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As the Boks head for Brisbane, scene of their infamous 49-0 defeat in 2006, the whines about bad refereeing are threatening to cloud the real problem. We forget that Richie McCaw was not offside while the All Blacks were scoring a record eight tries in their two opening World Cup games. Four tries a game; it’s a big problem, a long time since the Boks had such a disorganised, leaky defence.

What’s the problem?

  • Dick Muir handles the backline. He carried the Golden Lions through 13 straight losses so he knows why a team concedes tries. Not sure he knows how to fix it though.
  • Poor defence = lack of commitment? Although the scoreline suggests being comprehensively outplayed, if the Boks made first time tackles they would have been competitive.
  • Bakkies Botha must be up for some Darwin type award for sheer audacity. I can understand why he wanted to mug Jimmy Cowan (a scrumhalf pulling the jersey of the meanest man on the field — that wouldn’t escape vigilante justice in the old days!) Bakkies obviously hasn’t done much street fighting in his day, because he’d surely have known that ‘kopping’ the opposition on the BACK of the head only causes damage to the front of one’s own. I would love to have been sitting around the All Black campfire when they discussed that one. Then poor old Danie. Sucker punch number two. Richie McCaw’s been taking lessons from the soccer players. Zane Kirchner should have gone down in a heap of pretended unconsciousness after taking a vicious (yellow card offence) shoulder charge from All Black winger Rene Ranger. Would you rather get a toe in the back or be hit in the face by the shoulder of a 103kg wing while running at full pace?
  • Selection problems continue. Can we call them mistakes? The Boks have arguably the best centre pairing in the world yet they don’t play them together. Francois Steyn is lost through poor man management. The Springboks are carrying a number of players who, while performing well in the Super 14, are not in the class required to compete at the highest level. Our second stringers don’t cut it. Remember the third test against the Lions last year? We should ask the question: would the All Blacks pick that player? Or Australia? In 2007 when we won the World Cup the Boks had class players in virtually every position. They were either first choice or close for a World XV selection. We have only lost two through retirement: Percy Montgomery and Os Du Randt. Jean Smith, Fourie Du Preez and JP Petersen are injured, but Jean De Villiers and Pierre Spies are back.

Maybe it’s not such a bad thing. Jake White played some crafty tricks in the pre World Cup Tri-Nations. If the All Blacks are lured into a false sense of complacency then we’ll all be patting ourselves on the back.

Looking back at the 49-0 loss (30-0 at halftime!) at Suncorp Stadium a year before the 2007 World Cup victory. Danie Rossouw and Wynand Olivier and Ricky Januarie were all there, Jaco van der Westhuizen at flyhalf and Akona Ndungane on the wing. We have wasted opportunities against weaker nations to grow and blood key world class players of the future.

Obviously John Smit’s form and captaincy will come under scrutiny if the Boks do not pull out of their nosedive.

The 1999 Springboks could have, should have won the World Cup following the 1995 success. The class of 2011 need to avoid making their mistakes. Dropping the captain, Gary Teichman, was clearly one of them.

We need a cool hand at the wheel. Someone whose jersey can be tugged but stays focussed on winning the race to the ball.

Let’s see if Pieter de Villiers can timeously find someone like Eddie Jones to help.

Peter Church’s follow up to Dark Video is due out this year. www.peterchurch.book.co.za




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6 Responses to “Cool heads, warm hearts: Here’s to 2011”

[…] Sports Leader » Peter Church » Cool heads, warm hearts: Here’s to 2011 sportsleader.co.za/peterchurch/2010/07/21/cool-heads-warm-hearts-heres-to-2011/ – view page – cached As the Boks head for Brisbane, scene of their infamous 49-0 defeat in 2006, the whines about bad refereeing are threatening to cloud the real problem. Tweets about this link […]

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Great post Peter and I agree in the main.
I am a John Smit fan - who isnt? However, I think the guy has become old and sluggish on the field, and with the entire season, plus a Super 15 campaign to live through in 2011 before the World Cup, I just cant see how he will and should survive in the Bok set-up.
Unlike the Gary Teichman, incident, we have a captain in waiting - Victor Matfield, who already knows the set-up and is captain to the Bulls players already.

“Let’s see if Pieter de Villiers can timeously find someone like Eddie Jones to help.” Now wouldnt that be fantastic.

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Banana on July 21st, 2010 at 1:06 pm

Hi Peter, great post and I agree in the main.
I am a big fan of John Smit - who isnt?

I would offer however, that he is looking slow and old over the past few tests. Suddenly the World Cup looks an awful long way away for him, still having to negotiate the rest of the season, and at the very least, the Super 15 contest in 2011 before the Challenges of New Zealand.
Besides where are we going to play the guy when Bismarck returns?
Unlike the Gary Teichman saga, we are fortunate to have a shoe-in leader: Victor Matfield, who already captains the bulk of the Boks from the Bulls and should still be strong come WC time.

I am still smarting over the Gary Teichman incident.

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GarethV on July 21st, 2010 at 2:34 pm

Hey Peter. I agree with many of your comments, though overall I have a somewhat different view on the ‘performance’. We were totally outplayed on all three occasions, sure, but I believe it may be a lot simpler and less complex that it might otherwise appear. Discipline! Having any player sent off the field with a yellow card, whilst playing some of the greatest sides in the world, has significant repercussions. It is almost impossible, unless the opposition is playing tiddlywinks, to not feel the massive impact of that pressure. Those 10 minutes have a huge bearing on the entire game, especially the last 30 minutes or so. The game plan immediately becomes defunct, guys are angry and exhausted, having to defend (less one player), a team running at them at full tilt, trying desperately to take advantage of their window of opportunity.

For a long time, we have been the worst team in the world when it comes to discipline, and with the new rules and focus on hard, clean play, some of our Philistines haven’t come out of dark ages it seems. Having met Jean de Villiers, I would say that he’s undoubtedly the exception to the rule despite his misdemeanour; and what possessed him to make that spear tackle is anyone’s guess. He’s not that sort of chap, and unlike a few there, he has a good compassionate, strategic brain on his head. I say, get rid of the guys who the other teams request the referees to pay special attention to. Generally they’re right, they’re dirty and end up disrupting our game. Last Sat we lost due to penalties only. Rugby doesn’t have to be a Neanderthal sport to be played exceptionally well. It requires skilled thinkers.

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Castles in the Air on July 27th, 2010 at 3:23 pm

Pete, all highs are followed by lows, or were you not paying attention in Blades class? The trick is to get the cycle to coincide with the RWC cycle.

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Jamble on July 28th, 2010 at 9:35 am

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uefi on April 5th, 2011 at 3:04 am

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Peter Church is the author of the dark thriller, Bitter Pill published in August this year.

He is a proud supporter of South African sport, especially the Proteas and Springboks. His earliest sporting memory is listening to the muddy 1970 Springbok-All Black second rugby Test on the radio in his Dad's car. He stills manages the odd cricket game for the renowned Ridge CC in Cape Town. His previous novel, Dark Video was published by Struik/Random House in South Africa 2008 and New Holland in Australia 2009.

Read the 1st chapter of Bitter Pill online



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