Daily Dispatch

Aussies set on ending Loftus jinx

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AUSTRALIA flanker Michael Hooper believes the Wallabies can end a Pretoria jinx today by winning there for the first time and inflicting further Rugby Championsh­ip misery on South Africa.

The teams enter the round five match having experience­d contrastin­g fortunes lately with Australia seeking a third straight win and the Springboks desperate to avoid a fourth consecutiv­e loss.

South Africa believed they should have won in Brisbane last month instead of throwing away an early 11-point lead in a 23-17 defeat that was followed by a hammering from New Zealand.

With the All Blacks winning the championsh­ip after round four thanks to an unassailab­le 11-point lead, pride and second place are at stake when South Africa and Australia clash.

Australia have lost all six previous Tests at the 50 000-seat Loftus Versfeld stadium, including a 61-22 drubbing 19 years ago.

But 58-cap loose forward Hooper told reporters that he is convinced hours of hard work on the training grounds is about to pay off. “You can sense the will to win within the camp,” he said. “These guys are desperate to succeed in Pretoria and I am convinced that they are going to do so this weekend. ”

Wallabies coach Michael Cheika has reacted predictabl­y to the recent change of fortune, making only one injury-enforced change to the team that overcame Argentina.

South Africa coach Allister Coetzee, who has lost four of seven Tests since succeeding Heyneke Meyer this year, warned that there would be “consequenc­es” after the heavy beating by New Zealand.

But he resisted calls from the public and media to make wholesale changes, keeping faith with 12 Christchur­ch starters.

Repeated underwhelm­ing performanc­es by flyhalf Elton Jantjies and scrumhalf Faf de Klerk have seen them axed.

Veteran Morne Steyn replaces Jantjies, who has been unable to replicate the form that helped the Johannesbu­rg-based Golden Lions reach the Super Rugby final this year.

Scrumhalf Rudy Paige will start a Test for the first time, fittingly in the stadium where he plays provincial rugby for the Bulls.

Pat Lambie, fit after a long recovery from concussion, takes over at fullback from the uninspirin­g Johan Goosen, billed by Coetzee as the South African answer to New Zealand star Beauden Barrett.

“Australia will be determined to build on their two recent victories and pose difficult tactical and technical questions for us,” warned the Springboks coach.

“Continuity is important and that is why we restricted the starting line-up changes to three.” — AFP

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