Springboks will 'come for' the British & Irish Lions at scrum time
The British & Irish Lions first hit out on South African soil against the Sigma Lions was a powerful display full of high tempo rugby, bashing over the gain line and swinging the ball wide with success.
Despite notching 50-points against the hapless Lions, South African journalist AP Cronje has not been impressed with the Lions at set-piece time, predicting that the Springboks 'will come for the Lions' at the scrum.
The set-piece was an important part of the Springboks' World Cup final win over England, dominating them there after they lost their tighthead prop Kyle Sinckler in just the second minute.
Despite the Lions having vast front row resources to pick from across four nations, Cronje predicted that they would be 'annihilated' by South Africa.
The Boks are going to annihilate this Lions front row.
— AP Cronje (@rugby_ap) July 3, 2021
However, it was the Sigma Lions whose scrum was as fragile as wet paper against the British & Irish Lions, conceding three penalties to zero while having six collapsed scrums and four resets.
Despite the frailty, the home side's platform aided them by stalling for time to prevent the visitors from piling on the points.
The slow pace of the game on Lions' scrums allowed the clock to dwindle and allow the players to get a breathe as they completed just six of 11 formed scrum attempts.
The stability was on the tourists side, with no resets and coming away with a clean sheet of no penalties conceded. The power of the British & Irish Lions pack gave the visitors complete control, although they did not rely on the scrum.
They had just four scrum feeds compared to 21 lineouts. What's more, the British & Irish Lions forced two penalties on their four attacking scrums, a rate of 50 percent.
This was similar to their effort against Japan the week before, where they forced two penalties from just five attacking scrums, a rate of 40 percent.
The potency of their set-piece is beginning to show however some believed they will look for quick feeds, recycling the ball quickly, to counter the Springboks' pressure during the test series.
The Lions have three Number 8s with the ability to pick up the ball quickly, in Sam Simmonds, Jack Conan and Taulupe Faletau and have picked fast loose forwards for a mobile game plan.
BI Lions intentionally breaking away from scrums quickly. They are practicing to take the weapon away from the Boks. Won't be that easy, by the fact they picked quicker rather than stronger losies is telling.
— Johan Jordaan (@Johan_Jordaan72) July 3, 2021
Cronje stuck to his assertion, claiming the Springboks possess depth in the front row 'that no international side' can match or come close to, and that the selection of two entire front rows in the matchday 23 will act in tandem to 'clean up' the Lions.
Kitshoff, Mbonambi and Malherbe will more than sweat the Lions. Nche, Marx and Nyakane off the bench will clean up what's left. No international side, or Lions side, can match SA's depth in the front row. None come close.
— AP Cronje (@rugby_ap) July 3, 2021
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I thought you meant in europe. Because all of the reasons theyre different I wouldn't correlate that to mean for europe, as in french broadcasters pay two or three times as much as the UK or SA broadcasters do, like they do for their league.
With France, it's not just about viewers, they are also paying much more. So no doubt there will be a hit (to the amount the French teams receive for only playing a fraction of it) but they may not care too much as long as the big clubs, the top 8 for example, enter the meaty end, and it wouldn't have the same value to them as the top14 contract/compensation does. Hell, I wouldn't be surprised if the 3 separate networks broadcast deals only went to the clubs in their regions as well (that's how SR ended up (unbalanced) I believe).
Go to commentsHis best years were 2018 and he wasn't good enough to win the World Cup in 2023! (Although he was voted as the best player in the world in 2023)
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