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The absence of a specialist flyhalf in the Springbok squad has left many questioning the selections of coach Peter de Villiers ahead of a gruelling season-ending tour of the United Kingdom.

World Cup winner Butch James has been omitted as he plies his trade with Guinness Premiership giants Bath. However, he has made himself unavailable for the tour and publicly stated the 2009 British and Irish Lions tour will be his last series in the Springbok jersey.

Realistically, the options for flyhalf in the Springbok squad are Earl Rose, Frans Steyn and Ruan Pienaar – who appears to have the inside track to wear the number 10. Pienaar has, however, already stated his preferred position is scrumhalf and was encouraged by de Villiers earlier in the year to specialise at number nine.

The Sharks star is clearly talented enough to play in both positions, but in a bid to keep him in South Africa, the Sharks have been forced to play him at scrumhalf. So why now does the national coach select the player out of position? Pienaar has had no consistent run at flyhalf and throughout his career has only deputised for the regular number ten at his respective teams.

The other problem is that Pienaar is far too talented to be omitted from a Springbok side and with Fourie du Preez the incumbent number nine and Ricky Januarie waiting in the wings, it might prove a good move to have Pienaar in the side, albeit at number 10. If de Villiers is going to use Pienaar there, he needs to be given a consistent run on the UK tour and then some with the Sharks in next year’s Super 14.

Frans Steyn appeared to be the successor to Butch James earlier in the year when he was selected ahead of Pienaar to face Italy at Newlands. While he led a winning team, the wet conditions did show the flaws in Steyn’s game.

Like Pienaar, Steyn’s versatility has also proved to be a problem having played everywhere from 10-15 in the backline. The arrival of France international Frederic Michalak at the Sharks has also made de Villiers’ job much harder. Having Michalak playing at number ten meant Steyn and Pienaar were forced to shift elsewhere in the backline. For the majority of the Currie Cup Steyn played centre – the same position in which he played when the Boks won the World Cup last year.

With Jean de Villiers, Adi Jacobs and Jacque Fourie holding the aces for the centre positions, where does Steyn expect to play? Peter de Villiers may just be looking to have Steyn as an impact player with the ability to come off the bench for Pienaar. I sincerely hope that’s the way it works as we’ve seen the Sharks move Pienaar from flyhalf to scrumhalf during a game. Again, the players need to be given an extended run in one position to make sure they adapt their game effectively.

Take the example of Percy Montgomery who began his international career against the Lions in 1997 at outside centre. A brief run in the centre was followed by a move to flyhalf when Harry Viljoen took over as coach. Again, it was a short run until finally he was given the freedom of the number 15 jersey and now there are few people in the world who can argue against Montgomery’s success at the back.

The final pivot option of Earl Rose leaves me feeling very anxious as a Springbok supporter. While Rose has shown intermittent signs of brilliance in the Currie Cup, his lack of consistency and the ease at which he crumbles under the pressure makes me hope he will spend much of the tour watching from the sidelines. Having said that, Rose should not even be considered at fullback as Conrad Jantjes’ form makes him irreplaceable.

Rose’s selection quite honestly puzzles me when a player like Peter Grant is left out of the squad. Grant has international experience and has regularly played alongside Jean de Villers.

Surely South Africa has enough utility players and too few specialists?

Springbok squad – Bakkies Botha, Fourie du Preez, Bryan Habana, Chiliboy Ralepele, Danie Rossouw, Pierre Spies, Gurthro Steenkamp, Jongi Nokwe, Juan Smith, Andries Bekker, Schalk Burger, Jean de Villiers, Conrad Jantjes, Ricky Januarie, Brian Mujati, Heinrich Brussow, Jaque Fourie, Earl Rose, Victor Matfield, John Smit (c), Odwa Ndungane, JP Pietersen, Adrian Jacobs, Bismark du Plessis, Frans Steyn, Ruan Pienaar, Tendai Mtwarira, Ryan Kankowski.

On standby — Peter Grant, Jannie du Plessis, Johann Muller, Wynand Olivier, Adriaan Strauss, Heinke van der Merwe, Jano Vermaak.




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6 Responses to “Dude, where’s my flyhalf?”

Earl suffers from Brent Russel syndrome.because he is small and unorthodox, values anathemic to SA Rugby people tend to remember his mistakes more to justify their unease.

Watch him fly.

for the record I reckon Ruan would be a legendary flyhalf, and his kicking will get to 80% with time, remember Butch wasn’t that hot a kicker when he came through.

Peter Grant is simply too one dimensional, currently.

(Report abuse)

Siyabonga Ntshingila on October 28th, 2008 at 4:11 pm

Rose meeds another full season at 10 before being considered for national call-up, one hot day doesn’t make a summer. Ruan on the other hand is all class, has the X-factor, and should grab the 10 jersey with both hands.

(Report abuse)

Alan on October 28th, 2008 at 4:55 pm

While I tend to agree with the criticisms of Rose, I take one look at the points-scorer’s log for the 2008 Currie Cup, and I see Earl rose there on 172 points for the season (with 5 tries, nogal), 70 points ahead of the next guy Conrad Barnard and 78 points ahead of 4th place Ruan Pienaar (one try). He is only 20 points behind first-placed Morne Steyn (2 tires but a lot more penalties) – who had an extra game – and if you consider Earl’s two disastrous games against Province and then in the semi’s – he may have ended top of the log. If The Lions gained as many penalties as they conceded, he may have beaten Steyn to the top spot after all. The lauded Peter Grant is only on 8th place, no ties, a couple of penalties, with the bulk of his scoring from conversions. Rose scored three times the amount of points this season than Peter Grant – whom people think rose is taking the place of. As for Fransie Steyn? How does a grand total of 16 points for the season sound? Willie Wepener scored more tries on Hooker than Steyn did playing in a backline! There is merit in Rose’s selection.

One swallow does not make a summer – but two bad games does not make a palooka either. Rose has talent – oodles of it – BUT he does need some blooding in the big leagues. This man may yet surprise.

Granted - a rugby player is more than a points-machine – but if you look at the job of a fly-half, I think Earl Rose did a lot more this season than any of the other mentioned and lamented names.

Remember a lot of people who started out worse than Hoërskool Roodepoort’s 3rd team “back in the day” became legends. Percy Montgomery couldn’t play rugby if you paid him until he came home from Wales, Butch James was all tackle and no finesse until he went to finishing school, and even ol’ Slap Chips had plenty of speed, but the ball-handling skills of a three year old with a plaster-cast until some coach taught him how to play. Even my hero Brendan Venter had to be reigned in and guided from time to time. Raw talent they all had, but they needed to be coached to perfection. Now these four guys are rugby legends. My opinion is Rose has that same talent, has proven it, and while he may crack a bit under pressure, so what – most rookies did, and if we blood him now, and if he can be the points-machine for the Bokke (yes, Bokke, not Blomme!) that he was for the Lions, then we have our World Cup 2011 flyhalf.

I think the criticism against Rose is unfair, I think this man will surprise us all! BUT because I’m a Lions supporter (obviously), thereby doomed to eat my words and made to cry every time we play, I will probably be proven wrong.

Where is your flyhalf? Dude: Earl Rose – there is your flyhalf.

(Report abuse)

Gerry on October 28th, 2008 at 6:20 pm

SA hasn’t had a true, test-quality flyhalf since Honiball retired. NZ has players much better than Butch et al playing at number 10 in their amateur second division Heartland competition.

(Report abuse)

Jon on October 29th, 2008 at 12:44 am

Another option is Meyer Bosman.He may not have set the CC alight but when you have Fourie,Ricky,Jean,Adi and Steyn around you maybe what you want in a pivot is a dude that can just keep play moving instead of forcing himself on the game.

Too many chefs and all that.

Meyer came through as a no10, had a bit of a dip, then was recast as a no12 and he’s done alright there I say. Remember also that in NZ, the likes of Carter, McIntyre and even Mehrtens on occasion all alternate comfortably between 10+12 as the Kiwis treat those two as the decision makers as opposed to lumping everything on one mans shoulders.

(Report abuse)

Siyabonga Ntshingila on October 29th, 2008 at 12:39 pm

“Brent Russell syndrome” - i like that. Let’s give Rose another look at S14 level next season, maybe he will surprise us.

As for Meyer Bosman, agreed he’s gone very quiet at number 12, I’m hoping he gets another look at number 10 next season.

(Report abuse)

Justin Lawrence on October 31st, 2008 at 1:08 pm

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Justin is currently editor of the Essential Sports service at Cape Town-based agency Sunday Media. After completing his media and politics degree at UCT, this writer's work has been syndicated online to four continents, via the likes of Fox Sports, Virgin Mobile and Soccer365.

A brief sports career saw Justin become a master in the art of both putt-putt and corridor cricket before injuring himself while playing fantasy football. Nonetheless, he still holds a strong passion for all sport and is looking forward to seeing what Bafana Bafana can do in 2010.
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