Cape Argus

Rugby World Cup 2019: Bokke drawn with All Blacks

- MIKE GREENAWAY

FORMER Springboks are not super-optimistic about South Africa’s chances of winning the World Cup in 2019, despite the Boks receiving a relatively good draw in Kyoto in Japan yesterday.

The Boks have been drawn in Pool B alongside world champions New Zealand and have avoided the “Pool of Death”. In 2019 it is Pool C which includes England, France and Argentina, all capable of being top-four finishers in Japan.

Jean de Villiers, Springbok captain in the 2015 World Cup, says the draw is good for the Boks but only if there is significan­t change in the form of the Springboks over the next two years.

“We have to see our Pool game against New Zealand as a game that simply has to be won,” De Villiers said. “And if that is going to happen, a lot has to change in South African rugby over the next two years because current form does not give us much hope of beating the All Blacks any time soon.

“But it can happen,” the former Bok centre said. “A lot can change in two years. We have the players. We just have to get the structures right and build confidence and momentum. I am hopeful the Boks can get it right and it is significan­t that we have had a good draw and should be able to make the quarter-finals, and then the semi-finals. But it is not just going to happen. A lot of role players in SA Rugby have to make sure we are a force in 2019.”

Mark Andrews, a World Cup winner in 1995, said that the draw was good for the Boks but added that it counted for little because the Springboks can no longer take anything for granted in world rugby.

“We have to accept that we are now a mid-tier rugby nation (seventh in the world rankings),” Andrews said. “It is hurtful that we can no longer say that it is a “fait accompli” that we will beat Italy in our Pool in 2019. I feel that a lot has to change in our rugby if we are to be serious contenders for winning the World Cup. Something has to change. Just look at a country like England that was laughed out of their World Cup in 2015 and then had Eddie Jones come in and next thing England equalled the record for consecutiv­e wins among top-tier nations.”

Another former Springbok, John Allan, was caustic in his reaction to the World Cup draw. “I don’t care which Pool the Boks are in and who they are playing,” he said. “I just know that our rugby is in serious trouble and a lot has to change before Japan in 2019. Right now we are nowhere and we need drastic change because right now Springbok rugby cannot be taken seriously in terms of winning the World Cup.”

As it stand in 2017, form would suggest that the Boks will be runners-up in Pool B and that would mean a quarter-final against the winners of Pool A, and the form teams in that group are Ireland and Scotland.

If the Boks pull themselves together over the next two years, they might just beat Ireland or Scotland and make it through to the semi-finals.

So are South Africans going to be content with (hopefully) a semi-final finish or possibly a final against the All Blacks, or are we putting our money on the Boks being the first country to win the Cup having lost a match in the Pool stages? POOL A: Japan, Ireland, Scotland, Europe 1, Playoff winner POOL B: New Zealand, South Africa, Italy, Repechage winner, Africa 1 POOL C: England, France, Argentina, Oceania 2, Americas 1 POOL D: Australia, Wales, Georgia, Oceania 1, Americas

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 ?? Reuters ?? BRAINS TRUST: From left, Australia coach Michael Cheika, England coach Eddie Jones and South Africa coach Allister Coetzee in upbeat mood at the Rugby World Cup draw in Kyoto yesterday.
Reuters BRAINS TRUST: From left, Australia coach Michael Cheika, England coach Eddie Jones and South Africa coach Allister Coetzee in upbeat mood at the Rugby World Cup draw in Kyoto yesterday.

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