The Springboks’ first overseas Test in nearly two years – against Australia in the Rugby Championship – is a little over 10 days away. And while the Boks have been in action in South Africa recently and performed well, they face a massive test on foreign soil.
So far in 2021, they have beaten Georgia in a one-off Test, the British and Irish Lions (2-1), and Argentina in two Tests, but coach Jacques Nienaber and his team will be hard at work preparing the squad for the Tests against the Wallabies and All Blacks.
Here then are the five areas the Boks still need to work on ahead of next weekend’s first outing in Australia against their hosts.
The Springboks’ five victories so far this year have largely been down to their tight five outmuscling and outworking the opposition. As effective as it has been, forward dominance alone has seldom triumphed in the Southern Hemisphere competition.
It would be great to see Cheslin Kolbe, Makazole Mapimpi and Willie le Roux able to exploit space out wide more. They can also be brought into play from clever first-phase plays. These three are all capable of breaking defensive systems and showing a clean pair of heels.
One can forgive the Springboks for adopting a wear-them-down strategy against the British and Irish Lions because their lack of high-intensity conditioning after 18 months out of Test rugby made it essential.
But they now have a good month of game-time and conditioning work under their belts so the time has come for them to put more speed on the ball.
Unlike Argentina, Australia and New Zealand will be actively trying to quicken the game up, so the Springboks will need to be more mobile, with greater continuity between forwards and backs, and maybe even more offloads.
The old benchmark for Springbok teams was to concede fewer than 10 penalties per game; recently they have been in double figures most of the time.
It’s not that their discipline has been bad, but under pressure they have tended to err a bit too easily. They can get their penalty count down and that will help with momentum and territory.
At times the Springboks have looked like a bunch of boisterous pups having a bone thrown to them when it comes to receiving the restarts.
The absence of Vermeulen has been felt there and a bit more organisation and clinical execution will help make their exits smoother and relieve territorial pressure.
In the sage words of Nick Mallett: “It is not up to us to change the way we play because it’s not attractive. You play the way you play best in order to beat the opposition”. And the Springboks’ strengths are their set-pieces and kicking game. Which can still improve!
Lood de Jager and Franco Mostert have been immense at lineout time, but more options can be brought into play there.
Ox Nche, Malcolm Marx and Trevor Nyakane have excelled at scrum-time, but we are still waiting for Steven Kitshoff, Bongi Mbonambi and Frans Malherbe to really cut loose and destroy opposition scrums.
And the Springboks can improve their box-kicks and kicking into space.
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