Daily Dispatch

Triumphant Springboks under Erasmus show improvemen­t

- CRAIG RAY

The Springboks passed a tough Test on their slog through Britain and France at Murrayfiel­d on Saturday‚ to add another small entry in coach Rassie Erasmus’s improving catalogue.

The 26-20 win over a very good Scotland team was the Boks’ seventh of the year and their third away win of the season‚ which is as many road wins as they achieved in two years under Allister Coetzee.

Erasmus inherited a team in disarray after two seasons of record losses and embarrassi­ng performanc­es. He has slowly pieced the parts back together to make the Boks a force in world rugby again.

They are still some way off the consistent standard set by New Zealand‚ Ireland and even Wales‚ who have been under the same head coaches for a collective 22 years.

The Boks are on their third coach in as many years and while their consistenc­y and depth is not at the same level‚ they are as good as any of those teams on their day.

And even on a bad day‚ the Boks are competitiv­e again.

Erasmus’ decision to give Embrose Papier a start at scrumhalf against Scotland paid off with the 21-year-old unflustere­d and effective.

Papier played a big part in the opening try for Jesse Kriel and he was calm with his decision-making from the base of rucks.

His passing accuracy and speed though‚ are under par at this level.

He took too long to get his passes away at times and they were often inaccurate and floaty. But it’s an area that hard work will improve. The rest of the ingredient­s are there.

And that is a good thing for the Boks‚ who went on this tour with a duel mission of winning and growing.

They’ve passed both with two wins from three so far while players such as Papier‚ Ivan van Zyl and S’Bu Nkosi have moved into the next phase of their Test developmen­t.

The Boks have also won two tough games by showing good composure and raising their intensity and focus at critical moments.

Last week they calmly spent four minutes after the final hooter constructi­ng the winning try against France and on Saturday they raised the pace and ferocity of their game when fullback Willie le Roux was yellow-carded for a deliberate knock-on.

The Boks didn’t lose any ground during the period while he was off the field‚ landing a penalty to cancel out Scotland’s penalty for Le Roux’s infringeme­nt‚ which was a vital passage in the overall outcome.

“We’re learning how to close out games and that’s why we won this game because Scotland were as good as us on the day‚” said Erasmus.

“The maturity of this team is starting to show because we are now winning games from tight situations. We scored three points when Willie le Roux was off the field with a yellow card.”

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