The Star Malaysia

Hotel challenges pale in comparison to Boks threat for Welsh

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TOKYO: As if it’s not a busy enough week for Wales’ rugby team, the Tokyo hotel where the players are staying is also being used by Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe during the festivitie­s surroundin­g the enthroneme­nt of the country’s new emperor.

Roads around the hotel have been shut. Dignitarie­s and leaders are coming and going.

Security is tight, including the use of metal detectors. The Welsh are having to use a separate entrance.

“We don’t know how our bus is going to get in and out in the next couple of days,” Wales coach Warren Gatland said.

“We’ve got a few challenges to work through.”

Surely nothing will be greater, though, than the physical challenge put forth by the Springboks at the weekend.

“It’s going to be a battle royal,” Wales defence coach Shaun Edwards said yetserday, leaning forward on a table in a suite at the New Otani Hotel in central Tokyo.

No team in rugby pride themselves on winning the physical battle more than South Africa, described by Edwards as “the best defensive team in the world”.

The Springboks pack, led by giant lock Eben Etzebeth, is huge and relishes confrontat­ion.

Gatland has spoken of the Boks attempting a few years ago to emulate southern hemisphere rivals New Zealand and Australia by playing more expansivel­y and forgetting their trademark strengths – the driving lineouts, the strong scrum, the heavy ball-carrying. Basically, out-and-out physicalit­y. That has returned under Rassie Erasmus, a former South Africa flanker who became coach of the team in March last year and led it to the Rugby Championsh­ip title in August.

Wales lost to South Africa in the 2015 World Cup quarter-finals but have won all four of their meetings since then.

The last two have come against sides coached by Erasmus, but they were both in 2018 and the Boks have kicked on since then.

Edwards predicts the game will be decided by one score and is confident where the contest will hinge.

“A lot of people think that in defence, you don’t want to miss any tackles but it’s not one of the key performanc­e indicators of whether you are going to win a game,” he said.

“One of the biggest ones is the gain line. Did you give up the gain line, did you not give up the gain line?

“That is the biggest indicator of whether you win or lose the game in defence. It’s going to be a battle royal on the advantage line.”

Edwards backed his team to win if they could keep South Africa to 13-15 points, around the average Wales conceded per game in their run to the Six Nations Grand Slam this year.

And that would mean a first World Cup final for a country that lives and breathes rugby.

“It’s seize-the-moment time,” Edwards said.

“These opportunit­ies don’t come around very often.”

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