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The South African sevens legend who is 'absolutely convinced' about becoming a Springbok

Seabelo Senatla in action at the 2018 Sydney Sevens. (Photo by Bradley Kanaris/Getty Images)

He’s become one of South Africa’s most lethal weapons on the World Rugby Sevens Series, but things haven’t panned out so smoothly for Seabelo Senatla in the XVs version of rugby.

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With a whopping 224 tries in 203 matches for the Blitzboks on the world sevens circuit, the 26-year-old flyer sits in fourth place on the series’ all-time try-scorer list, trailing only England’s Dan Norton (338 tries), Kenya’s Collins Injera (271) and Argentina’s Santiago Gomez Cora (230).

Senatla’s nose for the tryline in the abbreviated format of the game has yielded plenty of international success.

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He played a key role in South Africa’s back-to-back World Sevens series titles in 2017 and 2018, claimed a gold medal at the 2014 Commonwealth Games in Glasgow and won bronze at the 2016 Rio Olympics.

However, despite being apart of the Western Province and Stormers set-ups since 2014, Senatla hasn’t been able to replicate that success in the game’s traditional XVs format.

Injuries and sevens commitments restricted him from pushing for higher honours beyond Super Rugby and the Currie Cup, although he did win a solitary appearance for a South Africa A side against the touring French Barbarians in 2017.

Nevertheless, that hasn’t quelled his desire to represent the Springboks at test level and put his 2020 Tokyo Olympics ambitions on hold, according to new Stormers coach John Dobson.

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“Seabelo is absolutely convinced that he can become a Springbok,” he said at a media briefing in Bellville on Monday.

That is his focus. He is actually discounting quite a bit in terms of wages to be able to do that. I hope he makes it. He is really keen.”

It’s a big ask for Senatla to crack into the Springboks set-up, especially considering the impact incumbent wingers Makazole Mapimpi and Cheslin Kolbe had on the South African side en route to their World Cup title tilt in Japan earlier this month.

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Senatla will join Stormers teammate Ruhan Nel in the Blitzboks’ opening two tournaments of the 2019-20 World Rugby Sevens Series in Dubai and Cape Town next month before fully committing himself to the upcoming Super Rugby campaign.

Dobson said Nel could leave the squad later in the season if he is selected for the Olympics in August.

“We’ve got Angelo Davids, Ruhan and Seabelo. Angelo is staying with the Sevens for the whole season, while Seabelo and Ruhan will join us at our pre-season camp after the Cape Town Sevens,” Dobson said.

“Seabelo will be with us full-time. If he gets selected, Ruhan will go to the Olympics and miss the Super Rugby playoffs.”

The Stormers open their 2020 Super Rugby season against the Hurricanes at Newlands in Cape Town on February 1.

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SK 14 minutes ago
The Reds' 'whimpering' exit shows Super Rugby scrums still matter

The Scrum remains a key platform in the game. There may be fewer set in SR Pacific and fewer penalties given but you cannot escape its importance and that is how it should be. The scrum cannot become an irrelevant thing in Rugby. It deserves its own space in the game however too much time is spent setting a scrum and thats where the refs need to be more strict. They need to demand effort from players and award 10metres or penalties if the scrums are not set fast enough by one team or the other. The sixty seconds to set will only help if its enforced strictly. The Refs in the Top 14, URC, Champs Cup and Prem have been too slack in adequately policing the times setting scrums. Too many teams simply dawdle at scrum time because they are on the back foot. Theres nothing more frustrating than watching a clock count down and players having a chat with the ref at scrum time or stand up because they packed in badly. Refs need to get serious on it. In 1995 scrums were set in seconds. The laws came in to make them safer but now its way too time consuming. I feel like too often refereeing is done according to feeling and not mandate. There needs to be consistent standards across the game. While SR referees will penalise a 9 for not using it in the 5 seconds it rarely happens in Europe. Andrew Brace did it this weekend to Embrose Papier but that was after like 10 seconds. The Refs need to get more assertive about time wasting and following the time limit guidelines and this needs to happen across all leagues at once. Only then will we have a game for all refereed at the same standard.

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