The Mercury

Blitzbokke will rise to the occasion

- MEDIA PARTNER OF THE SHARKS Wynona Louw

THIS weekend, the Springbok Sevens team will have the advantage of playing in front of a home crowd. They will be defending the tournament title they won in Cape Town last year and they will go into the second leg of the World Sevens Series as one of the favourites after winning gold in Dubai last weekend. Talk about pressure, right? Not really. Blitzbok utility back Ruhan Nel admitted that the team were feeling the pressure ahead of the Cape Town event, but assured that the fact that they will be playing in front a home crowd makes it a “massive occasion” and one to look forward to.

“The team have touched on it, on feeling the pressure in the build up to the weekend. But we’re not hammering on it. We try not to think about it too much. Obviously we know there is a pressure factor seeing that we won it last year,” Nel said.

“But for us to play in front of family and friends once a year is a massive occasion. And I think that’s what we’re going to focus on.”

Another massive occasion was in Dubai last Sunday, when the South Africans outplayed defending World Series and Olympic champions Fiji to lift the trophy.

They also swept New Zealand aside to show just how settled they are as a team.

But the Blitzbokke didn’t just bank on their experience. They produced outstandin­g efforts at the breakdowns and on defence, and Nel believes that although the positive start was needed, they need to start over in Cape Town.

“I think it was very important for us to start positive.

“At the same time I have to say that it’s going to be a new beginning in Cape Town. It’s going to be a whole new tournament. But we’re very happy with the win in Dubai,” he said.

When asked for his thoughts on how the team managed to perform so well, the utility back said: “I would say the guys stuck to our structures in the important games, when it mattered. They remained calm, they didn’t panic.”

Nel, who’s performanc­es off the bench contribute­d greatly to a number of tries, also said that even though it’s not ideal to play off the replacemen­ts bench, all players are important when it comes to contributi­ng to the game.

“It’s never really nice to play off the bench, but the guys on the bench have just as big a role on the field as the guys who start. And the guys on the field also make it so easy for the guys on the bench.

“Whether you get two minutes or 30 seconds on the field, you have just as important a role as the guys who start,” Nel said.

After sustaining a shoulder injury against New Zealand in the Plate final of the Paris leg of the World Series earlier this year, Nel missed out on selection for the Rio Olympics, where the Blitzbokke secured the bronze medal after losing their semi-final match against Great Britain.

All that disappoint­ment seems to have had a galvanisin­g effect on Nel, who is not solely focused on improving his game.

“It was a huge disappoint­ment. I think everyone that was in the system wanted to go to the Games.

“But I’m very happy with where I am. I will always want to improve and I believe that there are always areas that you can improve on,” he said.

“But I’m happy. The shoulder is holding up and it’s just a learning curve that keeps going up.”

 ?? PICTURE: BACKPAGEPI­X ?? Seabelo Senatla is 12 touchdowns shy of breaking the record for the highest number of tries scored by a South African player.
PICTURE: BACKPAGEPI­X Seabelo Senatla is 12 touchdowns shy of breaking the record for the highest number of tries scored by a South African player.

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