Jake White fronts the press over Bulls 'B-team' selection controversy
Bulls Director of Rugby Jake White pushed back strongly against suggestions he is deliberately fielding a ‘B-Team’ in the Champions Cup quarterfinal face-off against Northampton Saints at Franklin’s Gardens on Saturday.
None of the Springboks that featured in last week’s 59-19 Round of 16 demolition of Lyon made the trip to England.
Willie le Roux, Canan Moodie, David Kriel, Kurt-Lee Arendse, Johan Goosen, Embrose Papier, Elrigh Louw, Marcell Coetzee, Ruan Vermaak, Wilco Louw, Johan Grobbelaar and Gerhard Steenekamp all stayed at home.
White made it clear he was not leaning towards focusing on the United Rugby Championship and over the more distinguished Champions Cup.
The trip to England comes in the wake of two tough matches – a humbling 14-47 loss to Leinster in Dublin and a 59-19 Champions Cup win over Lyon in Pretoria last weekend.
Defending URC champions Munster – who beat the Stormers in the Final in Cape Town last year – arrive for a Round 14 crunch match at Loftus Versfeld next week, as the Bulls go into a vital period of URC fixtures.
They host Munster and Ospreys, then European semifinals (if they win this weekend), back to hosting Glasgow Warriors and Benetton in the URC.
The Champions Cup Final is scheduled for May 25, before the Bulls travel to Durban to face the Sharks before the final round of URC league action.
White said the selection for the encounter with the Saints is based on two factors – the need to rotate more (a mistake he admittedly made last year) and medical advice.
“I have said it over and over again, last season I did not rotate my squad enough and it came back to bite me in the end,” an indignant White said.
“It has nothing to do with Munster,” he continued, adding: “It has to do with where we are as a group.”
White pointed out that six players in the teams to face Saints had played in three Soper Rugby Finals.
Another eight had featured in the team that beat Leinster in Dublin in the semifinal of the inaugural tournament in 2022.
Stravino Jacobs and Cameron Hanekom make their return from injury.
“They were the first-choice starters in their positions before they were injured,” the Bulls boss said.
“Then there is rotation, but more importantly, I received medical advice that some players with ‘bumps and bruises’ after the last trip [to Dublin] and the massive game against Lyon would be an enormous risk on a trip abroad.
“They would unlikely be ready for Saturday and we would be at risk with players who can’t start.
“You can’t have guys 50-50 [to play] when you travel away from home and not being ready by Saturday.
“It would be impossible to replace them.
“It is the best team we can field.
“I am confident and looking forward to seeing how they perform.”
Bulls: 15 Devon Williams, 14 Sebastian de Klerk, 13 Henry Immelman, 12 Harold Vorster, 11 Stravino Jacobs, 10 Chris Smith, 9 Izak Burger, 8 Cameron Hanekom, 7 Mpilo Gumede, 6 Nizaam Carr (captain), 5 JF van Heerden, 4 Janko Swanepoel, 3 Mornay Smith, 2 Akker van der Merwe, 1 Simphiwe Matanzima.
Replacements: 16 Jan-Hendrik Wessels, 17 Dylan Smith, 18 Francois Klopper, 19 Merwe Olivier, 20 Reinhardt Ludwig, 21 Keagan Johannes, 22 Jaco van der Walt, 23 Cornal Hendricks.
Date: Saturday, April 13
Venue: Franklin’s Gardens
Kick-off: 20.00 (21.00 SA time; 19.00 GMT)
Referee: Mathieu Raynal (France)
Assistant referees: Ludovic Cayre (France), Luc Ramos (France)
TMO: Thomas Charabas (France)
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Thank goodness he wasn't born in Scotland, he'd have been a great candidate for the Scottish Barbarians. I wouldn't put it past them to push for a “where the player was conceived” rule 😂
Go to commentsOwen Farrell is one of the most polarising figures in the game. His entire attitude on the field (and sometimes off of it) smacks of arrogance and he is about as brash as Donald Trump in a political debate. Yet behind that facade is a calculating, determined and powerful leader who drives any team forward with an Iron will. You are right in that he gets better in the heat of battle and in the face of overwhelming odds. He develops a narrow focus and he delivers his best in a way that few others can. He is one of Englands great performers who sacrificed alot for the team and who often bears the weight of responsibility of leadership alone on the field and in front of the media. Despite what many think of him he is a fantastic game manager with a good rugby brain. He will be sorely missed from the international stage
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