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Ken Borland


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Coach delighted with pack, but improvement needed 0

Posted on October 12, 2012 by Ken

South Africa’s forwards coach Johann van Graan said on Tuesday that he was delighted with the pack’s performance in their last outing, but added that they will need to replicate that effort in order to beat Australia in their Rugby Championship match in Pretoria on Saturday.

The Springboks dominated New Zealand up front in Dunedin on September 15, but their effort was marred by terrible goal-kicking that saw the South Africans waste 20 points and lose 21-11.

“We’ve worked hard the last few weeks and the front row gave one of their best performances and the loose forwards got stuck in as well. We can improve on the lineout, where we lost a couple of balls, but the kick-offs were good and so was the ball-retention – we had our lowest turnover rate of the whole year. Francois Louw did very well, especially on the ground, while Duane Vermeulen was good at the breakdown too.

“I’m really proud of the performance against the All Blacks, we played some of our best rugby and to have 58% territory and 52% possession against them at home is a great effort. But unfortunately we just didn’t get the points,” Van Graan told a news conference in Johannesburg on Tuesday.

But Van Graan warned that the Wallabies, led by Nathan Sharpe, the grand old man of Australian rugby, would be another major challenge up front.

“Australia scrummed very well against us in Perth and Nathan Sharpe is one of the best locks of all time, so their lineout is tricky and they kick to different places to put you under pressure. Playing against the number two side in the world is always a massive challenge,” Van Graan said.

Experienced Springbok tighthead prop Jannie du Plessis said that while the Alll Blacks were a daunting physical prospect in the scrums, the Wallabies were clever, strategic scrummagers.

“The Australian scrum is different. While the All Blacks view scrums in the same mould as us, as a place to exert physical dominance over the opposition, the Wallabies are much more tactical, they know what they want from certain areas of the field.

“So it’s a big challenge against them, they have a great loosehead in Benn Robinson and he scrums well with Tatafu Polota-Nau, they’re both short and stocky,” Du Plessis said.

While Du Plessis and fellow prop Tendai Mtawarira were the only members of the Dunedin pack to have more than 30 caps, the qualified doctor said that inexperience helped create a never-say-die attitude.

“There are some advantages to inexperience, because those players are hungry and will play better than someone who has played a hundred tests and has a ‘been there, done that’ attitude. As they say, a hungry dog hunts best,” Du Plessis said.

Van Graan said it was important the Springboks showed an improvement in Pretoria on Saturday and took another step in their evolution.

“You can always improve and evolve and we started with the base, it’s about finding your feet at this level. But we’ve grown a lot, there’s been a lot of progression, our ball-retention and contesting on the ground is much better. You evolve step-by-step and we hope we take another step on Saturday. Hopefully we can go from a good performance to a great winning performance,” Van Graan said.

The assistant coach also highlighted the need for better defence against a top-class attacking team like Australia.

“The Wallabies are a big threat, especially with their reverse attacking lines, Digby Ioane and Dom Shipperley in particular. We will have to improve our defence and hope our kicking game is spot on.”

Van Graan also said better decision-making on attack would be crucial.

“Some stuff in Dunedin worked well but in these close tests, which they all are in the Rugby Championship, you need special moments from special players to change games, like Bryan Habana’s try. We’re expecting quite a quick game and, against defences that are a lot better at international level, you need to convert your opportunities into points. There were quite a few chances in both Dunedin and Perth that should have been points and it’s about making better decisions,” Van Graan said.

South Africa will name their team on Wednesday, with experienced inside centre Francois Steyn unlikely to be chosen as he was still on crutches on Tuesday after rolling his ankle the previous day.

 

Fates conspiring against brave selections 0

Posted on October 12, 2012 by Ken

 

Heyneke Meyer is not the sort of coach to make sallies into a brave new world willy nilly, but even if he did want to introduce a new dimension to Springbok flyhalf play this weekend against Australia, the fates seem to be conspiring against him.

With Morne Steyn clearly in desperate need of a break to regain his form and confidence and Johan Goosen having shown he has the stomach for Test rugby even at the tender age of 20, there were high hopes that there might have been a changing of the guard at flyhalf for Saturday’s Rugby Championship Test against the Wallabies.

That was until Francois Steyn rolled his ankle at practice on Monday and Goosen had to train barefoot because of a bruised heel.

Francois Steyn’s absence would rob the team of 53 caps worth of experience at inside centre and Meyer might be loath to introduce a new starting flyhalf because of that. Even moving Jean de Villiers to 12 doesn’t  solve the problem, because then either Juan de Jongh, with just 10 caps, or the uncapped Jaco Taute will have to play at outside centre.

While many would like to see Morne Steyn on holiday, lying on the beach with his hands on his tummy, Meyer explained on Monday that not choosing the 28-year-old in the Springbok squad would not have helped because, due to the South African Rugby Union not having full control over their contracted players, he would have just been snapped up the struggling Bulls to play Currie Cup rugby.

“The pressure won’t go away for him, the Bulls are also under pressure. It’s best to keep him involved with us, he’s taken a lot of criticism, but you’re still working with a human being and I can see that he is himself again back at home,” Meyer said. “I’m not just going to throw Morne away, he just kicked badly and Johan Goosen is not 100 percent fit and I’ve been bringing him through slowly. If I bowed to public pressure, then I would change the team every week.”

Lock Flip van der Merwe, who took his chance with both hands when he started against the All Blacks in Dunedin, is troubled by what team doctor Craig Roberts described as “a very mild calf strain,” while prop Coenie Oosthuizen, who played just once in the Green and Gold against England in June before injuring his neck, is suffering from “general stiffness” having returned to action with 35 minutes for the Free State Cheetahs at the weekend.

Wing Lwazi Mvovo (tight hamstring) and flank Jacques Potgieter (groin) are other players who will be managed with a gentle touch this week.

The Springboks were in touching distance of both the Wallabies and All Blacks in their last two matches and Meyer is confident they can restore the public’s faith by winning their last two Rugby Championship games in Pretoria and Soweto.

“It will definitely be different playing here. We should have won overseas and in the past we’ve done well at home,” Meyer said. “I have a good feeling about this team, it’s definitely developing, there’s a great vibe.

“We had three tough away games in a row, the only team to have that, so it’s great to be back at home and the players are a lot more relaxed. At first with a new, inexperienced team and a new coach, there are going to be doubts and a lack of self-belief. But I could see against Australia and the All Blacks that the players knew that they could win.”

Those hoping for a radical change in how the Springboks approach these next two Tests should not hold their breath, however. Meyer made it clear on Monday that his strategy will still be arm-wrestling the opposition into submission.

“In Test rugby, the teams are so close (in standard) and there’s not as much space, so it’s an arm-wrestle. There’s been a lot of talk about the game plan, but I thought we played them perfectly. We had more chances to win but we didn’t convert that pressure into points,” the Springbok coach said.

So dazzling the opposition is out, but Meyer does recognise the need for better attacking play.

“I was a bit cross today because the players have to get that mindset that if they break the line, then they must finish. They mustn’t look around and stop,” Meyer said.

Despite the injuries, there was a definite sense of the tough last few weeks being eradicated from the memory banks as the Springboks trained energetically and enthusiastically in the stadium where Meyer perfected the blueprint that he will continue to back against the best teams in the world.

http://dailymaverick.co.za/article/2012-09-25-the-gospel-according-to-heyneke-meyer-springboks-down-but-not-out

Boks happy at home but troubled by injuries 0

Posted on October 12, 2012 by Ken

South Africa coach Heyneke Meyer said his team were delighted to be back at home, but injury problems meant he could not totally relax as the Springboks had their first training sessions of the week in Pretoria on Monday.

Having drawn with Argentina and lost to Australia and New Zealand on the road in their last three Rugby Championship matches, the Springboks take on the Wallabies at Loftus Versfeld on Saturday in a last-ditch effort to stay in contention to win the competition.

But any hopes Meyer may have had of freshening up his team with new faces could be stymied by injuries, most notably to centre Francois Steyn and up-and-coming flyhalf Johan Goosen.

“We had three tough away games in a row, the only team to have that, so it’s great to be back at home and the players are a lot more relaxed. I wanted to go hard with the full squad of 30 at training today, but we’ve picked up lots of little untimely injuries,” Meyer told journalists at Loftus Versfeld on Monday.

Steyn rolled his ankle and was on crutches as the team practised at one of their spiritual homes on Monday afternoon, but team doctor Craig Roberts said x-rays were clear and a decision on the 25-year-old World Cup winner’s availability will only be made on Tuesday or Wednesday.

Goosen has a bruised heel but took part in some training, albeit barefoot.

Incumbent flyhalf Morne Steyn missed 11 points with wayward kicks when South Africa lost 11-21 to the All Blacks in Dunedin on September 15 and has failed to gel with his backline. When Goosen has come off the bench to replace him in the last two tests, for half-an-hour in total, he has looked the part and general opinion in the republic is that the 20-year-old should start instead of Morne Steyn against the Wallabies on Saturday.

But Goosen’s niggle and the possibility that the Springboks will lose 53 caps worth of experience at inside centre if Francois Steyn cannot play could delay what seems an inevitable changing of the guard.

“You obviously want to give players a break when they are fatigued, but if I hadn’t called Morne Steyn into the test squad then he would play Currie Cup for the Bulls. The pressure won’t go away for him, the Bulls are also under pressure. It’s best to keep him involved with us, he’s taken a lot of criticism but you’re still working with a human being and I can see that he is himself again back at home,” Meyer said.

“I’m not just going to throw Morne away, he just kicked badly and Johan is not 100% and I’ve been bringing him through slowly. If I bowed to public pressure, then I would change the team every week.

“You can’t just throw a whole bunch of 20-year-olds in against the Wallabies and All Blacks, they’ll be slaughtered, and I won’t push anyone unless they are 100% ready,” the coach added.

Meyer said he was confident his team could take the spoils against Australia, even though the Wallabies squeezed home 26-19 in Perth on September 8, with the Springboks failing to turn pressure into points, especially in the first half.

“It will definitely be different playing Australia here compared to Perth, where we should have won. In the past we’ve done well against them at home and I have a good feeling about this team, it’s definitely developing, there’s a great vibe,” Meyer said.

The other Springboks who are dogged by injury niggles are prop Coenie Oosthuizen (general stiffness), flank Jacques Potgieter (groin), wing Lwazi Mvovo (hamstring) and lock Flip van der Merwe (calf).

 

Cooper’s attack no distraction – Ashley-Cooper 0

Posted on October 11, 2012 by Ken

Australia utility back Adam Ashley-Cooper said on Monday that injured flyhalf Quade Cooper’s comments on the squad, in which he roasted the camp for having a “toxic environment”, would not be a distraction as the Wallabies prepare for their Rugby Championship Test against South Africa in Pretoria on Saturday.

“There’s a lot of people who are afraid to say what they feel so they just go along with it and nothing is going to change,” Cooper told Australian Associated Press at the weekend. “That’s why I feel so strongly as a player. I don’t want to be involved in the toxic environment, and that’s how it is at the moment.”

Cooper has also tweeted his displeasure at Wallabies coach Robbie Deans’ game plan, saying he was only allowed to play the attacking brand of rugby he favours from “February to May” at the Queensland Reds in SuperRugby.

But Ashley-Cooper said there was a very convivial mood in the Wallabies camp.

“I’m not aware of what the tweets are saying, but you can’t ignore social media, it’s a big part of the game. But it won’t be a distraction for us.

“There’s a great buzz in the squad and we’re excited to be here. We’ve had two good wins and we feel that we’re building as a group,” Ashley-Cooper told a news conference in Johannesburg on Monday.

While Australia have come from behind to win their last two Tests, against South Africa and Argentina, Deans is still under enormous pressure at home, mainly due to his record of just two wins in his last 16 matches against the All Blacks for the Bledisloe Cup.

Springbok coach Heyneke Meyer is also feeling the heat with his team managing just a win and a draw against Argentina thus far in the Rugby Championship.

“I think the Springboks are facing similar challenges to us with a lot of injuries and having to give opportunities to younger blokes. But those youngsters bring a lot of enthusiasm and energy which the older guys can feed off.

“The Springboks are coming off two disappointing losses so they’ll be pretty motivated and we expect it to be really tough to win in Pretoria.

“The challenge is greater for us away from home, we have two really tough games on a pretty tough trip and with the travel conditions added in, so there’s no room for complacency,” Ashley-Cooper said.

The 28-year-old veteran of 71Tests and numerous SuperRugby games against the Pretoria-based Bulls said Loftus Versfeld would not be a place for the faint-hearted on Saturday.

“Playing at Loftus is always pretty tough, you’re usually up against quality opposition there and a hostile crowd that they feed off. Plus the altitude and the pace of the game there means it’s always a challenge. A win is something we’ve never achieved before in Pretoria, we came close in 2010 [31-44], so there’s a lot of motivation for us,” Ashley-Cooper said.

Australia’s coaching co-ordinator, Tony McGahan, said despite criticism that the Springboks’ game plan was dull and conservative in comparison to the Wallabies’, every top international team employed similar tactics.

“Generally, most sides have the same principles with just small variations from week-to-week depending on the opposition and the conditions. But the core values are set in stone.

“You need a bit of both possession and territory. You use possession to gain territory and that’s how you control the scoreboard, converting field position into points. It will continue to be that way in test rugby.

“There will be more cause to have a penalty against you when you’re running the ball out of your own half, but you tend to get more favour from possession on attack. It also depends on the quality of your possession,” McGahan said.

Australia will name their team for Saturday’s Test on Thursday, while South Africa’s squad will be announced on Wednesday.

 

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    Galatians 5:22-23 – “But the fruit of the Spirit is love, joy, peace, patience, kindness, goodness, faithfulness, gentleness and self-control.”

    The fruit of the Spirit are elements of the character of Christ and we should have the constant desire to become more and more like Christ in thought and deed. But what seems impossible for you becomes possible through Jesus. In him, we are filled with love, joy, peace, patience, kindness, goodness, faithfulness, gentleness and self-control.



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