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Ken Borland



Two new caps as Meyer opens up to change 0

Posted on August 29, 2012 by Ken

 

South Africa coach Heyneke Meyer on Wednesday recalled openside flank Francois Louw and chose the uncapped duo of eighthman Duane Vermeulen and flyhalf Johan Goosen to open the possibility of a significant change in approach for the Springboks’ two Rugby Championship matches in Australia and New Zealand.

South Africa opened their Rugby Championship campaign against debutants Argentina, beating them 27-6 in Cape Town but without a try-scoring bonus point, before being held to a shock 16-16 draw in Mendoza last weekend.

Amidst massive criticism of the game plan the Springboks have employed so far this year, Meyer suggested some willingness to change on Wednesday when he gave first call-ups to Vermeulen and Goosen.

The 26-year-old Vermeulen has been a star for the Stormers with his powerhouse displays from the back of the scrum, but several injuries have prevented him from being chosen earlier for the Springboks.

The 20-year-old Goosen sprung to prominence in last year’s IRB Junior World Championship before making a prolific SuperRugby debut for the Cheetahs this year, until a serious shoulder injury ruled him out of action from the beginning of May until last weekend.

“Injuries meant we could not use Duane and Johan earlier in the season, but both have played Currie Cup rugby since their return and, after consultation with their respective provincial medical teams, we’re confident that they are ready to travel with us. While Duane and Johan are medically fit, their provincial coaches felt it necessary that they get more game time in the Currie Cup this weekend, but as we don’t have a lot of time to prepare and we need as much time with them as possible to get them used to our structures and game plans, the decision was taken to select them for the tour,” Meyer said in a statement released by the South African Rugby Union on Wednesday.

“I regard both of them as world-class rugby players. If it wasn’t for injuries, Duane would have been a Springbok long ago. I also believe Johan has a long career ahead of him at test match level and we will expose him when and how we feel it will benefit the player and the team best.”

The lack of a specialist fetcher in the Springbok squad had also been criticised, with Louw getting a summons from Meyer despite the fact that he now plays his rugby in England for Bath. A raft of injuries in South Africa’s loose forward stocks have also complicated matters, with veterans Schalk Burger and Juan Smith, Heinrich Brussow and new Stormers sensation Siya Kolisi all ruled out at the moment, while Ryan Kankowski is currently playing rugby in Japan.

“We were very keen to give Siya Kolisi an opportunity on this tour, but he is also out injured. Francois played at the Rugby World Cup last year and is an experienced player.  We opted for Francois because he is a specialist openside flanker, in the absence of Schalk, Heinrich and Siya, that can cover blindside and number eight as well, while he is also a very useful option in the lineout,” Meyer said.

South Africa’s young squad – 20 of the 28 are under 28 years old – will have to learn quickly from their mistakes in Argentina, where their dependence on physical dominance failed as the Pumas matched them in the collisions.

The inclusion of Goosen, who has a prodigious boot but can also spark a backline, and recalled World Cup centre Juan de Jongh suggests Meyer has heard the call for more creative play from his team.

Loose forward Keegan Daniel, who Meyer had suggested would see action against Australia, and utility back JJ Engelbrecht are the players omitted from the squad that went to Argentina.

Squad – Zane Kirchner, Pat Lambie, Bryan Habana, Lwazi Mvovo, Jean de Villiers, Francois Steyn, Juan de Jongh, Morne Steyn, Johan Goosen, Ruan Pienaar, Francois Hougaard, Jano Vermaak, Duane Vermeulen, Willem Alberts, Marcell Coetzee, Francois Louw, Jacques Potgieter, Juandre Kruger, Eben Etzebeth, Flip van der Merwe, Andries Bekker, Pat Cilliers, Tendai Mtawarira, Jannie du Plessis, Dean Greyling, Adriaan Strauss, Tiaan Liebenberg, Craig Burden.

Meyer blames Springboks’ inexperience 0

Posted on August 27, 2012 by Ken

South Africa coach Heyneke Meyer on Monday blamed the lack of experience in the Springbok side for their shock 16-16 Rugby Championship draw with Argentina in Mendoza at the weekend.

South Africa trailed Argentina, playing in the southern hemisphere tournament which was previously known as the Tri-Nations for the first time this year, for three-quarters of the test before a charge-down try by centre Francois Steyn allowed them to draw level.

“It was not good enough, it was unacceptable and I was very disappointed. But I always knew it would be very tough in the first year because of the inexperience of the side, a lot of them were playing their first test away from home.

“If we’re realistic, then there were only a couple of members of the pack who played in the World Cup. People underestimate Argentina, but their whole starting line-up plays in Europe and they are very experienced,” Meyer told reporters at Johannesburg International Airport on his arrival back from Argentina on Monday.

Meyer is missing a quartet of players who would have been in the starting line-up in veteran flank Schalk Burger, explosive hooker Bismarck du Plessis, loose forward Pierre Spies and experienced wing JP Pietersen, while stalwarts such as John Smit, Victor Matfield and Jaque Fourie have retired and Fourie du Preez, Bakkies Botha, Danie Rossouw and Gurtho Steenkamp are not playing rugby in South Africa.

The Springbok coach will announce his squad for their Australasian leg of the Rugby Championship on Tuesday, but Meyer said there would not be a raft of changes.

“It’s easy to say throw people out and pick new ones, but that’s not coaching, that’s picking. I’ve been in this position a few times as a coach and the easiest thing is just to cut players, but that won’t move you forward. We’ve already lost a lot of leadership and then you’d be throwing out what little experience you’ve got.”

Meyer admitted that taking on Australia in Perth and New Zealand in Dunedin in their next two Rugby Championship fixtures would be a more daunting prospect requiring a much improved performance from the Springboks.

“The next two games will be even tougher and we have to improve. I know we can do it, but the only way the side will improve is by coaching them, improving their technique and mental strength,” Meyer said.

South Africa suffered from a distinct lack of continuity against the Pumas, who dominated the breakdowns, but Meyer said the make-up of the loose-trio – three big, physical players in Willem Alberts, Jacques Potgieter and Marcell Coetzee – was not the problem. The Springboks have a top-class fetcher flank in Heinrich Brussow, but he has not been selected by Meyer and is currently out injured.

“Argentina are also very physical and it’s not just about the loose trio. It’s the whole pack and also the backs who have to contest the ball, and the Pumas flooded the breakdown. It’s more about numbers and technique,” Meyer said.

The Springbok coach suggested some of Argentina’s ball-stealing was illegal.

“I coached a few of their players while I was at Leicester, so I knew how tough it would be. Argentina have finished third in the World Cup and New Zealand could only score two tries against them in Auckland last year. They’re especially hard to play against if they slow down your ball and they don’t play like teams in SuperRugby.

“It was a different interpretation and Argentina competed a lot, threw numbers at the breakdown and got their hands on the ball to slow it down. Our guys were used to SuperRugby for 16 weeks and now players were flying into the rucks from all areas. But we should have done better with our clearing.”

Meyer admitted that it had been a case of the Springboks’ discipline also letting them down.

“Argentina had a lot of PR and emotion behind them, but I was very disappointed with our discipline because we knew they would come hard at us and get the crowd behind them early on. Because of our discipline, we’d concede a penalty and they would start mauling, which makes life very difficult. Away from home, your discipline needs to be impeccable, but we got very frustrated, which is part of the inexperience. It was a very hostile environment and there was off-the-ball stuff, especially at the breakdown. But there’s no excuse, this team needs to grow up,” Meyer said.

Pumas’ solid debut praised by Boks 0

Posted on August 20, 2012 by Ken

South Africa saw off Argentina 27-6 at Newlands on Saturday, but the Springboks praised the Pumas for making a solid debut in the Rugby Championship.

“Argentina belong in this company and they will be tough to beat. Today was a stepping stone for them,” Springbok captain Jean de Villiers told a news conference after his team had outscored the Pumas by three tries to nil, but had only scored seven points in the second half.

South Africa coach Heyneke Meyer said the other teams in the southern hemisphere tournament – New Zealand and Australia – should not underestimate newcomers Argentina.

“Full credit to them. They were right on the advantage line. People underestimate Argentina and they play great rugby, they are going to do well in the tournament. Those 15 opponents in blue made it impossible for us to get four tries and the bonus point,” Meyer said.

The Argentina captain and coach were mindful of the fact that they are going to need to improve if they are to beat one of the southern hemisphere giants in the Rugby Championship, and they were both disappointed by the Pumas’ error count at Newlands.

“For us, it is difficult to come to play the Springboks, but our mistakes gave them scoring opportunities. We made too many penalties in the first half and some balls were lost which South Africa turned to points. And it was difficult to leave our own part of the field.

“We didn’t do so well, but being our first game, we are happy with the performance. We need to improve a lot of things, but the players gave 100% and that is what we had wanted,” coach Santiago Phelan said.

“It was a good first step, we honestly realised how intense this type of rugby is. We can look at ourselves proudly as we gave everything, it was very intense.

“Today was a good step and we are proud to be in this tournament. Five more games and if we use them and keep on giving everything, if we improve, then we will be happy,” captain Juan Martin Fernandez Lobbe said.

The Pumas were particularly good at the rucks on Saturday and the Springboks struggled to gain continuity from their front-foot ball thanks to the determination of the visitors.

“Our kicking game was better than against England and we got in the right areas of the field, but at the breakdown we didn’t get the recycling we wanted,” Meyer said. “We missed Bismarck du Plessis – he is the leader of the pack. We need to be more physical in the breakdown.”

The physical and combative Du Plessis, the form hooker in SuperRugby, left the field after just four minutes with a knee injury.

Both Meyer and De Villiers praised the character of flyhalf Morne Steyn, whose response to the harsh criticism he received after the England series was a faultless performance with the boot and a key hand in two of the Springboks’ three tries.

Springbok forwards douse Argentina determination 0

Posted on August 20, 2012 by Ken

South Africa used their trademark forward charges to douse a determined Argentina debut and win their Rugby Championship match 27-6 (half-time 20-6) at Newlands on Saturday.

The Springbok pack did not yield in defence against the massive Argentina forwards and their strong ball-carriers won enough momentum for them to dominate both territory and possession.

Flyhalf Morne Steyn enjoyed a marvellous return to form as he steered South Africa to victory, his influence ranging from faultless goal-kicking that brought him three conversions and two penalties, to precise field-kicking that set up wing Bryan Habana’s try and slick handling that led to fullback Zane Kirchner’s opening try.

The Springboks also had a first-half try from flank Marcell Coetzee and, given their convincing lead at half-time, they will be disappointed that they did not claim a bonus point from the match for scoring four tries.

Argentina’s points came from two penalties by flyhalf Juan Martin Hernandez, but they could not capitalise on plenty of possession from turnovers, and struggled to escape from their own territory when under pressure in their first match in the tournament that includes the top three countries in the IRB rankings in New Zealand, Australia and South Africa.

Two incisive attacks down the left and right flanks by wings Habana and Lwazi Mvovo set up an early penalty for the Springboks by Steyn, but the home side were rocked at the same time by the loss of their star hooker, Bismarck du Plessis, with a knee injury. But his replacement, 26-year-old Adriaan Strauss, held his own on his 13th appearance at test level.

Argentina then held on to the ball well, but they could not make headway against the steely Springbok defence at close quarters, forcing Hernandez to launch a pinpoint up-and-under. Kirchner initially claimed the ball, but centre Santiago Fernandez ripped it off the fullback, who then played the ball while lying on the ground, gifting Hernandez a penalty to level the scores at 3-3 after 14 minutes.

But the Pumas failed to control the kickoff, giving South Africa a scrum in their 22. The Springboks were awarded a free kick after an early engagement by Argentina and Steyn drifted away from his marker before passing to Kirchner, who was cutting inside and stepped past two tacklers to score.

Steyn’s sweetly-struck conversion made it 10-3 to the hosts and Argentina, who fell foul of referee Steve Walsh’s whistle in the first half due to their ill-discipline, then gifted another three points to the prolific flyhalf after Sharks wing Mvovo was tackled in the air while taking a high ball, leading to a lineout in Pumas territory, at which they were trapped offsides.

Argentina continued to concede penalties and South Africa used rolling mauls to good effect before one of them brought a try as Coetzee broke blind and charged over the line.

Steyn’s convincing form with the boot continued as he kicked the touchline conversion to give the Springboks control with a 20-3 lead.

Hernandez kicked a penalty before the break and closed the gap to 20-6 after Strauss rushed up too enthusiastically and was caught offsides.

But any hopes Argentina had of getting back in the game were dashed when Hernandez (2) and centre Marcelo Bosch missed three penalties between them in the opening six minutes of the second half.

The scare served to reinvigorate the Springboks as they piled on the pressure, pinning the Pumas in their own half.

A knock-on by wing Gonzalo Camacho gave South Africa a scrum in the Argentina 22, which the visitors collapsed. The Springboks set the lineout and a rolling maul, before Steyn launched a crossfield kick to Habana on the right wing, who leapt high to claim the ball and plunge over the tryline.

Steyn again converted from the touchline, but their hopes of claiming a fourth try and the bonus point in the last 23 minutes were dashed by Argentina’s ability to steal turnovers and some unforced errors on their own behalf.

The debutants had left no one in the 39 000-strong crowd in any doubt about their passion, but their lack of attacking weapons meant they never really threatened the Springboks.

Scorers

South Africa – Tries: Zane Kirchner, Marcell Coetzee, Bryan Habana. Conversions: Morne Steyn (3). Penalties: M. Steyn (2).

Argentina – Penalties: Juan Martin Hernandez (2).

 

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