Daily Dispatch

Boks need consistenc­y and good fortune to win 2019 World Cup

- LIAM DEL CARME

The question many South Africans will be asking after a year in which the Springboks took one step forward and one back‚ is if their team can win the 2019 Rugby World Cup.

The Boks may have been wildly inconsiste­nt with seven wins from their 14 Tests in 2018, but they showed that they are capable of scaling heights that seem beyond their reach.

With so many mediocre results in the season their undoubted highlight was their win over the All Blacks in Wellington. It shouldn’t just imbue them with self-belief ahead of the RWC but it stands as a beacon of hope for the other teams with a realistic chance of lifting the Webb Ellis Cup.

That win would also have served the dual purpose of creating doubt in the All Blacks ranks.

They had been near invincible at home. They lost in Wellington to the British and Irish Lions in 2017 and drew the deciding Test at Eden Park a week later. Their only other home defeats in the last decade came against France at Carisbrook in 2009 and the Boks in Hamilton in the same year.

Apart from that win the Boks can draw inspiratio­n from their most recent engagement­s against the All Blacks. On aggregate only one point separates the two teams in their last three meetings.

In 2018 the Boks won by two points in Wellington‚ lost by the same margin at Loftus Versfeld. In their most recent meeting against the All Blacks at the RWC the men the New Zealanders won 20-18 in the semifinal in London in 2015.

The Boks continue to have the muscle to combat the All Blacks at close quarters but they still have a skill shortfall to consistent­ly test the Kiwis in the less populated areas of the field.

The two teams will get the opportunit­y to size each other up when they meet in the pool stages in Yokohama on September 21. It may provide a portent of what’s to come later in the tournament.

As for the other leading contenders‚ the Boks at the very least have an equal shot.

Ireland have of late held more than their own against the Boks. In their most recent outing in November 2017, Ireland thoroughly dominated the Boks under Allister Coetzee.

Wales too seemed to have grown an arm and a leg in their recent encounters with the Springboks. Since losing in the quarterfin­als of the last RWC against the Boks‚ Wales have beaten SA in four consecutiv­e matches.

The only other team to boast two wins over the Boks under Rassie Erasmus is England. They probably fall into the same category as the Boks‚ as will the Wallabies who have a decent record against SA.

The Boks cannot be ruled out as potential RWC champions but they will have to find the kind of consistenc­y we have not seen for years. They will also‚ you sense‚ require an inordinate amount of good fortune.

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