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'He gets the Springboks going': All Blacks should 'expect fast play, coast to coast' from Libbok

Manie Libbok with ball in hand for the Springboks. Photo by WIKUS DE WET/AFP via Getty Images

Everyone knows what to expect when you play the Springboks; a massive pack with undeniable physicality and as strong of a set piece as you’ll find in the rugby world.

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Well, that covers the forwards at least. In the backs, head coach Jacques Nienabar has been mixing up his selections week in, week out, throwing different looks at different opposition and employing the full reaches of the player depth at his disposal.

With three first fives vying for the No 10 jersey, question marks have circled the position and continue to despite Handre Pollard’s exclusion from the Rugby World Cup squad.

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We’re yet to discover whether it will be Manie Libbok or Damian Willemse to lead the South African’s World Cup campaign, or if Pollard is yet to make a curious return.

It is the former, Libbok, who has been named as pivot for the team’s final World Cup warm-up match against the All Blacks – just don’t tell the teams it’s a warm-up.

The 26-year-old is in the infancy of his international rugby journey but does not play like it, and he’ll bring a different element to a matchup that the New Zealand team came out trumps in last time around.

“He’s an exciting kind of flyhalf,” Philasande Sixaba told The Platform. “He brings something very much different to a Handre Pollard. He’s very much a ball-in-hand kind of first five.

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“I think a lot of the things the South African public moan about is his inconsistency from the kicking tee, and I think that’s something he’ll improve on as he gets more minutes in test match rugby, I think he’s about eight test matches in now.

“He’s really just stood up in terms of his attacking play, he’s got a really good defensive play as well.

“For me, he’s one of those guys where you look at and from a point where he gets the Springboks going, particularly when they have a strong pack like they have against New Zealand this Friday. So, you can expect some fast play, coast to coast from a guy like Manie Libbok.

“He’s got a really good, thinking brain inside him. He knows when to attack, he knows when to kick and vary his play so very much an exciting prospect.”

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Among the options that have been floated at 10 are Cheslin Kolbe and Willie le Roux, two players who often occupy the outside back positions for their country but have shown their chops at 10 for their clubs.

With various injury concerns across the field, the Springbok coaches have their hands full planning for different situations but Sixaba thinks the playmaker role is of top concern.

“At flyhalf, that is probably one of the positions where Jacques Nienabar scratches his head a little bit more than the others.

“It’s kind of difficult to replace those frontline players like Pollard… the X-factor of a Manie Libbok still gets us through test matches.”

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Comments

6 Comments
d
dk 692 days ago

Ambitious prediction here. Coast to coast requires fitness. Something the South African forward pack's reserves don't have. Keep it tight and don't run out of gas. That's how SA need to play. They may try to throw other nations off the scent by throwing it around but they'll lose and no one will fall for it so why bother?

D
DA 692 days ago

hey small Dave you aren't verbose at the moment. I do recall one of the so called FAT BOKS PROPS running around one of your three quarters. Please man don't be so quiet I am really missing you. Venture out of the hole when the sun comes out.🤣🤣🤣🤣

B
Bob Marler 692 days ago

Hahaha

S
Snash 693 days ago

so good to see Nienaber backing him despite inconsistent place kicking - and if he creates or scores more 5s it doesn't matter

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Jfp123 31 minutes ago
France push All Blacks to 80th minute in narrow Dunedin defeat

So, you think top rugby players’ wages ought to be kept artificially low, when in fact the forces of “demand and supply” mean that many can and indeed are commanding wages higher than you approve of, and even though players regularly get injured, and those injuries can be serious enough to cut short careers and even threaten lives, e.g. Steven Kitshoff.

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As far as I can make out your objections amount to

1) they’ve sent a B team, which is not what we do and I don’t like it. Is there more to it than that? You haven’t replied to the points I made previously about sell out Tests and high ticket prices, so I take it reduced earnings are no longer part of your argument. Possibly you’re disappointed at not seeing Dupont et al., but a lot of New Zealanders think he is over rated anyway.


2) The Top 14 is paying players too much, leading to wage inflation around the world which is bad for the sport.

Firstly, young athletes have a range of sports to choose from, so rugby holding out the prospect of a lucrative, glamorous career helps attract talent.

Above all, market forces mean the French clubs earn a lot of money, and spend a large part of that money on relatively high wages, within a framework set by the league to maintain the health of the league. This framework includes the salary cap and Jiff rules which in effect limit the number of foreign stars the clubs employ and encourage the development of young talent, so there is a limit on Top14 demand. The Toulon of the 2010s is a thing of the past.


So yes, the French clubs cream off some top players - they are competitive sports teams, what do expect them to do with their money? - but there’s still a there’s a plentiful supply of great rugby players and coaches without French contracts. The troubles in England and Wales were down to mismanagement of those national bodies, and clubs themselves, not the French


So if you don’t want to let market forces determine wage levels, and you do want to prevent the French clubs from spending so much of their large incomes on players, how on earth do you want to set player wages?


Is the problem that NZ can’t pay so much as the Top 14 and you fear the best players will be lured away and/or you want NZ franchises to compete for leading international talent? Are you asking for NZ wage scales to be adopted as the maximum allowed, to achieve this? But in that case why not take Uruguay, or Spain, or Tonga or Samoa as the standard, so Samoa, a highly talented rugby nation, can keep Samoan players in Samoa, not see them leave for higher wages in NZ and elsewhere.

Rugby is played in lots of countries, with hugely varying levels of financial backing etc. Obviously, it’s more difficult for some than others, but aside for a limited amount of help from world rugby, it’s up to each one to make their sums add up, and make the most of the particular advantages their nation/club/franchise has. SA are not the richest, but are still highly successful, and I don’t hear them complaining about Top14 wages.


Many, particularly second tier, nations benefit from the Top14, and anyone genuinely concerned about the whole community of world rugby should welcome that. England and NZ have laid down rules so they can’t make the most of the French competition, which is up to them. But unlike some NZ fans and pundits, the English aren’t generally blaming their own woes on the French, rather they want reform of the English structure, and some are calling for lessons to learned from their neighbours across the channel. If NZ fans aren’t satisfied, I suggest they call for internal reform, not try to make the French scapegoats.


In my opinion, a breach of standards would be to include on your team players who beat up women, not to regularly send a B team on the summer tours for reasons of player welfare, which in all the years you’ve been doing this only some of the pundits and fans of a single country have made a stink about.


[my comments here are, of course, not aimed at all NZ fans and pundits]

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