Northern Edition

Select Edition

Northern Northern
Southern Southern
Global Global
New Zealand New Zealand
France France

This Springboks selection will knock France out of their own World Cup

Cobus Reinach of South Africa lines up in the tunnel ahead of the Rugby World Cup France 2023 match between South Africa and Tonga at Stade Velodrome on October 01, 2023 in Marseille, France. (Photo by Michael Steele - World Rugby/World Rugby via Getty Images)

Well done Jacques Nienaber. Well done Rassie Erasmus. You nailed it. No notes. Ten out of ten. This is the side that will advance to the semi-finals.

ADVERTISEMENT

The Springboks match-day 23 selected for their most significant, and arguably their most difficult, match for four years is perfect. No doubt that there’ll be a few fans and pundits who’ll pick holes, highlight weaknesses or stroke their chins as they make a case for a player committed from the team. But across the board, in every position, this is the ideal team to beat France in front of a hostile Parisian crowd.

The selection that will grab most attention is the decision to start Cobus Reinach over Faf de Klerk at scrum-half. And though this has as much to do with de Klerk’s contributions off the bench in the second half, it is perhaps a sign of how South Africa will look to neutralise France while landing blows of their own.

Video Spacer

The Big Jim Show Live – RWC Semi Finals

Video Spacer

The Big Jim Show Live – RWC Semi Finals

Join Big Jim & special guests for the special live shows before and after each Semi Final live on Rugbypass TV

Watch Free

Apart from Grant Williams, there isn’t a faster scrum-half in the game than Reinach. But unlike Williams, Reinach has enough bulk to impose himself from short range. This makes him the ideal candidate to get in the face of Antoine Dupont – the most physically imposing scrum-half around – or Maxime Lucu around the fringe.

France’s strategy relies on quick ball from the base of the ruck with the odd snipe round the corner from their ‘little corporal’. This has been a cornerstone of French rugby for generations and suffocating their leader can cause the rest of the operation to falter.

Reinach’s partnership with Manie Libbok outside him will be an enticing watch. It is the third time they’ve been paired together and serves as counterbalance to the more defensively minded centre duo of Damian de Allende and Jesse Kriel. With Damian Willemse expected to join the party on occasion at first receiver, this is one of the most dynamically creative backlines named over this past World Cup cycle. To do it in a fixture of this magnitude underlines the evolution of Springboks rugby.

Forgive the indulgence and hyperbole but it’s such a tantalising prospect. Reinach’s extra zip feeding Libbok’s flair and Willemse’s slippery slaloms. For those of us who grew up on stodgy play dominated by all-kicking 9s and 10s, this feels like a triumph no matter the result. And with two diminutive wingers in Cheslin Kolbe and Kurt-Lee Arendse out wide, there is every chance that the Springboks will look to run their hosts off the park.

ADVERTISEMENT

They might be wearing the same badge on their chest and have eight players who beat England in Yokohama four years ago, but this is a wholly different outfit to the one that last lifted the Webb Ellis. Back then it was mauls, scrums and counter-punches that saw them steamroll their way to the final after victories over Japan and Wales. If they reach the showpiece event this time, they’d have done so with a spring in the hot-stepping boots.

Not that they’ve thrown the baby out with the bathwater. Sure, they’ve gone for a 5-3 bench split – just as they did the last time the teams met in Marseille last year – which suggests they’ll look to spread the ball throughout the contest. But there is still enough grunt up front to keep the traditionalists on board.

Duane Vermeulen Springboks France
Duane Vermeulen of Ulster after his side’s defeat in the Heineken Champions Cup Pool B Round 3 match between La Rochelle and Ulster at Stade Marcel Deflandre in La Rochelle, France. (Photo By Ramsey Cardy/Sportsfile via Getty Images)

Duane Vermeulen will be a key figure. It’s worth lingering on that for a while given he’s a 37-year-old that has a seemingly endless production line of meaty back-rowers. And though there have been faster, more skilful and more explosive men in this all-important area of the pitch for South Africa over the years, few have been as immovable as the one they call Thor.

ADVERTISEMENT

It is that immovability over the ball and from the kick-off that will be decisive on Sunday. Against Ireland the Springboks were bossed at the breakdown. Siya Kolisi, Pieter Steph-du Toit and Jasper Wiese – who drops out of the 23 entirely with the more elusive Kwagga Smith named on the bench – were constantly beaten to the ball or shoved off it.

Vermeulen might not get their first every time, but once he positions his hefty frame over the ball it’s only coming out one way. Expect the burly veteran to play a starring role until he makes way for Smith.

It is the side’s ability, and intention, to dovetail that is most exciting. Smith’s energy will replace Vermuelen’s power. The dazzle and speed from Libbok and Reinach will make way for the control and nous provided by de Klerk and Handre Pollard. And with Willie le Roux also included on the bench, we might see a triple substitution in the backline with Willemse making way for the seasoned full-back. It’s not quite a Bomb Squad but it’ll be just as destructive with enough front-foot ball.

Much will depend on South Africa establishing a lead for de Klerk, Pollard and le Roux to maintain. I fully expect this to happen. A red card, an uncharacteristic mistake or a French masterclass might compel me to eat my words on Monday, but this is a Springboks side that has all the ingredients to detonate out of the blocks and make the game safe as the French grow more frenetic with waves of blue runners crashing on bottle green rocks. France have wowed the world for four years, becoming the darlings of every rugby fan as their captain morphed into a truly global superstar.

That is not meant to denigrate the host nation and their brilliant team. Beating them in Paris would constitute the greatest achievement of Nienaber’s tenure to date and I include a British & Irish Lions series victory in that. This is the final I was hoping to see and I know many South African fans feel the same way. If France triumphs I expect they’ll instantly become every Saffas preferred pick to win it. They’d have my full backing.

Unfortunately for them, their adoring fans, and their leader in a mask, they’re meeting a perfectly assembled Springboks side. This is where their story ends.

Related

ADVERTISEMENT

LIVE

Krakow | Leg 3 | Day 1

HSBC SVNS Singapore 2025 | Day Two Men's Highlights

HSBC SVNS Singapore 2025 | Day Two Women's Highlights

Jet Lag: The biggest challenge facing international sports? | The Report

Boks Office | Episode 39 | The Investec Champions Cup is back

Rugby’s Greatest Rivalry? | New Zealand & Australia | Sevens Wonders | Episode 5

Kobelco Kobe Steelers vs Toshiba Brave Lupus Tokyo | Japan Rugby League One 2024/25 | Full Match Replay

The Rise of Kenya | The Report

The Fixture: How This Rugby Rivalry Has Lasted 59 Years

Trending on RugbyPass

Comments

155 Comments
R
Rupert 542 days ago

Congrats to you Daniel for calling this match so accurately

R
Ruaan 543 days ago

So… this proved correct in almost every way. Bravo, Mr Gallen.

p
pof 544 days ago

‘Nigel' is a bot. Ignore it.

S
Snash 544 days ago

Yes i also see 5 years of planning and trialling bearing fruit on Sunday night, despite French home ground, my one concern, as a kiwi ref programmed to favour kiwi rugby, Boks may not get much favour in set piece and maul, which could be why they are taking as much of their game as possible out of his hands. The Ireland game was a trial of not getting love for their maul, thus only 2 mauls.

N
Nigel 545 days ago

Unsurprisingly it has been revealed that SA's token quota captain will be speaking to O'Keeffe before the game to ensure he gives them 9 to 12 points as per usual. Thick brown envelope per chance?

C
Chris 545 days ago

Win or lose you’ll still be saffers,
Putin supporting, race obsessed povos

f
francoisphoto 545 days ago

Excellent editorial Daniel

B
Bob Marler 545 days ago

Finally. A writer on rugbypiss that knows what he is talking about.

Reinach will also suck in defenders so when Manie throws that flat, beautiful pass (or pin point cross kick) to the outside backs… hmmm. My plums are purring. Fresh juicy plums. Ready for the picking.

Anyway, that will happen after fairly regular bashes up into the phantom of the opera by DDA and the normal crew.

What a game in the making.

W
Warner 545 days ago

Ka mate
Ka mate
I cannot wait.
Backing Black all the way to the very final whistle , no excuses every game prior means nothing it’s eight teams with four losers four winners all the BS media comments and the one eyed Rugbypass comments account for nothing but wasted ink , the best will survive and the rest will be assigned to the also rans ,
We all have our favorites and opinions this is mine in short.
The Soutern Hemisphere will win RWC 2023
The only NH team to progress to the next round will be England although the Islanders will test their mantle.
ABs will win a fourth CUP
It will be 9/10 cups for the Southern Hemisphere Teams.
Ia aha ha
Ana

N
Nigel 545 days ago

Galthié must be wondering if this is not another Erasmus clown move. No Esterhuizen, a has been plonker at No 8 and a token quota player on the side of the scrum? Ireland destroyed SA at the breakdown, surely even the Erasmus/Nienaber combination realize that that’s were the game was lost?

Load More Comments

Join free and tell us what you really think!

Sign up for free
ADVERTISEMENT

Latest Features

Comments on RugbyPass

N
Natashajason 19 minutes ago
Ex-All Blacks left confused after bizarre game strategy

TRACE HACKER'S CRYPTO RECOVERY IS A GENUINE CRYPTO RECOVERY COMPANY


It was a cold morning when I first realized the full extent of my loss. I had invested 150,000 euros into an online crypto platform, believing in their promises and the allure of quick financial success. But as the days passed, I discovered it was all a scam. My money was gone, and with it, my dreams of financial security.

The feeling of helplessness and devastation was overwhelming. I tried everything to recover my funds contacting authorities, searching for solutions online, and connecting with others who had been through similar scams—but nothing seemed to work. I felt completely lost, as though there was no way back.One Sunday, feeling utterly defeated, I decided to visit Grace Church in Dublin, Ireland. I was searching for some peace and comfort. During the service, I shared my story with the congregation, explaining how I had been scammed and lost everything. I didn’t expect much—just a chance to speak to someone.

Afterward, a fellow parishioner came up to me. He had been listening closely, and after hearing my situation, he shared that he had once been in a similar place.

He had fallen victim to a scam too, and like me, thought his money was gone for good. But someone had recommended a service called TRACE HACKER'S CRYPTO RECOVERY to him. He decided to reach out to them, and with their help, he had managed to recover his lost funds.

He suggested I contact them, believing they could help me too.

Though I was skeptical, I was also desperate, so I wrote down their contact information. That evening, I called TRACE HACKER'S CRYPTO RECOVERY. From the moment we spoke, I felt a sense of professionalism and empathy that I hadn’t encountered before. They didn’t treat me like just another case. They listened to my story, took my concerns seriously, and reassured me that they would do everything they could to help.The recovery process was detailed and transparent. They kept me updated regularly, explaining each step they were taking. Weeks passed, and though I was anxious, I held onto hope. Then, out of nowhere, I received the incredible news: TRACE HACKER'S CRYPTO RECOVERY had successfully recovered 95% of my 150,000 euros. It felt like a miracle. I couldn’t believe it. Thanks to the team at TRACE HACKER'S CRYPTO RECOVERY, I was able to regain my financial footing and rebuild emotionally. I’m now more cautious than ever, but I’m also deeply grateful.

Without the kind recommendation from that parishioner at Grace Church, I would never have found the help I so desperately needed.

Today, I’m on the path to full recovery, and I can confidently say that TRACE HACKER'S CRYPTO RECOVERY gave me a second chance.

Their dedication and expertise truly made all the difference in my life.

Email:support @ tracehackerscryptorecovery. com

Email: info @ tracehackerscryptorecovery. com

Whatsapp: +447 35570 2876

Website:https:// tracehackers cryptorecovery. com/

4 Go to comments
N
Natashajason 20 minutes ago
Ex-All Blacks left confused after bizarre game strategy

TRACE HACKER'S CRYPTO RECOVERY IS A GENUINE CRYPTO RECOVERY COMPANY


It was a cold morning when I first realized the full extent of my loss. I had invested 150,000 euros into an online crypto platform, believing in their promises and the allure of quick financial success. But as the days passed, I discovered it was all a scam. My money was gone, and with it, my dreams of financial security.

The feeling of helplessness and devastation was overwhelming. I tried everything to recover my funds contacting authorities, searching for solutions online, and connecting with others who had been through similar scams—but nothing seemed to work. I felt completely lost, as though there was no way back.One Sunday, feeling utterly defeated, I decided to visit Grace Church in Dublin, Ireland. I was searching for some peace and comfort. During the service, I shared my story with the congregation, explaining how I had been scammed and lost everything. I didn’t expect much—just a chance to speak to someone.

Afterward, a fellow parishioner came up to me. He had been listening closely, and after hearing my situation, he shared that he had once been in a similar place.

He had fallen victim to a scam too, and like me, thought his money was gone for good. But someone had recommended a service called TRACE HACKER'S CRYPTO RECOVERY to him. He decided to reach out to them, and with their help, he had managed to recover his lost funds.

He suggested I contact them, believing they could help me too.

Though I was skeptical, I was also desperate, so I wrote down their contact information. That evening, I called TRACE HACKER'S CRYPTO RECOVERY. From the moment we spoke, I felt a sense of professionalism and empathy that I hadn’t encountered before. They didn’t treat me like just another case. They listened to my story, took my concerns seriously, and reassured me that they would do everything they could to help.The recovery process was detailed and transparent. They kept me updated regularly, explaining each step they were taking. Weeks passed, and though I was anxious, I held onto hope. Then, out of nowhere, I received the incredible news: TRACE HACKER'S CRYPTO RECOVERY had successfully recovered 95% of my 150,000 euros. It felt like a miracle. I couldn’t believe it. Thanks to the team at TRACE HACKER'S CRYPTO RECOVERY, I was able to regain my financial footing and rebuild emotionally. I’m now more cautious than ever, but I’m also deeply grateful.

Without the kind recommendation from that parishioner at Grace Church, I would never have found the help I so desperately needed.

Today, I’m on the path to full recovery, and I can confidently say that TRACE HACKER'S CRYPTO RECOVERY gave me a second chance.

Their dedication and expertise truly made all the difference in my life.

Email:support @ tracehackerscryptorecovery. com

Email: info @ tracehackerscryptorecovery. com

Whatsapp: +447 35570 2876

Website:https:// tracehackers cryptorecovery. com/

4 Go to comments
R
RedWarriors 38 minutes ago
Why Glasgow won't be starstruck by 'arguably the best club team in the world'

I am really looking forward to this. We have seen Glasgow’s quality in Toulon, if that was a home match Glasgow were winning. Glasgow will play in Dublin as if in Glasgow. If Leinster get ahead they cannot allow Glasgow chances like they did Northhampton last year. That will be fatal against Glasgow.

Smith is just repeating what others are saying but this constant talk of ‘greatest club team in the world’ etc is just a symptom of the click bait on line news need for sensationalism. We can only compare with NH teams. Toulouse’s demolition on Leicester is head and shoulders the best performance this year. They earned all those line breaks and the conversion rate from line breaks was 60%. They had only 20 line breaks against Leicester but incredibly scored 12 tries. Leinster had 27 line breaks against Quins and scored 10, which is 37%.

You can see that Leinster may have to have more line breaks than Toulouse in the ratio of about 3:2 to achieve parity as Toulouse are a lot more efficient in converting. This may be achievable without Dupont. Its down to teh day, and Leinster will have to beat a big big gun on a fianl day to be crowned best in Europe, assuming the get past a brilliant Glasgow team.

For the reasons above if Leinster beat Glasgow and Toulouse are beaten in Toulon then its hard to see beyond Leinster outscoring and limiting all other remaining teams.

1 Go to comments
TRENDING
TRENDING 'When I said Glasgow would win the Champions Cup, I had a couple of red wines' Leinster clash is opportunity for Glasgow's Lions hopefuls to roar
Search