CleanCut
Academy Player
On second thought ... having just visited your link ... consider the subject closed.
That would be the best solution to our short term woes. We should use the Brazilian Football team as a model.
Their players play in leagues around the world but somehow they manage to be in the top two in the world of football a much more competitive sport than Rugby at the moment. If they can form cohesion with their foreign players and make sure they are conditioned to accepted levels then surely we can also do it in rugby. Bear in mind Football has become very competitive and lots of money has been pumped into the game in terms of high performance so their margins are definitely fine. In rugby only the top 8 nations are really close. Maybe even just the top 6. Lets embrace the fact that our players are going to move abroad. Soak up all their cumulative experience in the different leagues of the world with our young home based players supplementing them. The Brazilian league is a gold mine for young talent currently they are a fellow third world nation so economics can be compared as opposed to the german youth setup.
Just because many of the best Brazilians left their own shores did not automatically translate in the production of weaker Brazilian local players rather they keep on producing gems. I think we will keep on producing good players even without the influence of our experienced "hardebaarde" players. These young players can then gain some of that experience by sharing a national team dressing room with our foreign internationals. The argument that foreign based players won't want to play for the Springboks based on club commitments are moot as given the right environment ( a culture of embracing players based abroad) and good incentives to supplement their club contracts then they will always jump for the opportunity to play for a team such as the Springboks.
And that is how i feel we can reach the top 2 if not top 1 in world rugby within tow years.
The thread is titled "Springbok issues" is it not?
Quotas and racism is absolutely a Springbok issue.
It in no way over shadows any other discussion ... unless of course you feel a little uncomfortable facing the facts.
Feel free to hide your head in the sand. I for one much prefer to look at the issue squarely in the eye ... calling it what it is.
To me it seems that the best way to be a competitive top intentional rugby side is to give your best players occasional sabbaticals and long term rest.
It's a competitive business decision that players like Ben Smith, Israel Falou, and David Pocock are currently taking breaks from rugby. If I am correct, Johnny Sexton only played in one Pro 14 game this season before the Springbok game. Sam Warburton doesn't play a whole lot of club games either. Dan Carter played in an average of 13 club games a season in New Zealand. All of this is because they cannot play rugby week-in and week-out and play at their best.
For the Boks we have Francois Louw who has played nonstop rugby for something like 6 years right? I feel like the European club rugby season and SH test rugby are basically incompatible.
I don't know how much short term stress the Boks are in financially. I guess that both the coaching decision and the 30 cap decision might hang on short term considerations. Which is too bad. I definitely see that some people say that they won't buy tickets to the England matches if Coatzee is the coach. If the presence of a coach is affecting the business then he needs to go. Maybe reducing the cap rule could help in the short run, I am not personally convinced, but I think that it would hurt in the long run.
Some people have said that there is actually more money in South African rugby than there is in New Zealand rugby. I am not sure if that is true, but if that's the case the problem is not financial, it is organizational. Super Rugby was created with the sole purpose of giving the SH a scale at which to compete with the revenue potential of England and France. It has pretty much worked. The TV deals have gotten bigger and are much bigger than the Pro 14's. It is just that SARU has not figured out how to best use the tools that the SH has. The SH is also getting most of what they want out of World Rugby with regards to the annual test calendar.
The big thing that the SH can't compete with is the losses that NH club owners have been able to absorb. Saracen's losses alone are greater then the Aus super rugby salary cap. It's crazy. But there are signs that the financial joke that is NH rugby is being reigned in. The light at the end of the tunnel is not there for rugby's investors. The value destroying subsidy will stop.
The Pro 14 needs top players in their league to increase their TV contracts. Super Rugby will be the same. If all of the Springboks are playing in Europe then the TV revenue for Super Rugby will fall. I think that gates will fall to. I personally can't see how selecting overseas players is good for SA Rugby. I am of the view that SARU needs to be definitive about this. The waffling back'n'forth just does not give the players the "policy certainty" that they need to make commitments to the Springboks and SA rugby teams. It doesn't give the Bok's sponsors certainty over the product and how it is managed either.
With regards to Brazil the last time that I watched a Brazilian football match it was full of journeyman players. The game was entertaining enough but it wasn't full of starlets. With regards to Argentina, Lionel Messi has never played club football in Argentina.
I think that it is also worth noting Argentina's hard rugby cap for the Pumas. Why do they have this cap? Because they don't want to be the rugby equivalent of a South American football league. They know what it's like and it's not great. Would much rather work toward being at the top of the world table of leagues than an underling.
Nothing to be honest. Cyril has his hands full with correcting institutionalised corruption in the ANC government. The Sports Minister will have more influence and the current ones appears a bit like a limp "comrade" appointment. Unless there is a ministerial cabinet reshuffle the status quo will be maintained.What affect, if any, will Cyril Ramaphosa being the new President of the ANC have on the Boks?
Nothing to be honest. Cyril has his hands full with correcting institutionalised corruption in the ANC government. The Sports Minister will have more influence and the current ones appears a bit like a limp "comrade" appointment. Unless there is a ministerial cabinet reshuffle the status quo will be maintained.
At least the little racist tyrant Fikile Mbalula is gone. Combine what he said about Indian South Africans in 2007 and his racially driven actions as Sports Minister, and you can see what character he has.
What affect, if any, will Cyril Ramaphosa being the new President of the ANC have on the Boks?
Can't see much fault with what Jake is saying, but then again, it's not rocket science what he's saying either. I think Rassie is getting the balance right, which was the issue with AC. I think AC forgot a bit of the defensive structures and tried too hard to focus on attacking play, but we can only attack if our defence is sorted out.
But I think Jake is not mentioning another aspect, and that is fitness. I think our guys are now much fitter than they were under AC. You can clearly see that the guys are hungry to play and doesn't want to go off the field, while under AC, we saw guys puffing and heaving, which also lead to defensive lapses.
I know that Rassie brought in an Irish S&C coach from his time at Munster (who is a bit crazy, they do some interesting things)
seems to have made a huge difference in their ability to play the entire 80
Are you talking about Jacques Nienaber? he's as South African as I am...
Hes talking about Aled Walters, who came with Rassie from Munster. He is the fitness coach as far as i understand. Could also be termed strengh and conditioning if you want to give it a fancy name.
Nienaber is just in charge of defence.
Although i feel that our recent upswing in form is largely due to the guru that is Nienaber.
Can't see much fault with what Jake is saying, but then again, it's not rocket science what he's saying either. I think Rassie is getting the balance right, which was the issue with AC. I think AC forgot a bit of the defensive structures and tried too hard to focus on attacking play, but we can only attack if our defense is sorted out.
But I think Jake is not mentioning another aspect, and that is fitness. I think our guys are now much fitter than they were under AC. You can clearly see that the guys are hungry to play and doesn't want to go off the field, while under AC, we saw guys puffing and heaving, which also lead to defensive lapses.