Jean de Villiers: ‘next year will be the acid test for this group’
Rugby Championship winners for the first time since 2019, unbeaten on a European tour for the first time in 11 years – the Springboks have hardly put a foot wrong in 2024.
A year bookended by wins over Wales brought 11 victories out of 13 in total, with the Springboks’ only defeats coming by a point at home to second-ranked Ireland (24-25) and away to a resurgent Argentina (28-29).
Rassie Erasmus’ team scored 57 tries and averaged 34.6 points per game, despite a change to the coaching set-up and multiple changes of personnel, often from one Test to another.
For Springbok legend Jean de Villiers, the challenge will be maintaining those sky-high standards during another period of transition, which will see the world champions head to New Zealand, twice, in The Rugby Championship. Trips to France and Ireland have also been mooted for the end of year tour.
“Jacques Nienaber gone, Tony Brown in, Jerry Flannery in, there is always a way there might be a different performance but we haven’t seen that, and it’s not as if we have played poor teams this year,” de Villiers says in the latest episode of Boks Office.
“Two losses, each by one point, playing Ireland at home, The Rugby Championship and winning that, the end-of year tour ... so I think the transition from back-to-back world champs to this year has been pretty smooth. But now the standard is very high. And I think next year will be the acid test for this group.”
Realistically many of the players involved in the clean sweep of Autumn wins over England, Scotland and Wales will be well retired by the time the next Rugby World Cup takes place in Australia in 2027.
Two-thirds of the starting XV that beat New Zealand in 2023 final will be 35 or over at the start of the next tournament. All five of the players that will be under 35 are backs, so it’s the pack that needs the biggest overhaul, unless some of the veterans such as two-time World Rugby Men’s Player of the Year Pieter-Steph du Toit can defy old father time.
Damian Willemse, Kurt-Lee Arendse, Jesse Kriel, Handrè Pollard and Cheslin Kolbe are the five still in with a chance of being around, although for the three outside backs especially, it’ll be a push.
With that in mind, Rassie Erasmus hasn’t wasted any time in blooding new talent in 2024 with Cameron Hanekom the 51st player (49 before the Autumn) to be given an opportunity after stepping off the bench in last weekend’s 45-12 win over Wales.
Of the newcomers, fly-half Sacha Feinberg-Mngomezulu has played the most – eight caps and 55 points scored – and has looked totally at ease at the highest level, while full-back Aphelele Fassi’s return to favour, and form, was arguably the comeback story of the year.
Sat beside de Villiers on the Boks Office sofa, 2004 World Rugby Player of the year Schalk Burger says it is incumbent for the new group to kick on and go to the next World Cup with the right level of exposure to Test rugby. For Willie Le Roux, who turned 35 in August, that could spell trouble as he looks to get the two caps he needs to reach the magic 100-cap mark.
“We had 51 players this year, that’s immense, the amount of players we’ve given opportunities to," remarks Burger.
“Often there is a guy who blows everyone out of the water and Rassie will take him with six, seven, eight nine or 10 caps. But it’s for all of those players to get to 20/25 caps, so that when he is still a young player at the next World Cup he is not really young (in terms of experience),” Burger says.
“Unfortunately for the older generation of players, not all of them are going to make it. So that transition will happen more and more. You will see a natural progression as we’ve seen with Fassi’s performances this year versus Willie (Le Roux). I think in an ideal world we wanted to have Willie at 100, but he’s in the nervous 90s, 98 not out.
“We’ve got Damian de Allende, who is our rock at number 12, but think next year if you experiment a bit and you go Sacha Feinberg-Mngomezulu at 10, Damian Willemse at 12, you maybe even try a Canan Moodie at 13 – there are so many options we have got – and you’re trying to build depth in case Damian de Allende gets injured.”
For Burger, the smart evolution of the squad is summed up well by the situation at 10, where once contenders to replace Pollard appeared to be thin on the ground.
“We were sitting in this environment thinking who is the next 10 behind Handrè Pollard and all of a sudden now you see Mannie (Libbok), now you see Jordan (Hendrikse), now you see Sacha – Damian Willemse played not too long ago there. The options are there which is such a healthy position for us to be in.”
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Shame no Welsh players made this XV.
Go to commentsThanks Nick
Competition structure clearly a problem in both countries.
IMO too little too late in both places.
Really, Australia should have 2 teams in SR or whatever comp they are in from 2026 onwards.
Call them North and South or whatever you like, but one team playing most of it's matches out of Brisbane/Queensland, and the other playing most of their matches out of Sydney/NSW.
Combined these two make up 80-90% of the players and supporters (and crowds)
Get real.
Add Western Australia (Force) to Queensland because they have some cultural similarities. Let 20% of games be played in Perth.
Down South, let the team play 20% of games in Canberra, despite the fact that crowds in Brumby-land are tiny.
If North and South don't suit, call the teams the Maroons and the Chardonnays, or if that doesn't suit, the Cane Toads and the Cockroaches.
Just do something to avoid a slow and agonising death
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