The one thing that didn’t surprise Eben Etzebeth about Scotland
While the final scoreline gives the impression of a fairly comfortable outing for South Africa in their opening Autumn Nations Series match, it was anything but as Scotland gave as good as they got at Scottish Gas Murrayfield.
The Springboks’ 7-1 bench aimed to effectively blast the Scots off the park in the second half, but it wasn’t quite that straightforward as the home outfit stood up to the giant units that are now holders of both the Rugby World Cup and the Rugby Championship.
A 32-15 victory will look impressive in the history books, but this was a contest that felt a lot closer. And there was plenty of feeling.
“I think I said in the press conference before the game yesterday that we know they are a quality side,” commented stand-in Springbok captain Eben Etzebeth, who himself felt the full force of Scotland's physical effort.
“Always, when you prepare for Scotland, we prepare like we are going to play New Zealand or Ireland, because they're one of the top teams in the world.
“To beat them at Murrayfield with 17 points, yeah, maybe the scoreboard does flatter us a little bit, but we still got a good performance in.
"We always know it's not going to go our way. It's going to be a bit of a grind. They’re a quality side, and they definitely stood up to us in the general play with their physicality and brought the game to us as well, so it was a good battle. It was a good Test match.
“Compliments to them. I think they were great today. We probably weren't at our best, but we showed quality in the end to make the scoreboard like that.”
South Africa kept Scotland try-less for the second time in succession, a fact that coach Rassie Erasmus noted was even more impressive considering they have the likes of Finn Russell in their ranks.
The Springboks now move back to number one in the world rankings, with Ireland dropping to third and New Zealand up to second.
Facing England next, Etzebeth knows full well that they need to keep getting better.
“We obviously set our standards for ourselves. We drive within the team, the players and the management. We want to keep on, keep on performing.
“And we know every now and then there's going to be a performance that we're not probably that proud of, and like I said, at the end of the day it was a good performance because we beat them by that margin.
“But there's just some aspects of the game that we probably won't be happy with and that we'll work on and I'm sure the coaches will point it out to us, and there will be some harsh words, but also some good words. And then I think that you need that in a professional team environment.
“We always strive to be better, and that's why I say there will be some harsh words as well.”
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I don't see the English pulling of a miracle. Rassie will put on the Boks strongest team available. The amount of Boks injured could make a team of their own, but the Boks is lucky to have the depth available that we do. There is about another one or two teams of players that can be made Boks who would challenge anyone in the world and still win, that's how much depth we have.
I just don't see an English win. Boks by 20+
Go to commentsYou are right. He makes mistakes as do many players and unfortunately it does cost teams a loss. I won't argue that point. No player is perfect. They are whiners that's for sure. Expected to be in the Final and expected to win. Got rudely shaken out of that lovely dream into a nightmare on home soil.
As for the AB's, I can't argue there neither. I will always support the SH over the NH, call it SH bias, but the arrogance of the Irish and French just gets my heckles up. I don't think the French stands a chance against the AB's. I predict the AB's to win by at least 12-15 points.
I just say it as I see it. Du Point is a very good player, but that doesn't necessarily make him a good person. I'm not arguing his personality. I don't know him, just how he play.
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