10 things you need to know about the Springboks in 2018

It's the start of a new era under Rassie Erasmus. Will he be able to stop the slump of the last two years?


South Africa will play 14 Tests this year as they seek redemption under new coach Rassie Erasmus after two disastrous seasons since finishing third at the 2015 World Cup.

Here are 10 issues surrounding the team ahead of their first international, a one-off Test against Wales in Washington this Saturday.

Captaincy

Siya Kolisi became the first black captain of the South African Test team this week in place of injured Warren Whiteley, but Erasmus said he will review the position after the England series.

Even when Whiteley recovers, it is difficult to imagine Kolisi being stripped of the role unless things go horribly pear-shaped in the England series.

Cash

It seems crazy organising a Test against Wales on the other side of the Atlantic just seven days before hosting England, but Erasmus admits money is a factor.

“One reason for this match is it enables SA Rugby to make some money,” he said, referring to a national body that posted a R33.3 million  loss last year.

Coach

There is intense pressure on Erasmus to lift the Springboks out of the doldrums after predecessor Allister Coetzee won only 11 of 25 Tests during the past two seasons.

“Technically, there is not a better coach in South Africa than ‘Rassie’. In fact, he is one of the best in the world,” was the optimistic view of Springbok great Victor Matfield.

Creativity

South Africans are offloading more often in the tackle and with greater skill, but a tendency remains to try and smash through opponents rather than find a way past them.

When it comes to unpredictable backline play, New Zealand remain supreme in the southern hemisphere with many South African attempts at originality ponderous by comparison.

Defence

Renowned in previous decades for watertight defending, South Africa conceded a lot of soft tries during the past two seasons, often due to half-hearted, technically poor tackling.

A particular weakness has been aerial defence with opponents like Ireland using high kicks to great effect, particularly against Springbok wingers.

Injuries

South Africa continually suffer more from this problem than most rivals with four probable forward starters against England ruled out by injuries.

Whiteley has barely played in 12 months, Eben Etzebeth has not featured since November and Malcolm Marx and Lood de Jager are more recent casualties.

New Zealand

While three home Tests against England during June will be revealing, the ultimate test of a hoped-for Springbok revival will come later against arch rivals New Zealand.

They clash in September and October against a background of 11 All-Black victories in the last 12 Tests against the Springboks, including a record 57-0 rout last year.

Racial mix

Tired of predominantly “white” teams in a country with a 92 percent black population, the government is insisting at least 50 percent of the 2019 Rugby World Cup team in Japan be black.

The target this year is 45 percent over the season and Erasmus met it for the Wales Test by choosing 11 blacks, seven starters and four replacements.

Rankings

After years of challenging New Zealand for top place in the world rankings, South Africa have slumped to sixth, behind Ireland, England, Australia and Scotland.

Erasmus is confident this can change quickly, saying: “We can get back to number one or two in the world soon. We have the players to achieve this goal.”

Tactical kicking

This is an area of South African rugby desperately needing improvement with too many field kicks becoming nothing more than an invitation for rivals to counterattack.

New Zealanders are masters of contestable kicks whereas South Africans regularly overkick, giving their team-mates little hope of regaining possession.

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