Cape Times

Australia won’t follow SA lead

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AUSTRALIA will not be following South Africa by scrapping its restrictio­ns on overseas-based players representi­ng their country, Rugby Australia chief Raelene Castle has said.

The southern hemisphere powers have faced an accelerati­ng stampede of players heading off to enjoy the riches of European and Japanese rugby in recent years and have introduced various rules to try to keep their Test teams strong. SA introduced a 30-cap threshold for overseas-based players to play Test rugby in 2017 to encourage young talent to stay home but, with the World Cup only a few months away abandoned it at the weekend.

Australia, which had previously not allowed anyone based abroad to play Tests, instituted a similar rule – dubbed the Giteau Law and demanding a minimum of 60 caps – before the last World Cup, and Castle said it was working well.

“At the moment, we’re very comfortabl­e with the way it’s performing,” she said. “The Giteau Law for us is a rule that’s in place that we review often because we need to make sure that it’s delivering to the outcomes that we put it in place for.

“And we believe it is, we believe the benchmark is right as a 60-Test threshold because if you’ve played 60 Tests for your country you deserve the chance to look at other options because you have the training maturity and the profession­alism to come back into the Wallaby environmen­t and fit right in. “We think from a going overseas perspectiv­e it’s right, we think probably if we lowered it, what it does do is potentiall­y have us lose some of the current talent that we have playing here in Super Rugby.

“And Super Rugby is also incredibly important for us because we need to make sure that our four teams are successful in Super Rugby.”

Wallabies coach Michael Cheika was the driving force behind the rule change and immediatel­y benefited from the introducti­on of experience­d backs like Matt Giteau and Drew Mitchell to his squad for the 2015 World Cup. There have been some positive signs in the first two weeks of Super Rugby, however, and the quality of player that would become available to Cheika should Australia loosen the restrictio­ns is nowhere near that of four years ago. | SOUTH AFRICA’S WBO bantamweig­ht champion Zolani Tete has finally been told when he will be fighting his World Boxing Super Series (WBSS) semi-final against the Filipino Nonito Donaire.

The latest news is that Zete will be battling it out against Donaire on 27 April at a venue still to be determined in the United States.

Due to various reasons, Tete has had a long wait to find out details of his fight against Donaire. Tete, who fights for well-known British promoter Frank Warren, is still largely untested against the top-ranked fighters.

The 30-year-old southpaw beat Mikhael Aloyan on a unanimous decision in October last year to move into the WBSS semi-final but then came rumours that the WBSS tournament was going to be abandoned.

Tete has been in outstandin­g form against lesser-known opponents over the past two years, but in Donaire, Tete faces his most experience­d opponent to date. |

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