Business Day

No bluffing: Rassie to go with same again

Bok coach says he cannot change tactics in two training sessions, which leaves England’s Jones in two minds

- Liam Del Carme Tokyo Images

Rassie Erasmus has made it clear that apart from the reintroduc­tion of wing Cheslin Kolbe, he is likely to stick with the same players who did duty in the semifinal.

It is hard to discern fantasy from reality now that the Springboks have returned to their Tokyo Bay haunt.

In the build-up to Saturday’s Rugby World Cup (RWC) final against England‚ they are back in residence next to Tokyo’s sprawling Disneyland complex where they did much of their preparatio­n for their opening match against New Zealand.

A week ago‚ when England coach Eddie Jones and his team made the same hotel their temporary home‚ many wondered whether he was shooting straight with comments about how the pressure is on the All Blacks as well as his assertion that the New Zealand media were fans with keyboards.

The question now is whether Rassie Erasmus potentiall­y has lines blurred about the make-up of his match-day squad‚ as well as the tactics the Springboks are most likely to employ in Saturday’s final.

Erasmus has made it clear that apart from the reintroduc­tion of wing Cheslin Kolbe, he is likely to stick to the same players who did duty in the semifinal.

He also re-emphasised the point that the Bok tactics have to remain the same given the short six-day turnaround between their semifinal and the final.

Some in the UK media found it odd that he should so generously share such informatio­n early in the week leading up to an RWC final. He was pointedly asked whether he was bluffing.

“We have 160 minutes to train on a six-day turnaround‚” said Erasmus. “There is not a lot we can change between those two training sessions.

“If we had a seven- or eightday turnaround I might change things. There might be one or two new starter moves or something like that. There is not a helluva lot you can change in your tactics in six days‚” said the coach.

However, in his formative years as a coach Erasmus was known for using the odd ruse‚ or drawing something from left field. His roof-fitted disco lights innovation certainly raised a few eyebrows when he was at the Cheetahs.

He is a strategist at heart and is drawn to doing things that may not immediatel­y blip on the opposition’s radar.

He has even got the wily England coach in two minds.

“Rassie is a cunning coach and has done a great job with the Springboks‚” said Jones. “We are prepared for the unexpected.

“The only thing we are really worried about is how the Springboks turn up on Saturday. They won a tough semifinal and when you are in the final of the World Cup, you have done a lot of good things right.

“They are a massively aggressive pack and they played their stronger team in the second half as opposed to the first half. They are going to be a difficult side to beat but we will enjoy the preparatio­ns.

“We know a couple of areas where we think we can expose them and will make sure we are good in those areas.

“They can play differentl­y but also know they can come through the front door. Not many Springbok teams you play don’t come through the front door so we will be ready at the front door and have enough cover for the back door if that happens.”

Whether Erasmus is bluffing may be revealed at his team announceme­nt on Thursday.

The wags and the offspring of the Springboks may be luxuriatin­g in this precinct of fable and fantasy, but ahead of the most important match of his life, Erasmus insists he is not kidding.

 ?? /Dan Mullan/Getty ?? Welcome return: Cheslin Kolbe, who has recovered from injury, is expected to be named in the Springbok team on Thursday for Saturday’s World Cup final against England.
/Dan Mullan/Getty Welcome return: Cheslin Kolbe, who has recovered from injury, is expected to be named in the Springbok team on Thursday for Saturday’s World Cup final against England.

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