Otago Daily Times

Chasing the dream

BOKS V ENGLAND

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TOKYO: England coach Eddie Jones has long asserted that 21stcentur­y rugby is a 23man game and the battle between his eight ‘‘finishers’’ and South Africa’s ‘‘Bomb Squad’’ bench could have a big influence on tonight’s Rugby World Cup final.

Only injury substituti­ons were initially allowed in rugby but tactical replacemen­ts were gradually introduced. Now, eight players are available off the bench because of the necessity of covering frontrow injuries.

Top coaches now build the use of those replacemen­ts into their game plans, allowing them to bring off fatigued or injured starters as well as introduce key impact players for strategic reasons.

After causing a ripple of surprise by naming George Ford on the bench for the quarterfin­al against Australia, Jones cheekily promised to email some English journalist­s to explain how the game had changed over the last 30 years.

Lock George Kruis, who will be one of the eight England replacemen­ts at Yokohama Internatio­nal Stadium tonight, said Jones’ position was not just a sop to make players not selected for the starting XV feel a bit better about their role.

‘‘There is a massive emphasis on the finishing side. I think from different experience­s, I fully believe it, I fully buy into it,’’ he told reporters yesterday.

‘‘I see it as everyone has a role in that 23, like everyone does in the 31. If you look at the players who they can bring on, they have points at the end of the game.

‘‘We have a massive role as finishers. We are confident in our bench, in our finishers.

‘‘We are looking forward to it. They have a good pack, a sixtwo split. We know what’s coming. It’s about manning up and dealing with it.’’

South Africa’s split of six forwards and only two backs on the bench enables the Springboks to almost completely overhaul their pack for the last half hour.

They have forged a specific identity as the Bomb Squad because, as coach Rassie Erasmus explained, ‘‘they either come in and fix it when it is not going well on the park or it is a false alarm and maybe they don’t even

get on to the park’’.

‘‘We named it the Bomb Squad last year,’’ captain Siya Kolisi said.

‘‘They have their own little ways to get each other up and when they come on, the difference that they make.

‘‘They’ve been huge for us this year, as you’ve seen. We know we can give everything on the field because the next guy coming is only going to lift it.’’

The Bomb Squad’s exclusive celebratio­ns triggered accusation­s of racism in South Africa after a video circulated of black winger Makazole Mapimpi walking away from a huddle of replacemen­ts after their victory over Italy.

However, Erasmus explained that all players who were not replacemen­ts were excluded from the celebratio­ns. — Reuters

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 ?? PHOTO: GETTY IMAGES ?? Props can do anything . . . Joe Moody breaks away to score the All Blacks’ first try in their Rugby World Cup bronze final match against Wales at Tokyo Stadium last night. For full match report see www.odt.co.nz
PHOTO: GETTY IMAGES Props can do anything . . . Joe Moody breaks away to score the All Blacks’ first try in their Rugby World Cup bronze final match against Wales at Tokyo Stadium last night. For full match report see www.odt.co.nz
 ??  ?? George Kruis
George Kruis

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