Daily Dispatch

Bok win is step in right direction

- By KHANYISO TSHWAKU

SPRINGBOK coach Allister Coetzee isn’t a meteorolog­ist but knows very well that one spell of heavy rain isn’t enough to end a drought.

Saturday’s 37-14 win against France at Loftus Versfeld was Coetzee’s first since the 18-10 victory against Australia at the same ground.

It kept the Boks’ 11-year streak in Pretoria intact even though they haven’t played New Zealand there since 2006.

With the nightmare of last year’s four wins from 12 matches not forgotten by South African fans, Coetzee appealed for last year to be banished to the forgotten pages of history, but knowing full well that one defeat could set the cat among the pigeons.

“We’ve closed the chapter on 2016. We’ve really closed it now with a young and inexperien­ced side. I’ve selected the best side I can for this series and I’m really pleased with the performanc­e. It’s about the performanc­e and not the win because when the team plays like it did, it is a step in the right direction. We’re not a team that’s playing not to lose, but we’re a team that has got the belief in the ability of playing the game in different ways,” Coetzee said.

“There’s a team environmen­t that has taken shape in that week in Plettenber­g Bay and the example was the last five minutes we spent in our own half after the game was won and not conceding a try. That is starting to take shape and the fact bodies were put on the line was pleasing. The French played without a lot of their stars and they put us under pressure with ball in hand at stages.”

Like any Test match, there was a turning point, with Brice Dulin’s 60th minute yellow for an early tackle on debutant Courtnall Skosan in the act of trying to dot the ball down gifting the Springboks a penalty try.

The Boks scored two more through another debutant, Ross Cronje and Jan Serfontein in Dulin’s absence to give the Boks a clean break and a deserved win. Coetzee was also criticised for using the Lions players but all seven came through for him.

Malcolm Marx was imposing and excellent even though he could do with polishing his lineout work, while Franco Mostert was steady.

Halfback pairing Ross Cronje and Elton Jantjies continued from where they left off in Super Rugby, with the latter finally looking the part in a Springbok jersey.

Captain Warren Whiteley put in a reasonable shift while Skosan and Andries Coetzee didn’t disappoint.

Raymond Rhule had a busy defensive night marking Virimi Vakatawa, but distinguis­hed himself very well.

“n every match there will be crucial moments. The try that we conceded when we were leading 16-7 was a crucial one. We were up at the time and it was the bounce of the ball. The penalty try was a result of unpredicta­ble play but also the awareness of players who wanted to score tries was good,” Coetzee said.

“The impact of the bench and the debutants was unbelievab­le and it was tough to select this team because players were looking to get into the team and you could see from the impact.”

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