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Fatigue

It has been a long season. And it showed. PdV and the provincial coaches need to sit down and work out a schedule per player on how the Bok 22 will be managed next year.

I agree with him that international rugby is not the arena in which you rest players. It is the very pinnacle of the game and the best players should be there representing their country. But we need to balance that against keeping our best fit, fresh and more importantly HUNGRY for 2011. This is where the provincial/Super 14 coaches come in.

Our starting XV should not be playing more than 9/10 Super Rugby round-robin matches next season. This is why by the time the Tri-Nations is halfway through, our guys are spent. It starts there. Manage them in the S14, bring them in off the bench in the incoming Tests (this will do the reserves much good in terms of getting quality game-time) and unleash them in the (harder) away leg of the Tri-Nations. Hopefully by the time the home leg comes, the coach will have the leeway to blood some of the reserves in. Guys like Matfield, Juan Smith (should be grateful he was injured and can rest) Fourie and Jaque do not need to play themselves into form. They need careful management more.

Maybe this is the trigger we need to introduce central contracting in SA.

Tactics

When PdV first came in, he tried to instil in the players a mentality of playing the situation. When the results went against us, he was roundly lambasted for “taking SA Rugby away from its strengths”. A ridiculous argument if ever there was one. PdV has never said our forwards must turn into jelly-boy nancies. Instead what he has been trying to advocate among our backline, is to make better use of the ball that our front row grunt almost always guarantees us. The Boks are almost always going to get adequate ball in a match and our players need to be taught to have the courage to make the right decision at the right time instead of sticking to Plan A. Problem is you cannot teach that at international level. The bigger problem is that our Plan A works so well at domestic level that it is hard to argue against the head-in-the-sand ostriches that shout loudest in our rugby discourse.

Last night showed exactly what happens when Plan A doesn’t work. Morne Steyn is a quality player, but when he has to improvise on the spot he is hopeless. How often did he kick away possession needlessly and aimlessly instead of taking advantage of a broken French line and moving upfield with ball in hand? A prodigious boot is not much use when the opposition gets the ball going forward and keeps you playing in your 22.

Intensity

The French did not do anything miraculous yesterday. They just did everything harder. Got the hit in first in the scrums, hit the collision points quicker and faster and they made their first-time tackles count. This afforded their backs the opportunity to stretch our defence and make telling incursions behind our lines. Maybe this had to do with our players being tired. Or maybe it was a simple matter of this being the beginning of their season, and it being yet another game for a Bok team that had achieved its major goals for the season.

The good that came out of this for me is as follows:

1. Despite our poor performance, we were still able to stay within range of the French the whole game. That says a lot for our quality and fighting spirit.

2. Andries Bekker’s physicality has come in leaps and bounds this year.

3. Brussow continues to be a revelation.

4. Adi Jacobs silenced his critics.

5. It highlighted the need for better player management. Hopefully our coaches can now work together and find the right balance between local needs and national priorities.

6. Morne Steyn had a bad game. Bad for him on the night, but ultimately it will do him (and Bok rugby) a world of good. He will learn from this and emerge a better player. Let us hope his provincial coaches allow him to work on his running game so he becomes a more complete player.




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14 Responses to “What went wrong for the Boks”

I’m sorry, I think this whole “peaking too soon” thing is a bit overrated.
Professional athletes should always work towards being in their peak. Once they get there, they should aim to stay there… Case in point: Ryan Giggs.
And once we realise that Tim Noakes is not the end all, be all of SA sports fitness, then we’ll realise that we do not need to treat our players with kid gloves.
Look at what a long break did for the All Blacks at the last World Cup?
I say NO BREAKS!!! These guys are men, they are paid to play rugby, and therefore they should be okay with playing 25 games a year.

(Report abuse)

Lunga Biyela on November 17th, 2009 at 8:57 am

I cannot agree here with this article. New Zealand equally and Australia have had a long season, yet despite poor performances, they still manage to win.
Morne was shocking, his inexperience was shown up as was Kankowski, both of whom went to the bin…If our players were tired before running onto the field, imagine how tired they were when two players were binned…You cannot win games at the top level with only 14 men for 20 minutes of an 80 minute game.
I fail to see how Adi Jacobs silenced his critics? Like the whole backline, he was inept, again! One tackle does not a game make.

(Report abuse)

Banana on November 17th, 2009 at 10:36 am

Banana, New Zealand and Australia have hardly had impressive seasons. Witness their struggles with the French, and a certain team in green and gold.

I would hardly point them out as examples to support an argument.

And so far they have triumphed against who exactly?

Wales? Italy? England?

Roll another one mate.

(Report abuse)

Bonga Ntshingila on November 17th, 2009 at 11:22 am

Not to mention that both NZ and Oz have been chopping and changing their test teams all year. They do not have 10-13 players who played every match. Both McCaw and Carter missed tests and S14 matches through injury. This year was the first extended 3N, a tough Lions series (as opposed to the usual casual warm ups), a long super competition and one of the most competitive Currie Cups in years. The core of the Boks played every match they were eligible for which accounts to nearly every weekend since Feb. I have no doubt that mentally they are up for it, but I don’t believe they are up for it physically. I only hope that their fatigue does not translate to injury next year and thereby loss of form going into 2011 WC.

(Report abuse)

nic on November 17th, 2009 at 12:39 pm

Some interesting points made. I reckon Siyabonga is spot on when it comes to fitness. I disagree with Lunga since Tim Noakes is Tim Noakes for a reason. He is no crack-pot, and is it little wonder we entered the 2007 WC with a fully fit squad after resting our main players for the 2006 End of year tour? Jake White listened to Noakes, and SA demonstrated during the WC they were the fittest team there, in no small part thanks to Noakes.

Adi had a poor game, so I think Wynand should get a go against Italy to show us what he can do.

Andries Bekker is indeed looking good for the future, which bodes well for Vic and Bakkies.

(Report abuse)

Adam Wakefield on November 17th, 2009 at 1:15 pm

@Lunga,

Ryan Giggs benefitted in no small way from Wales being so useless in international football that all his summers have been free. he gets enough rest.

Ditto Paul Scholes since his retirement.

(Report abuse)

Bonga Ntshingila on November 17th, 2009 at 1:37 pm

The excuse of fitness and fatigue in a test match doesnt cut it for me, are you saying That Kankowski was tired? along with Morne Steyn?…How do you explain our best player for two seasons Fourie Du Preez putting in good performance on a consistent level, Friday night included? Surely if he is up for it the resat should follow?

Nic you have a short memory…PdV brought ‘tired’ players off after 50 odd minutes in the first test against the Lions and it nearly backfired…He then rested the big guns in the third test and we were humbled…by English and Welshmen - so yes Bonga…they are a comparison, Ireland Wales and England are never easy to beat at home…just see our record in England in recent years, and Ireland…

The scrums are a joke thanks in no small measure to Gary Gold who was pathetic for the Province pack before he joined the Boks…I big reason why we were so shoody against the French is because if the pack is under pressure the quality of ball suffers as a result…it has nothing to do with fatigue.

Whether against Wales, Ireland, or England, the point is that even a below par New Zealand and Australia still do the business overseas, whether it be an A team, or B team. Why?

How do you explain the dirt trackers abysmal performances Bonga? Fatigue I suppose aswell after the rigours of the Currie Cup…as many of those players only palyed in our domestic competition?

Basically the solution is to scrap the end of the year tour becuse our core players are tired and the aside from the match 22, the rest are average and would lose every year come November because the bulk of the A team are at home having an early Christmas.
You are calling for players to be rested at key intervals during the super 14, and Tri Nationas, but if that happened we would not compete, would not make play-offs, people wouldnt turn up to watch games and the end product would suffer, then the players could sit at home and look at the empty trophy cupboard!

Adi Jacobs silenced his critics….ha ha laughable!

I smoke a pipe Bonga, perhaps you can join me…

(Report abuse)

Banana on November 18th, 2009 at 9:40 am

banana - Are you kidding, Jacobs was one of the only guys who actually had a good game… Du preez on the other hand had a rare shocker…Why is the midweek team playing badly because they have never played together before, even Saracens coach Brendan venter said it, ´they play like a barbarians side´ a good team in theory but without unity…. Bonga in completely right to suggest that there needs to be better management of the players amount of game time. The guys play almost every week from February to the end of November - Then start training again in Mid December for the new season… Of course they are going to be playing badly in their last few matches… Bongas point of them missing the some super 14 matches and coming off the bench for the easier incoming tours makes a lot of sense. If we want them to peak in the big games then we need to rest them in the smaller ones.

(Report abuse)

Steve on November 18th, 2009 at 1:07 pm

Steve not sure if you watch rugby, but we already do rest kep players in the Super 14? Come chap keep up - the better performing franchises have been rotating players for a few seasons now!

(Report abuse)

Banana on November 18th, 2009 at 5:03 pm

A recurring complaint in the Southern Hemisphere is that the touring Northern Hemisphere sides send under strength teams, causing poor gate takings. NZ even took the issue up at government level and threatened to boycott end of year tours. Why do think the NH does this? They like losing?

Resting players in the Lions tour was not the right decision. The team was building momentum and fatigue was not a factor. Sending in a rookie fullback with two rookie wings was a terrible idea. Although Kirchener has all the makings of a great player, when he inevitably made a mistake, instead of having JP and Habana to back him up, he had two rookies floundering with him. You do not blood 10 rookies at the same time. There are no combinations, no experience in playing styles and little cohesion.

What is your alternative Banana? The Boks and coaching staff turned to custard in three short months? NZ isn’t actually that good? Our playing style is too one-dimensional? Rotating players is something that the current Bok Management have not done well, but is it really a good idea? NZ might not think it is after their last fiasco. No teams have played as much rugby in a season as the current crop have. If you can’t understand how this might lead to fatigue then I don’t know.

Kankowski has had several shots at the Bok jersey and has failed every time. He doesn’t have BMT, or he is being used in the wrong role. Nothing to do with fatigue.

(Report abuse)

nic on November 19th, 2009 at 12:02 am

Banana we´re not the only ones saying it - all the pros agree… Read Nick mallets comments on keo.co.za today - Better rest management is vital, surely this was evident on Friday night - the boys look tired, its not rocket science.

(Report abuse)

Steve on November 19th, 2009 at 9:42 am

Steve, I am being a little pig headed in my defense that fatigue should not be an excuse for the poor performance…as there were many other reasons why lost against the French. To be honest I am not a fan of this end of year tour - tired South versus early season North.
However, many of the mainline boks had good rest periods due to injury… Bakkies, (banned too LOL) Fourie, Adi, Victor and a few others all rested at some point, while guys like Kanko, Jacque Fourie, and Morne Steyn, Kirchner, and JP Pieterson one would harly think they are that tired.
I do take the fatigue point, but am not that keen when I hear thats is the reson for last weekend performance…there were many other factors, scrummaging for one, two chaps in the bin etc. Mentally, we werent up for it…so if you talk about mental fatigue, I could see a point.
Apologies for coming across as a brick wall.

(Report abuse)

Banana on November 19th, 2009 at 11:02 am

No worries, I actually agree, in general I think it was a bad strategy more than anything else… Arriving in France less than two days before didn´t help their case and in general most of the guys had a crap game, ur right some of the players cant use fatigue as their point… Fatigue was only one of the factors…

(Report abuse)

Steve on November 19th, 2009 at 11:32 am

i am afraid, these boks have not only reached, but allready left their peak.
Let us see what they do against Ireland now.
But my gut feeling is, that not only this very long (and successfull) season is taking its toll, but also the key players age.
A quite radical rehaul needs to be done during the next 1,5 years, if the RWC is a goal at all.
NZ and Aus are way ahead - they are rebuilding, which is one reason, the boks were so dominant in this yeasr Trinations.

(Report abuse)

Rolf on November 25th, 2009 at 12:45 pm

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Bonga Ntshingila is a 25 year old avid sports fan,he had a promising youth sports career (as in coaches always promised he would play in the next match,and teammates always promised to moer him if he shanked yet another scoring opportunity).When he realised that maybe he wasn't going to be the next Andre Joubert thanks to a few shortcomings (hand-eye co-ordination,timing,pace (buffet lines excepted) he proceeded to satisfy his huge passion for sport from the stands and immerse himself in in-depth analysis of sport and atheletes.This may (not) have been made even more inviting by the prospect of imbibing a few refreshing beverages while casting a critical eye over the latest choke/cheat/fluke by (insert geographically correct team here) and telling all and sundry just how and why he and only he saw it coming.

Bonga indulges the following sporting passions:

1.Orlando Pirates (no I have never set any stadium on fire)
2. Rugby.anywhere and everywhere it is played on the planet
3. Curling

One of the above may be made up.
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