Saturday Star

There can be no excuses for an inept performanc­e this time

- MIKE GREENAWAY

AT THE risk of sounding pessimisti­c, here is a bit of trivia regarding the Springboks in Test matches in the Northern hemisphere that puts today’s match against Ireland (7.30pm SA time kick-off) in Dublin into perspectiv­e.

The last time the Boks won north of the equator was when they beat Argentina in the bronze medal play-off in London at the 2015 World Cup.

We need no reminding that they have not won in greater Europe under Allister Coetzee,

— the nightmare of the 2016 tour is only a year ago ... in fact the only away match the Boks have won under Coetzee was in Salta earlier this year against the Pumas. There was a draw earlier this year in Perth, but the reality is that away from home the Boks are rather underwhelm­ing.

No wonder this week in Dublin, Coetzee has been only too happy to accept the underdog status going into the tour opener. The coach cannot be blamed for getting his defence in early, so to speak, given that the Boks are truly going to have to put in a memorable perfor mance to beat a very good Ireland team today. But that is what we expect from the Springboks ... excellent perfor mances every time they play. That should be the norm, not the exception. The 24-25 defeat to the All Blacks in Cape Town in a classic clash must be the minimum standard the national team should deliver. In fact, Newlands was not quite good enough — the Boks should have won.

Alright, let’s not get too carried away, but the bottom line is that Springbok supporters deserve to see their team deliver the urgency and intent of that last Bok performanc­e in every single Test. And the biggest pressure on the Boks today is to prove the way they played at Newlands was not an anomaly.

Scrum coach Matthew Proudfoot said this week that they cannot take a step backwards from how they played against the All Blacks, and that they have to show today there is far more to this side than that humiliatin­g 57-0 disaster in New Zealand).

Quite right, and today we will see what the Boks are really made of under Coetzee. There can be no more excuses for inept performanc­es. We can grudgingly say that last year there were mitigating circumstan­ces in that Coetzee only got appointed a month or so before his first Test in charge and that with no planning, a number of new players, and an under-strength backroom staff that was foisted on him, the only way was down.

The Boks started badly, lost heart and entered a downward spiral that bottomed out in Florence of all places. A Shakespear­e tragedy if ever there was one, and the curtain could not have come down soon enough on 2016, although there was one last embarrassm­ent in Cardiff.

In 2017 it has gone substantia­lly better. The Boks have won their first five Tests but dare we point out they have not won in five subsequent Tests. To be fair, there have been two draws against the Wallabies but the reality is that if the Boks lose today, it will mean they are winless in six Tests, the pressure to win next week in Paris will be excruciati­ng and in no time Coetzee could be back to square one, with the already sharpened knives out.

In short, today’s Test is monumental­ly important to the Boks of the Coetzee era. It is close to watershed time for Coetzee. This tour has to be a success if he is to be backed as the man to take the Boks to the 2019 World Cup.

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