The Mercury

Springbok ‘spine’ is strong, but some elements still need closer examinatio­n

- Mike Greenaway

WE JUSTIFIABL­Y should continue to applaud the Springboks for the raw guts and passion they showed at Newlands.

They have put a smile on our faces again and running the All Blacks so close shows the players are indeed playing for each other and the jersey, and you can’t put a price on that.

That game, which so easily could have been a Springbok victory, almost has no negatives to it (apart from the result!) because it also gave the players’ capabiliti­es the most thorough of examinatio­ns.

As wonderfull­y entertaini­ng as the game was, it was also extremely brutal in exposing strengths and weaknesses. It was just about as close to mortal combat in the Roman Coliseum as you can get in 2017.

There was nowhere to hide for any player with skills limitation,s while also providing opportunit­y for those possessing true warrior spirit PLUS a good skill set to stand out. The Springbok pack was mostly exceptiona­l. We don’t have to mention a word about Marx, but jeepers did Pieter-Steph finally show what he really can do with those big mitts of his?

Kitshoff also confirmed he is much more than an impact sub.

Pre-match I wondered about the gamble of picking three locks. It was an inspired selection.

Lood de Jager at the 2015 World Cup was the brains behind a very good line-out (Matfield did not play many of the games). He ran the line-out superbly at Newlands, freeing up Etzebeth to revel in a game tailor-made made for his combative attributes.

But it is the spine of the team I want to examine. The wise men of rugby always maintain successful rugby sides, be it at provincial or internatio­nal level, have standout players at 2,8,9, 10 and 15, around which the flesh of the team is added.

There is substance to this although, of course, you can obviously have match winners in other positions. But non-negotiable is reliable, highly competent players in that aforementi­oned axis.

How do the Boks shape up if we look at the spine? Hooker? Again Malcolm more than made his mark.

Scrumhalf ? Ross Cronje deserves his place, and since he replaced Hougaard has given a rhythm to the attack. He also gives confidence to Elton Jantjies, and it makes sense that this franchise com- bination is elevated to internatio­nal level.

But Newlands last week also showed the courageous Cronje is no Fourie du Preez. His box-kicking is not good enough and one poorly directed kick led to an All Blacks try.

By contrast the All Blacks’ box-kicking was pin-point and allowed their chasers to contest for the ball. It was not down a counter-attackers’ throat.

The speed of Cronje’s passing also came under the microscope. It must be snappier.

Flyhalf. Elton-bashing is a popular sport among our fans and I am not going to join the club. SHANGHAI: Shanghai Masters top seed Rafael Nadal yesterday shrugged off any pressure to hold onto the No 1 ranking, joking that he’s too old for that kind of nonsense.

“With 31 years old, no, no (pressure),” the Spaniard said as he prepared for a second-round start against American Jared Donaldson. “During the year it was never my goal to be where I am today.

“But it’s much better to be No 1 than two or three.”

Nadal came to China’s commercial capital fresh from a Beijing title at the weekend over Nick Kyrgios.

Nadal said that after an injury interrupte­d 2016 his only goal was his health.

“For me, that was the main thing: be healthy and be competitiv­e. That’s something that happened this year, and that’s the most important thing for me.

“Now I am No 1 and to finish the year as No 1 is something a little bit different. If it happens it will be a great

We must see Elton for what he is. The best we have right now and he is not all bad. We must accept that currently he is the man for the job and he is going to make half a dozen elementary mistakes in each Test he plays while also doing some pretty good stuff.

But will we win a Rugby Championsh­ip with Elton as the general, not to mention a World Cup? This is a rhetorical question...

It would be churlish to compare Elton to Dan Carter, who turned in one of the great flyhalf performanc­es of all time in the final of the 2015 World Cup. Let us leave it at this: teams which win big trophies have a general at 10 who takes

I’M TOO OLD FOR PRESSURE – NADAL

achievemen­t but I need to play well.”

Roger Federer found out the name of today’s opponent as Argentine Diego Schwartzma­n beat Australian Jordan Thompson 6-4 7-6 (7-4) to move into a second-round match with the Swiss.

US 10th seed Sam Querrey put out Japan’s Yuichi Sugita 6-3 6-2. US Open finalist and 11th seed Kevin Anderson beat Adrian Mannarino 6-3 6-1.

There was another upset as qualifier Alexandr Dolgopolov eliminated 14th seed Jack Sock 4-6 6-1 2-1 when the American retired.

Ryan Harrison stopped China’s Zhang Ze 6-3 6-3 while German JanLennard Struff defeated compatriot Mischa Zverev 3-6 6-5 on another match that was not completed. Serb Viktor Troicki overcame Canadian teenaged wild card Denis Shapovalov 6-7 (3-7) 6-3 6-0.

In the second round, Albert RamosVinol­as defeated Spanish compatriot Pablo Carreno Busta, the seventh seed, 7-5 7-5. – dpa the game by the scruff of the neck and generally does not miss “gettable” kicks at goal, the odd tackle and the odd touch finder. And he does not get charged down.

So what are Allister Coetzee’s options? Right now he must stick with Jantjies, particular­ly if it is in conjunctio­n with Cronje, and he must wait to see what transpires with Handre Pollard.

Pollard needs game time to find form and, to be frank, we actually don’t not know how good he can be because we have yet to see him realise his full potential.

Then there is Curwin Bosch. We are told there is a national plan for him and he is not yet ready for the Test stage. Perhaps he will get opportunit­ies on the November tour or perhaps Coetzee wants to see how he manages at 10 in Super Rugby?

That brings us to fullback, a position Bosch is at home in.

The incumbent is Andries Coetzee, a plucky little fellow who is gutsy under the high ball and unafraid to take on the defence on counter-attack. But is he a world class player? I am not sure.

I think Warrick Gelant is building an increasing­ly strong case for the Bok 15 jersey, while it is not beyond the realms of possibilit­y that Bosch can grow into the next Andre Joubert.

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