The Mail on Sunday

LIONS AT WAR

Tempers boil over at Boks’ dirty tricks

- By Nik Simon

ON the streets of Cape Town they all hailed Rassie the Rascal. After spending the week firing out rogue Tweets, leaking videos on the internet and torching his reputation as a cool and collected character, it was the Springbok director of rugby who had the last laugh.

It’s not the first time Rassie Erasmus has pushed the boundaries in the pursuit of victory. Those who know him best claim he’s a genius — a workaholic who went from driving tanks to winning the World Cup.

He has a reputation as an innovator. During his early days coaching the Cats, he took his team physio and promoted him to defence coach. That physio was Jacques Nienaber, who is now the Springboks head coach. They became a double act and last night they starred in the Saturday night primetime slot.

‘They were like Laurel and Hardy when we were at the Cats,’ said hooker Schalk Brits. ‘ A perfect couple. They work together extremely well and they sometimes do things a little quirky.

‘When I moved to the Stormers, we played against Rassie’s team. They had left a sheet with all their lineout calls in the changing room. Our coach called us in two hours early the next day to learn these calls. Come t he match, guess what? They weren’t even the calls being used!

‘With the Cheetahs, Rassie would sit on the roof of the stadium with different coloured lights for different moves and he used these lights to relay informatio­n during the match. He was always ahead of the curve.

‘What has Rassie done this week? All I can say is that he’s always clued up with what he says. He has taken the focus away from his players and put it on himself. It’s pretty much what Eddie Jones does with England.’

The pantomime villain stole the show. To an extent, he torched his own reputation to create a media frenzy, before his team arrived under the radar at the Cape Town Stadium to snatch victory. Another s uccess s t ory f or t he Rassie Roadshow.

At Munster, Erasmus used to call in players at random to sit in on the coaches’ meeting. They would be asked to contribute to tactical review sessions. All in the name of transparen­cy. ‘There’s always a method to what he’s doing,’ said his former Munster assistant Jerry Flannery.

‘He’s not a knee-jerk guy and he certainly wouldn’t lose the plot. He knew the reaction he’d get so it would all be part of a plan. He controlled the narrative, didn’t he?

‘He’s the smartest rugby guy I’ve ever come across. Rassie would take a step back and feel where the energy of the group was at.

‘The year they arrived, our head coach Anthony Foley died. The way they handled that showed their ability to connect emotionall­y with the players.

‘We had a European game that weekend and he said: “You guys buried your head coach this week, you’ll never do anything harder than that in your life, this match will feel so easy”. He’s so good at connecting with the emotional side of the group and he seems very human. He talks about his own mistakes and you identify with that.’

Perhaps one day Erasmus will look back on this week as one of his mistakes, despite the victory. Many have accused him of bringing the game into disrepute, but here in South Africa his allies have remained firm.

‘ The bi g debate i s whether Rassie was right or wrong,’ said his former team- mate Brendan Venter. ‘If you know Rassie, he’s incredibly committed to the cause. Why did Rassie go that far? Because he knows what it means to the country.’

Who knows what the man has got up his sleeve next?

 ??  ?? CALL TO ARMS: Lions and Springboks face off during their bad-tempered second Test
CALL TO ARMS: Lions and Springboks face off during their bad-tempered second Test
 ??  ?? MASTERMIND: Erasmus relays his strategy to captain Siya Kolisi while acting as a waterboy
MASTERMIND: Erasmus relays his strategy to captain Siya Kolisi while acting as a waterboy

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