Financial Mail and Business Day

We have to salvage this, says Springbok coach

Liam Del Carme

The Springboks have built much of their preparation for the series against the British & Irish Lions by looking in the rear-view mirror.

Their World Cup success was their point of reference and they may argue that now they have lost the first Test 22-17, they have more cause for a retrospective approach.

With the smart money now on them losing the Test series‚ they will need to invoke the belief and bloody-mindedness that saw them overcome even greater odds at the World Cup.

By losing their opening game then against New Zealand, the Springboks under Rassie Erasmus needed to win every

remaining game to lift the Webb Ellis Cup. They did that with aplomb.

Though they have reassembled many of those 2019 heroes, their preparation for that tournament was forged over months of meticulous planning‚ repetition on the training field and match day combat.

They were together for 19 weeks leading up to the final. To turn things around this time will require a far more concentrated effort. Losing the first Test usually signals the death knell for teams in this match-up.

The vanquished in the first Test tend to spiral out of control and the Lions have not relinquished such a position of promise since their 2-1 defeat to Australia 20 years ago.

Springbok coach Jacques Nienaber was clear about what the team’s obligations now are.

“We have to salvage this. A proper review is needed but we can sort this out‚ no doubt. It worked in the first half and I believe what happened in the second half is fixable.”

He will seek answers in his review and his inquest is likely to pause on his team’s efforts at the breakdown. They didn’t maul effectively‚ they lost their first-half traction in the scrum after the break and their overall discipline has invited scrutiny.

They came off second best in the contestable kicking game. Lions’ scrumhalf Ali Price had the ball on a string in the second half.

“The kicking game was won by us in the first half and we got the rewards‚ but the second half was a different story‚” said Nienaber. “They won that battle and it gave them territory‚ advantage in broken field play and we had to scramble‚ and could not cope.”

Nienaber said the Springboks’ lack of height‚ especially on the wings, was not to blame for their shortfalls in that area.

“No‚ it’s not size. Cheslin Kolbe is good in the air.

“Cheslin got good rewards in the first half. There was a mix-up with Willie le Roux and Kwagga Smith, but that happens. They will sort it out.”

Lamentably for the Boks, the momentum of the match seemed to turn on the result of a contestable kick shortly after half time when miscommunication between Smith and Le Roux brought about hesitation.

Smith was thumped in a tackle and the Boks were on the back foot as they saw their 12-3 halftime advantage evaporate.

Though the hosts got over the try line against the run of play incursions‚ they were ruled out by the officials‚ who seemed stretched to keep a handle on proceedings.

Nienaber was philosophical about those calls.

“Sometimes those inches go for you and you score a brilliant try. Sometimes they don’t.”

Despite their handy lead at the break, Nienaber pointed at areas where trouble might be brewing.

“At halftime things were working for us. We were playing right areas of the field. We needed to step up at breakdown. We had to sort that out and also our discipline. They started mauling. We gave stupid penalties away. Our discipline wasn’t great in the second half.”

SPORT

en-za

2021-07-26T07:00:00.0000000Z

2021-07-26T07:00:00.0000000Z

https://timesmedia2.pressreader.com/article/281973200683137

Arena Holdings PTY