Business Day

Boks deserve the plaudits, but need to build on France win.

- MARK KEOHANE

Rugby order has been restored. The Springboks played like a team closer to two than five in the world rankings. It is where they belong.

There is belief in the Bok jersey again and there is hope about Springbok rugby.

Test rugby again is a joyous occasion in SA.

In dismantlin­g France, the Boks have allowed for this sense of euphoria.

The applause is justified and the optimism is based on the tangible of just how well the Boks played in the season’s opening two Tests.

The players deserve the good cheer. Ditto coach Allister Coetzee and his support staff.

The Boks have hammered France and they’ll complete the job in Johannesbu­rg on Saturday.

I expected a 3-0 series win and backed such a result on the talents of those selected and Coetzee’s appointmen­t of Brendan Venter as a technical specialist.

The victories against France were emphatic, but Ireland, a year ago, were a stronger contender than France. And the Boks beat them. Then it all imploded courtesy of two Test matches against the All Blacks in which the Boks conceded 15 tries and 98 points.

There is seldom perspectiv­e when it comes to the Springboks and the average fan argument is that passionate support doesn’t come packaged with perspectiv­e.

The passionate therefore are already talking of Warren Whiteley’s Springboks as being special, but it would be more accurate to make a judgment of Whiteley and his men after 12 Tests in 2017, when the Boks have played the Rugby Championsh­ip, travelled to Australia, New Zealand and Argentina and played the November internatio­nals at the end of a long season.

The South African players are into their 17th week of the season. The French players were still going for it in Durban in the 47th week.

It is not necessaril­y why they lost, but fatigue certainly contribute­d to their inability to come close to unsettling the Springboks.

The Boks were easy winners, but it shouldn’t have come as a shock that SA won well at home.

It should be the norm, but what makes it seem exceptiona­l is the backdrop of the last eight Tests in 2016.

What the Springboks have done in the past two Saturdays is ease the pain of how 2016 finished but until they’ve completed the season, it would be premature to assess how far the team has advanced.

The Springboks have instilled hope again because of how they won against France in Durban, as opposed to how they lost to the All Blacks at the same venue in 2016.

But the French series, like the Irish series win short of a year ago, cannot be allowed to be a forgotten footnote come December.

Bigger Tests and greater challenges await Whiteley’s Springboks and it would serve every passionate supporter to keep as calm a head as the Springboks did defensivel­y in repelling the French in Durban.

France offered very little in the opening two Tests and they have not presented much of a global challenge in the past three years.

The Springboks, well selected for this series, well prepared and well coached, were expected to be comfortabl­e winners over Les Bleus. This expectatio­n has been met, which is all the squad could do at this stage of the season.

The applause is not misplaced and the cheer is justified on the quality of wins against France.

There is so much good about the past two weekends. Individual­s who traditiona­lly have been strong in Super Rugby, transferre­d this impact to the Test stage.

Collective­ly, there was mongrel in defence and the Boks were clinical on attack. There was discipline and desire.

The caution is recalling there was a lot to take from the past two home Tests against Ireland a year ago. The Boks in Johannesbu­rg fought back from 19-3 at half-time and 26-10 on the hour to win and defensivel­y delivered to beat Ireland in Port Elizabeth.

Faf de Klerk was the player of the series … now he can’t make the Bok squad.

A week can be a long time in rugby. A year is an eternity.

The Boks are in good shape midway through 2017. The start against France has been impressive, but it is the finish against France on November 19 that will be more telling of 2017. For now, all is golden. Keohane is an award-winning sports journalist and former Springbok communicat­ions manager. Follow him on Twitter.com/mark_keohane

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