The Star Late Edition

Time to think outside the box

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end), it worked and came through for us.”

Kolisi conceded his team had simply been out-muscled by France in the first half of the match. “They simply dominated us. That was the big thing ... we didn’t make any technical errors or such, but they got over the gainline, got over the ball, and we couldn’t move them.

“They won the physical battle in the first half, but we were much better after the break.”

Coach Rassie Erasmus was more blunt in his response, admitting his side had not delivered a clinical performanc­e.

“Last week (against England) we lost in the last minute; this week we won it in the last minute ... so it’s a much better feeling this time,” said Erasmus.

“But this was not a perfect performanc­e, it was definitely not a clinical performanc­e, but it was a gutsy effort.”

The Boks now move on to Edinburgh and a date with Scotland on Saturday. AFTER the lacklustre showing in their last-gasp 29-26 win against France in Paris on Saturday night, rugby writer

suggests Bok coach Rassie Erasmus rethink his team and game-plan to face Scotland

STOP THE BOX-KICKING

Faf de Klerk is one of the most attacking, dangerous scrumhalve­s in the world game – but if he’s not going to be allowed to run at the opposition, feed his backs and be a nuisance to the opposition there’s no reason to be picking him.

His forte is not box-kicking and coach Rassie Erasmus needs to rethink this “plan”. De Klerk, or whoever starts at scrumhalf, should be allowed to play their game and allow Handre Pollard (or whoever is at 10) to take charge and be the decision-maker.

GET PSDT BACK IN THE BACK-ROW

It wasn’t that long ago that fans were questionin­g the reasoning behind playing one of our premier locks, Pieter-Steph du Toit, as a blindside flank ... well, no more. Du Toit has shown this year he is more than capable of playing in the loose-trio and needs to move back there as soon as possible.

The Boks have more than enough quality locks for Du Toit to wear the

No 7 on his back. Against Scotland this weekend he needs to form a loose-trio with Siya Kolisi and Duane Vermeulen.

LET’S SEE BONGI HAVE A GO

Malcolm Marx may be one of the nominees for World Player of the Year, but he has not been on top of his game for some time now. While he hit his jumpers on Saturday – a marked improvemen­t from the England game – he was far off the standard he’s set for himself in recent times. Swapping places with Bongi Mbonambi might just fire up Marx, who could be devastatin­g coming off the bench, and allow Mbonambi to show his mettle again. The Stormers man deserves another start.

PLEASE PUT TOGETHER AN 80-MINUTE EFFORT

One of the mysteries of the Erasmus era so far has been the fact the Boks can’t put together a whole-hearted 80-minute performanc­e. If they’re not starting slowly and falling behind early on (England in June), they’re giving up handy positions to lose in the dying minutes (New Zealand at Loftus). On Saturday against France, they were poor in the first half and only just better in the second half. Erasmus needs to find the magic to ensure the Boks maintain a high standard throughout.

SORT OUT THE INCONSISTE­NCIES

From one week to the next you just don’t know what you’re going to get from this Bok side. At times this year, they’ve varied their attacking game and looked dangerous when on the front foot, but on Saturday they seemed to have no idea how to unlock the French defence. One week they defend well (as they did at Twickenham to deny England a try), the next there are gaping holes in the defensive wall. Sometimes the replacemen­ts work, sometimes they don’t. Some consistenc­y please.

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