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Jake White on SA rugby
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<blockquote data-quote="Ospervat" data-source="post: 817466" data-attributes="member: 72942"><p>Whoa- this has gone way off topic.</p><p> [USER=23054]@bruce[/USER] ma goose</p><p>White does make subtle reference to the effect of quotas:- </p><p></p><p>“That’s a worrying sign because whatever is happening now, there’s no doubt it will impact where we will be in the next five years. There are a lot of factors â€" overseas players, spreading the talent base â€" but I don’t think people want to admit that the consequences are going to come back to bite us.â€</p><p></p><p>And.....</p><p></p><p>“What I’m saying is that there’s a glaring obvious flaw in what you see. There’s no succession plan. When the Bok coach packs his bags and leaves, he doesn’t leave anything for the next guy. Heyneke never rested a player, never rotated his team, he knew that he needed to get results. You can’t blame him for that, that’s the nature of the job.</p><p></p><p>Regarding schools rugby - it is not the exclusive privilege of private schools - it is played across state schools however the quality of rugby played by these schools has dropped dramatically over the last 20 years.</p><p></p><p>Point in case - I attended a state school with a proud history of rugby in the eastern cape. We were always up there with the best - getting players into craven week and SA schools every year.</p><p></p><p>Today the racial makeup of that school is 80% students of colour and their rugby is absolutely nowhere - we haven't had a single player selected for craven week in 8 years - those days are over - however soccer is flying - This is quite typical of many schools in the area.</p><p></p><p>It is the private schools in the new South Africa that have tried to preserve the quality of rugby at school level otherwise this too would have perished.</p><p></p><p>There is right way and a wrong way to implement social mobility across all spectrums of life. The political power in SA has elected to place racially based selection policies on the national side but in typical fashion had no plan to provide the funding for education at grass roots level to ensure continuity of talent in future generations.</p><p></p><p>It's taken exactly one generation to seriously erode the talent base in SA rugby and it is finally paying the price. Be mindful - this recent epiphany is only the start - you can expect to see the erosion accelerate before it levels out to one of abject humiliation.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Ospervat, post: 817466, member: 72942"] Whoa- this has gone way off topic. [USER=23054]@bruce[/USER] ma goose White does make subtle reference to the effect of quotas:- “That’s a worrying sign because whatever is happening now, there’s no doubt it will impact where we will be in the next five years. There are a lot of factors – overseas players, spreading the talent base – but I don’t think people want to admit that the consequences are going to come back to bite us.†And..... “What I’m saying is that there’s a glaring obvious flaw in what you see. There’s no succession plan. When the Bok coach packs his bags and leaves, he doesn’t leave anything for the next guy. Heyneke never rested a player, never rotated his team, he knew that he needed to get results. You can’t blame him for that, that’s the nature of the job. Regarding schools rugby - it is not the exclusive privilege of private schools - it is played across state schools however the quality of rugby played by these schools has dropped dramatically over the last 20 years. Point in case - I attended a state school with a proud history of rugby in the eastern cape. We were always up there with the best - getting players into craven week and SA schools every year. Today the racial makeup of that school is 80% students of colour and their rugby is absolutely nowhere - we haven't had a single player selected for craven week in 8 years - those days are over - however soccer is flying - This is quite typical of many schools in the area. It is the private schools in the new South Africa that have tried to preserve the quality of rugby at school level otherwise this too would have perished. There is right way and a wrong way to implement social mobility across all spectrums of life. The political power in SA has elected to place racially based selection policies on the national side but in typical fashion had no plan to provide the funding for education at grass roots level to ensure continuity of talent in future generations. It's taken exactly one generation to seriously erode the talent base in SA rugby and it is finally paying the price. Be mindful - this recent epiphany is only the start - you can expect to see the erosion accelerate before it levels out to one of abject humiliation. [/QUOTE]
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