Cobus Reinach catapults himself into contention on back of turbocharged hat trick
With three high-class scrumhalves competing with one another, Springboks head coach Rassie Erasmus is in a good position at the end of the pool stages of the Rugby World Cup.
Faf de Klerk, Herschel Jantjies and Cobus Reinach are all vying to impress their coach, and the Northampton Saints nine did himself no harm with the fastest RWC hat trick ever on Tuesday against Canada.
Reinach dotted down for his third score on the 21-minute mark in a first-half demolition of the Canadians, breaking Australian Chris Latham’s 16-year record for the fastest trio of tries. However, it was perhaps the variety of scores that may have impressed Erasmus the most.
The first try was just a pure solo effort, where Reinach displayed his searing pace, his second was a sniping try from close range and the third showed his superb support play after a break by Warrick Gelant.
Although de Klerk has been Erasmus’ first choice over the past year in green, he has faced some criticism so far this RWC, particularly after his display against the All Blacks.
Since making his debut in July, Jantjies has closed the gap behind the Sale Sharks nine, but Reinach is hot on his heels as well. The 23-year-old Jantjies was not overly impressive in the final 20 minutes against Canada, leaving it unclear who may start come the last eight.
On this display, Reinach has worked his way into a number of fans’ squads for the quarter-final, although he may not necessarily be a starter. The pace he brings from the bench is unrivalled, and he could provide an injection of energy into the final stages of a match.
2018 World Rugby player of the year nominee de Klerk has been consigned to the reserves for many fans, as the playoffs of a RWC are not the place for a struggling player to try and find some form.
These are the fans’ opinions on the scrumhalf debate:
While Reinach and Jantjies look to be the form scrumhalves in the South Africa squad currently, coaches are sometimes reluctant to defer from what they know when it comes to crucial matches, which works in de Klerk’s favour. The Springboks will face either Japan, Ireland or Scotland in the last eight, none of which are teams that Erasmus will want to experiment with his nines against.
Rassie Erasmus has had to curtail talks of any racism in the Springboks:
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Apart from the scrum a really sloppy AB performance. Through successive coaching regimes they just don't seem to be able to cope with motivated and physically aggressive opposition, getting knocked off the ball and scrambling around with back foot ball. A lack of proper 10 means we are then not turning the opposition around and pinning them in their corners.
Go to commentsSheesh Goldie, South Africa actually lost two tests, IRE & ARG. Everyone got beaten at least twice this year so I'm not sure why the Boks are the "standard". I'd hate the ABs to follow their example. Our standard should be ABs (version 2015).
But I agree, the ABs are definitely in the B range. For me, it's a B+, the + mainly reflecting the lifting of the teams baseline from wobbly to now comfortably being able to win ugly.
Bring on 2025.
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