Cape Times

Tiaan Strauss explains why the old Springboks are happy again ...

- Vata Ngobeni

PRETORIA: His brain says Australia but his heart is undoubtedl­y for the green and gold of the Springboks.

But heart alone won’t be enough to guide the Boks to victory in their upcoming Rugby Championsh­ip clash against the Wallabies in Perth according to former Springbok and Wallaby Tiaan Strauss.

The hard and uncompromi­sing loose forward, was appreciate­d by the Australian­s in the late 1990s and earned 11 caps for the Wallabies, including a World Cup winners medal in 1999. He played 15 Tests for the Boks and captained in a handful of matches, too.

But Strauss remains a South African and Springbok at heart and believes that the air of optimism and confidence sweeping through the Bok team at the moment, and a dominant forward onslaught, should do the trick and earn the South Africans their first win in Perth since 2009.

“There is definitely a culture of change in the team and this year they had a lot more time to prepare. They obviously set some good performanc­e indicators and ethos how they want to train and where they are going,” said Strauss. “You can see the guys are playing for each other and there is a determinat­ion that wasn’t there last year. It is great to see that they wear the jersey with proudness again and that makes the old Boks happy.”

But key to victory over a revived Wallabies side will be how the Springbok forwards continue to grow and take charge of the set-pieces and the other dark areas where only the players with the single digits on their backs fearlessly charge in.

Strauss control of is adamant that the set-pieces, an effective rolling maul and winning the physical war of attrition that often plays itself amongst the forwards, should be enough to hand the Springboks their sixth win on the trot this year.

“What stood out for me this year is that our set phase has been very good kick-offs, lineouts and scrums. We can disrupt them in those phases and driving mauls and we must dominate and control in that forward area which can set us up well to win the game. And also we mustn’t give them a lot of ball from kicks, we must be able to kick the ball out or compete for it. If we are going to give them a lot of ball, they have some potent backs who are going to punish you,” he said.

However, it is what goes on in Strauss’ head that has him concerned about the sudden turnaround of the Wallabies after their narrow defeat to the All Blacks in Dunedin.

Even though the Wallabies lost their second game in the competitio­n, Strauss has joined the growing chorus of rugby realists who all believe that the Australian­s are a far better outfit than the results of this year suggest, and will be a formidable adversary for the Springboks on Saturday.

“If you look at the Wallabies side and the individual players, it is a good team. They haven’t done well in Super Rugby this year, but the team they have got together for the Wallabies is actually a quality side,” Strauss said.

“There are small things that can turn a team around and they showed it with a lot more dedication on defence in Dunedin which was poor in their first game. A few things went their way and it is a pity they could not pull it off because I thought they were the better team on the day.

“They can continue it. If you look at the players, they are quality. It is a matter of gelling together and playing with some heart and determinat­ion. There is definitely a sign that they can turn it around and be a better team.”

 ?? Picture: NIC BOTHMA, EPA ?? SMELLS LIKE TEAM SPIRIT ...
Picture: NIC BOTHMA, EPA SMELLS LIKE TEAM SPIRIT ...
 ??  ??
 ??  ?? TIAAN STRAUSS: ‘Small things turn a team around’
TIAAN STRAUSS: ‘Small things turn a team around’

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from South Africa