Sowetan

BOKS IN BIG REBUILDING PHASE

Team fight against odds this year

- Craig Ray TMG Digital

IT’S been a mere two years since the Springboks faced Argentina in Salta and yet only seven members of that team will be back on the pitch when the two sides meet in the Rugby Championsh­ip at the same venue tomorrow (9.40pm).

It’s an indication of just what a big rebuilding phase the Springboks are in when you consider that there has been a 65% player overhaul in 24 months.

It’s no wonder the Boks are battling for cohesion.

Locks Eben Etzebeth and Lood de Jager‚ flank Francois Louw‚ wing Bryan Habana and centre Damian de Allende started in 2014 and will return tomorrow.

Morné Steyn‚ Adriaan Strauss and Tendai Mtawarira were on the bench two years ago.

Strauss and Mtawarira will start this weekend with Steyn again on the bench.

The 2014 squad in Salta‚ which won 33-31‚ had a combined 886 caps. The 2016 vintage has 527 caps.

The Pumas have yet to name their team for the Salta match.

But if they are unchanged from last week’s selection in Nelspruit‚ then there would be 13 survivors from the 2014 clash in the desert city.

That’s nearly double the continuity of the Boks in the same period.

The world champion All Blacks have also shown that their turnover of players is lower despite the retirement of stars such as Richie McCaw‚ Dan Carter‚ Conrad Smith and Ma’a Nonu.

The NZ squad that beat Australia 51-20 in Auckland two years ago‚ on the same weekend the Boks were in Salta‚ contained 13 players that will feature against the Wallabies in Wellington this weekend.

Australia‚ who unlike the Springboks aren’t going through as much of a rebuilding phase‚ only have nine survivors from the 2014 Auckland meeting for tomorrow’s encounter in Wellington.

So it’s clear that the Boks are the team doing the most in terms of rebuilding of the all the rivals in the Rugby Championsh­ip.

The Boks are also the only team with a new coach in 2016. Allister Coetzee was appointed in April to take over from Heyneke Meyer.

Australia’s Michael Cheika is into his second season in charge.

Argentina’s Daniel Hourcade is in his third year as head coach, while NZ’s Steven Hansen is in his fifth. All this suggests the Boks are fighting against the odds in this year.

They managed a tournament opening 30-23 win over the Pumas in Nelspruit last weekend‚ but from here on things will get tougher for Coetzee’s inexperien­ced squad. –

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