Saturday Star

OVER TO YOU, RASSIE

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IT’S A cliché, but the reality is everything does all start up front. Even the Lions, who play free-flowing, attack-minded, running rugby, have a solid set-piece. In fact they’ve scored more tries through their driving maul than from any other play in Super Rugby this season. And Erasmus is no different to every coach in the world – he’ll want his scrums and line-outs to function properly today. It matters little that the men in action might not play in the first Test against England; it’s currently one big squad of players who’ll have followed the same training drills, and the Boks need to fire from the off. Today’s match is a big opportunit­y for especially tighthead prop Wilco Louw, loosehead Ox Nche, and new lock Jason Jenkins.

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ERASMUS’S right-hand man, Jacques Nienaber, is widely lauded for his defensive coaching skills so every tackle, push and press will be closely watched. Positionin­g, alignment and unity in defence is always crucial in applying pressure on the opposition and it will be hoped the Boks in 2018 are as stingy in letting players past them as the Stormers were some years ago when Erasmus and Nienaber were involved in the coaching set-up there. A strong defence is something the new coach spoke openly about this last week – “We’re scoring tries but leaking too many ourselves,” he said. They say tackling and defending is an attitude thing – that it reveals one’s character – well, we’ll see what this new-look Bok squad is made of today.

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There’s always plenty of excitement ahead of the first Test of the year, but with a new coach in charge and several young in-form players in the mix today, the bar has been raised just a little.

I think it would be unfair, though, to judge any player or coach on today’s showing; this is a match on neutral ground that is perhaps something of an irritant to both outfits, between two teams that have an experiment­al, second-string look to them.

But the Boks will still want to win –

THERE is no disputing there’s an excitement factor in the back-three that will run out today; Curwin Bosch, Makazole Mapimpi and Travis Ismaiel have plenty of running in them, and skill to bamboozle any defence. But, it’s one thing showing off your attacking abilities and quite another when you’re working off the ball. Too often in recent times Bok teams have been found wanting out wide and at the back, with players being caught out of position and unable to field high balls. These three men today, and those who’ll run out against England over the next month, have simply got to put their bodies on the line and show they’re ready to be the steady rocks at the back.

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and how crucial that may be.

No new coach wants to start with a defeat, and certainly not a few days before the first highly-anticipate­d Test against Eddie Jones and his England team.

We must hope the Boks today – with 13 uncapped players in the 23 – play vibrant, powerful, exciting rugby that showcases their skills and hunger for success.

A win would not only build confidence in the coaching team and player group ahead of next week’s Ellis Park showdown,

ERASMUS has made it clear he is excited about young Bulls scrumhalf Ivan van Zyl, a player with a good pass and an equally strong kick, and this is his time to shine. The Boks are desperate to find a scrumhalf or two who can nail down their spot in the team and produce quality performanc­es from one match to the next. Van Zyl and his back-up today, Embrose Papier, must stand tall and take charge, and show their coach they are, indeed, worth investing in. Faf de Klerk will start against England, but who’ll sit on the bench as his deputy will be determined by who does what against the Welsh. What an opportunit­y for the two men who’ll be in action in Washington.

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but also ensure every rugby follower gets behind Erasmus and his team from the off.

IT’S SOMEWHAT surprising the Boks don’t have a full-time attack coach – perhaps that job is shared by Erasmus and Nienaber – but in the Lions’ Swys de Bruin, who’s acting as a consultant, they have someone in their midst who’s conjured up plenty of magic at Super Rugby level. Now, can he do it at Test level? With Elton Jantjies, at No 10 – a player who knows De Bruin well and is the key decision-maker for the Lions – the Boks might just be on the right track. What they dish up and how they vary their attacking play – with runarounds and kicks to the wings – will show what type of game the Boks will deliver in the coming months and years under the new coaching team.

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