Daily Maverick

Pandemic still casts a long shadow over the stumbling Blitzboks

The team have recently suffered some of the worst defeats in their history, but the problems lie deeper than the coaching. By

- Keanan Hemmonsbey

The Blitzboks have been on a downward trajectory for some time. It started with the Covid-19 pandemic, which continues to haunt the side four years later. The team are languishin­g in seventh position, out of 12, in the overall season standings of the World Series. This follows their worst-ever finish last season, when they ended in eighth place. Their previous worst finish was sixth in the 2009/2010 season.

Because they ended outside the top four, the side failed to qualify directly for the Olympic Games in Paris.

Adding insult to injury, the Blitzboks lost to Kenya in the final of the Africa Men’s Sevens in Zimbabwe last year, in their second attempt at Olympic qualificat­ion.

They now have one last shot at going to the Games when they head to the repechage in Monaco in June.

It has been a calamitous past 18 months. This all happened under the tutelage of head coach Sandile Ngcobo, who was appointed in September 2022, after Neil Powell decided to vacate the post and take up the role of director of rugby at the Sharks.

Ngcobo stepped down as head coach last week, and his assistant, former Springbok Sevens captain Philip Snyman, took over.

Despite the timing of it all, Ngcobo cannot shoulder all the blame. The wheels had already started coming off towards the end of Powell’s tenure.

In the 2021/2022 season, South Africa finished as overall series runners-up. But that doesn’t paint the full picture.

The team took gold in their first four tournament­s of that world series and were seemingly cruising to become overall champions – before failing to reach the semifinals of the next six tournament­s.

They followed that up by finishing seventh at the home World Cup in Cape Town in September 2022, ending Powell’s largely successful nine-year stint as coach without as much as a semifinal appearance in his last seven competitio­ns overall.

Ngcobo was then handed the hat of the captain of a sinking ship.

“A lot of people say we’re missing Neil, but I think Neil will be the first one to agree with me that, even when he was here, in his last couple of months, there was a problem,” Marius Schoeman, the Springbok Sevens high-performanc­e manager, told Daily

Maverick.

Suffering Academy

The Covid-19 pandemic in 2020 forced the South African Rugby Union (Saru) to tighten its belt to the tune of about R1-billion to make up for the lack of commercial and broadcasti­ng revenue, among other things that were cut back at the time.

The Springbok Sevens programme, which falls under Saru, had its budgets slashed, which had its biggest effect on the Academy – the Sevens players outside the main Blitzboks squad.

The budget cuts meant internatio­nal tours were limited, and they remain scarce now.

“We had a successful run [with the Academy] for eight, nine years and then, with Covid, there was a financial implicatio­n, and all the funding was cut,” Schoeman said. “It’s not so much the Academy itself, it’s more the internatio­nal tournament­s.”

The last time South Africa’s Sevens Academy played in an internatio­nal tournament was in

August 2021, when they won the Rugby Town 7s in Colorado, US. That was 30 months ago.

Ngcobo was the head coach of that squad, which consisted of Christie Grobbelaar, James Murphy, Ryan Oosthuizen, Shilton van Wyk, Darren Adonis, Shaun Williams, Dewald Human and Tiaan Pretorius, all of whom represente­d the Blitzboks at some stage this season.

“One of our rules was always that we wanted the boys to play in four to six internatio­nal tournament­s [at Academy level] a year before they play for the senior team,” Schoeman said.

“At the moment we don’t have any such tournament­s. The [Academy] guys are training and once there’s an injury [to the senior side] we have to select them without proper tournament experience.

“It happened even when Neil was here, in the 2021 Olympic year. Way back then we could already see the implicatio­ns of not having a full-time Academy with tournament­s. Back then it was Covid that took away those tournament­s. But in the past two-and-a-half years we weren’t able to participat­e in those tournament­s and give those youngsters the much-needed game time

and developmen­t.”

The Springbok Sevens Academy have been invited to an internatio­nal tournament in Spain in May, but they are awaiting approval from Saru before confirming their attendance.

If they do go to Spain, it will be their first internatio­nal tournament in 33 months.

Consequenc­es

The Springbok Sevens Academy had its first intake of players in 2012. They included now global stars Kwagga Smith, Cheslin Kolbe, Warrick Gelant, Seabelo Senatla and Justin Geduld.

“The Academy was actually the pillar of our success over the last 10 years,” Schoeman said.

“Unfortunat­ely, now we don’t have that. In my opinion, that is 80% the biggest reason for the poor results the last two seasons.”

Argentina and Ireland, who currently sit first and second on the overall series table this season, have since duplicated

South Afri

ca’s Sevens Academy system and play in tournament­s all over the world.

“It’s sad to think that we were the first country to start a Sevens Academy and then these countries replicated our blueprint and they’re doing well now [whereas we are not],” Schoeman said.

The brains trust at the Springbok Sevens remains hopeful of a swift return of the Academy to its initial form.

Saru is negotiatin­g an equity deal that promises financial security.

The lack of internatio­nal tournament­s for the Academy has meant that the next tier of Blitzboks lack experience at the highest level. The players in the Academy are not capable of offering realistic competitio­n to the Springbok Sevens regulars.

“You can’t have them playing their first tournament in Hong Kong in front of 50,000 people. They [often] get lost in the moment,” Schoeman said.

South Africa have so far thrown Quewin Nortje, Kat Letebele and Tristan Leyds into the deep end this season.

Though they have held their own to a reasonable extent, their first few tournament­s have been used to develop them, whereas previously this process would have been done at Academy level.

South Africa have it all to do at the back end of the season, with only two series left before the grand final in Madrid at the start of June – the same month of their final attempt at Olympic qualificat­ion.

However, their first task will be at the start of April when they play in Hong Kong. The hope is that, by then, the experience of the season, despite all its inconsiste­ncies, will have improved the side.

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 ?? ?? The Blitzboks have tumbled down the rankings from one of the best teams in the world, to one of the
stragglers. Photos: Gallo
Images
The Blitzboks have tumbled down the rankings from one of the best teams in the world, to one of the stragglers. Photos: Gallo Images
 ?? ?? Marius Schoeman, the Springbok Sevens high-performanc­e manager.
Marius Schoeman, the Springbok Sevens high-performanc­e manager.
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