The Mercury

The rookie versus the old pro

- Mike Greenaway

BRISBANE: The midfield battle between emerging internatio­nal star Damian de Allende and a former nemesis of the Springboks, Matt Giteau, has become one the big talking points in the build-up to the Rugby Championsh­ip match between the Wallabies and the Boks at the Suncorp Stadium on Saturday.

Giteau, given an internatio­nal lifeline by Australia coach Michael Cheika after four years in the northern hemisphere wilder ness, seemed to save his best for Tests against the Springboks and sometimes just about beat them on his own, particular­ly on Australian soil.

With Bernard Foley almost certainly playing at 10 with recalled Will Genia as his halfback partner, Giteau has been running at 12 at training this week, and De Allende has an opportunit­y to measure himself against one of the greats of the game.

“We have been doing our homework on Giteau,” Boks defence coach John McFarland said yesterday from the team hotel in Brisbane.

“He is hugely respected in Europe for how he has played since leaving Australia, and I think it is great for the game that a player of his quality is on course for the World Cup.”

The game needs stars, and South Africa has an emerging one of their own in the Stormers centre. “Damian has been huge,” McFarland said. “We have looked at Giteau’s strengths and weaknesses, and it will be a surprise if either overwhelms the other. I can’t see Damian being dominated.”

The Boks are unlikely to make wholesale changes for the game, but coach Heyneke Meyer has said he wants to err on the side of caution in selection for this match.

He wants to give Handre Pollard another chance to sort out his kicking woes rather than drop him after his three from seven return last week at Newlands.

It would also make sense to keep the loose trio intact after Marcell Coetzee and Francois Louw played so well last week. Meyer is worried about the brilliant ability of Wallabies flanks David Pocock and Michael Hooper to win contestabl­e ball on the ground.

“Turnover ball is the Holy Grail, most tries come from turnover ball,” McFarland said. “The winning and losing of a game can come down to how many turnovers you force, and how many you prevent the opposition from getting,” he said.

“And when you get that unexpected, sudden ball, and you have unstructur­ed defence in front of you, you have got to have the skill and vision to move the ball to attack the exposed weakness in defence.”

In Super Rugby this year, the teams that made the semifinals also happened to be the teams that were best at offloading in the tackle.

But it does not bother defence expert McFarland that no South African teams made the semi-finals, and only the Lions showed a willingnes­s to keep the ball alive rather than monotonous­ly take contact.

“Yes it was lovely rugby to watch, but Test rugby is a different game,” he said.

“The pressures are too great to play that way because every Test match is like a final.”

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