other hand have hit rock bottom, and it’s going to take an overhaul to ensure they can perform at the top level again. Talk of the players making demands can now be washed aside, as they don’t deserve anything, and the new coach needs to come in and lay some strong ground rules. The union’s biggest problem will be attracting and maintaining quality players, and if Jacque Fourie does leave for France, they will be in even worse shape.

    On the weekend, we moved to Bloemfontein, the city of flowers, where it was the turn of the Cheaters.
    The first 20 minutes saw the Lions put 20 points on and a repeat of the midweek game beckoned.

    I have to say I agreed with the Lions players that referee Wayne Barnes did a poor job at the breakdown. Brussow was exceptional, and played to the ref’s whistle, but the Lions can feel hard done by.

    I was impressed with the Lions willingness to move the ball, run hard and straight, and mix that up with clever changes of angles, inside balls, and backing themselves on the outside. Flyhalf James Hook also showed a willingness to take the ball to the line, and I feel he’d be a better bet than the more predictable O’Gara and Jones for the test position.

    The Cheaters on the other hand were lucky with an intercept try in the closing stages of the game, and once again showed they know how to lose games. They’ve had a very settled squad all year, and if they don’t finally perform in the Currie Cup, questions will be asked similiar to what the Lions are now experiencing.

    The Lions now move on to the coastal games against the Sharks midweek and Western Province on the weekend as they look to finalise test spots. I’m picking two close games…

    Jun 6 2009

    The Springboks squad for the British and Irish Lions series was announced on monday, and the players got together in Johannesburg, minus the victorious Bulls players who have earnt a well deserved rest.
    There are quite a few players recovering from injuries, but this camp will allow them to get back up to speed under expert medical guidance, and start focusing on the British and Irish Lions series. With the injuries and form of some of the Bulls players, there are going to be some hotly contested positions, mostly in the backs, so the players will be working hard trying to impress Div and gain selection for the first test in Durban on June 20!

    The Boks, may not have the game preparation the Lions are receiving, but it’s significant that they are training at altitude whilst the Lions will be moving around from the highveld to sea level. The first test in Durban will be at sea level, but I suspect this will have a major bearing on the second and third tests which are both up on the highveld at our traditional strong hold grounds, Loftus and Ellis Park. It will be interesting as time unfolds to see just what plans Div has for his match day squad, i’m expecting a few surprises still to be announced!

    Jun 5 2009

    The British and Irish Lions got their tour off a winning start in the weekend with a come from behind victory over the Royal XV in Rustenberg.
    It will be a difficult tour for them, whith lots of tavel accross the different climatic zones in South Africa.

    I’ll let Bob Skinstad take you through the itinerary.

    I’m predicting the Lions to go through almost unbeaten in the provincial games, but in the test macthes i’d expect a 3-0 victory for the Sprinboks. Anything less than that would be a failure for the Boks, but if there is one man who has done it time and again it’s the Lions coach, Ian McGeechan.

    My two concerns are the goal kicking, if we dont play Morne Steyn. And the kicking from fullback, depending on who we play there. In my mind, Kirchner has all the skills and is solid and dependable. Still this Bok side has many talented individuals, and the personnel we do have can still do the job.

    The Boks have 2 more weeks of preparation and I cant wait for the first test in Durban on the 20th June!

    Jun 2 2009

    The springbok squad for the British and Irish Lions series was announced yesterday.

    This is the full squad:

    Props:
    John Smit
    Tendai “the beast” Mtawarira
    Gurthrö Steenkamp
    Deon Carstens

    Hookers:
    Bismarck du Plessis
    Chiliboy Ralepelle

    Locks:
    Victor Matfield
    Bakkies Botha
    Andries Bekker
    Danie Rossouw

    Loose forwards:
    Schalk Burger
    Juan Smith
    Pierre Spies
    Ryan Kankowski

    Halfbacks:
    Fourie du Preez
    Ricky Januarie

    Flyhalves:
    Ruan Pienaar
    Morné Steyn

    Centres:
    Jean de Villiers
    Adi Jacobs
    Wynand Olivier

    Wingers:
    Bryan Habana
    Jongi Nokwe
    Odwa Ndungane

    Utility backs:
    Jaque Fourie
    JP Pietersen
    Earl Rose
    Frans Steyn

    By and large it is a good squad, but I don’t think it is the “best” squad we could have named. Whilst I am a firm believer in John Smit’s playing ability and think he’ll do a great job at tighthead prop, it’s worrying we don’t have another specialist tighthead in the squad, or anyone in the country who really put their hand up. Jannie Du Plessis and BJ Botha are both overrated in my opinion, and this necessitates Smit moving to this position. Deon Carstens as cover is a little bit of a gamble, although I think he’s a good player. I’d have gone for a slightly controversial selection and picked Sephaka, I think his scrumming is solid, and his fitness and work rate around the field has been exceptional this year.

    The hookers were not surprising. But i’m not sure if Chiliboy is our second best hooker behind Bismarck. Derick Kuun has been awesome this year, and can be considered unlucky to miss out.

    No surprises in the locks. Matfield and Botha are the best in the world, Bekker may get to be reserve with Danie Rousouw covering loose forward.

    The Loose forward combination is a proven trio, but i’d drop Burger. His form has been dismal, and i’d prefer a true opensider in Heinrich Brussow. Kankowski has never impressed me, and i’d rather Burger on the bench who can cover all three loose forward positions. In another selection many wouldn’t consider, i’d also get Pedrie Wannenburg in there, as I think he is tremendously skillful and offers a great ball carrying option.

    Halfbacks were the experienced duo of Du Preez and Januarie. I’d have dropped Januarie and given vermaak a go. I think Januarie needs to offer greater consistency, and Vermaak does the basics well and could be a gamebreaker off the bench.

    Flyhalf was predicatable. Pienaar will be first choice, but in my mind Steyn deserves it on current form. I also would love to see Earl Rose at some stage.

    The centres pick themselves there, and i’d still put De Villiers ahead of Olivier. If Adi Jacobs shoulder isn’t right, then Jacque Fourie deserves outside centre.

    On the wings i’d pick Habana and Nokwe in the test side. There is plenty of cover in Fourie, Jacobs and Pietersen, so i’m not sure why they picked Odwa Ndungane. In any case I think they picked the wrong Ndungane, as Akona was playing brilliantly for the Bulls.

    JP Pietersen seems to have the inside running for the fullback position, with Jacque Fourie, Earl Rose and even Morne Steyn as possible options. I’d have picked Kirchner in the squad instead as specialist fullback, and in my starting lineup. Those that opted for Terblanche need to see he is not in the same league as Percy was when he was Brought back as an experienced old head.

    Sanjay’s Springbok team
    1. Gurthro Steenkamp
    2. Bismarck Du Plessis
    3. John Smit (c)
    4. Bakkies Botha
    5. Victor Matfield (v/c)
    6. Heinrich Brussow
    7. Juan Smith
    8. Pierre Spies
    9. Fourie Du Preez
    10 Morne Steyn
    11. Bryan Habana
    12. Jean De Villiers
    13. Adi Jacobs
    14. Jongi Nokwe
    15. Zane Kirchner

    16. Derick Kuun
    17. The Beast
    18. Danie Rousouw
    19. Schalk Burger
    20. Jano Vermaak
    21. Jacque Fourie
    22. Earl Rose

    Jun 2 2009

    It’s now a few days after the Bulls became crowned Super 14 Champions, once more. Deservedly they had a parade through the Streets of Pretoria yesterday.

    For video highlights, click here.

    The Bok team was named yesterday also, and no fewer than 9 Bulls were named in the Bok squad. I think Kirchner and Akona Ndungane can consider themselves very unlucky. I am sure by the end of the year, Kirchner will become a test Bok.

    To relive the glory, click here.

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