The Star Early Edition

Warburton’s Wales pumped to face the Springboks

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WALES captain Sam Warburton, says his team have no fear of playing the Boks in Saturday’s quarter-final at Twickenham.

The Welsh somehow conspired to lose 15-6 to an at one stage 13-man Australian team at the weekend to sentence themselves to the half of the draw that pits them against the Southern hemisphere powerhouse­s, South Africa and New Zealand.

If Wales had shown more enterprise on attack and varied their play when they had the two-man advantage, they might have found the gaps to score tries but battered away one-dimensiona­lly against a valiant Wallabies defence. Had Wales won, they would have had a relatively comfy quarter-final clash against Scotland. Instead they face the Boks, and if they win that game, probably the All Blacks in the semi-finals.

“The last time we played the Boks we beat them (in Cardiff last November) and we should have beaten them in Nelspruit (the teams played each other three times last year, twice in South Africa in June),” Warburton said. “Why would we think we can’t beat them again?

“There is no easy way to win a World Cup and we have always accepted that we are going to have to beat the best teams to do it. That has not changed,” he said.

After Willie le Roux had starred in the first Test in June for a comfortabl­e Springbok win, the Boks narrowly won 3130 in the second Test, at the Mbombelo Stadium with Warburton adding that two penalty tries awarded to the Boks in the game by referee Steve Walsh were contentiou­s.

“We can take massive confidence from the fact that we could easily have won that game on their home turf if it had not been for the second penalty try in the final seconds. And then we beat them in the next game we played.”

Warburton admitted that South Africa will be a tougher propositio­n than Scotland but again said his team had the ammunition to beat the Boks.

“One thing this group of players does not mind is a challenge and it will be a tough challenge against the Boks on neutral territory,” the captain said.

While the Welsh will continue to talk up their chances in a bid to get over the blow to their psyche, there was also physical damage inflicted by the Wallabies. Wing Liam Williams is out of the World Cup because of an injury and a major concern is the head knock suffered by key centre Jamie Robetrs, who will be undergoing the routine concussion protocols this week.

While the Welsh are pumping themselves up with the memory of beating the Boks in Cardiff last year the reality is that the Bok team is significan­tly changed from the tired side that ended their season at the Millennium Stadium.

In that match, the half-back combinatio­n was Cobus Reinach and Patrick Lambie, while Fourie du Preez and Handré Pollard will start on Saturday; the centre pairing was Jean de Villiers and Jan Serfontein, this time it will be Damian de Allende and Jesse Kriel; the wings were Lwazi Mvovo and Cornel Hendricks, this time it will be Bryan Habana and, in-

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