Thursday, May 24, 2012

Tri-Nations watch

smaller text tool iconmedium text tool iconlarger text tool icon

Rugby_watchWhere to now, De Villiers?

The embattled Springbok team and its management are currently trying to survive as all-comers hurl verbal missiles at them. It would seem that some tough decisions and changes in approach have become unavoidable, and will start this week when a review board of the South African Rugby Union (SARU) asks tough questions of the coach, Peter de Villiers.

There are persistent rumours that De Villiers is a hands-off mentor, that the team is effectively being coached by senior players, with him merely rubber-stamping the style and plan devised by the players.

SARU is extremely perturbed by the controversial media statements made by De Villiers, which are harmful to the Bok cause and fire up the opposition.

Ultimately, the other members of the management team and the senior Boks are forced to aid their ailing coach and jump to his assistance, detracting from their focus on the immediate task at hand.

Furthermore, De Villiers has been grilled for his lack of leadership, an apparent lack of progressive ideas, and stale tactics.

The Bok management team has denied there is a rift within the coaching staff on the Plan A of the South African team.

Apparently, Dick Muir is an apostle for an expansive game, while the other assistant Gary Gold prefers a more structured approach.

The crisis calls for cool heads, and a coach who is prepared to put his head on the block in proactive pursuit of the right style, willing to reassume control while taking tough and, sometimes, unpopular decisions.

Best squad available?

Many pundits, including former coach Jake White, believe that this Springbok squad is arguably the most talented ever assembled on a South African rugby field.

The performances by the Bulls and Stormers have underlined that we have the talent available to win the Vodacom Tri-Nations tournament.

But these players have not been managed correctly – rather man-handled, abused and demoralised. Some have been overplayed to the point of burnout, while others have reached the end of their career.

What is most disconcerting is that many senior Boks have hardly had any rest over the past six months. If you persist with the tried and trusted experience in the hope that it becomes an insurance policy for success, you are flirting with disaster.

That is exactly what happened in Australasia, and specifically on Saturday when the Boks were humiliated and outplayed by a rampant Wallabies team in Brisbane.

The Australians won 30-13. Bryan Habana, Jaque Fourie and Pierre Spies were pale shadows of their exhilarating best; while John Smit, Victor Matfield and Morné Steyn hardly convinced the South Africa public with stale performances.

Former All Blacks Richard Loe and Sean Fitzpatrick pointed to the fact that the Boks looked jaded.

Rugby columnist Peter Bills warned in the Cape Times that if De Villiers were permitted to stay until after the Rugby World Cup, he may by then have squandered the golden generation bequeathed by White and failed in his principal task to retain the Cup.

Lessons from history


Related news items:
Newer news items:
Older news items:

A Springbok coach cannot and should not be short-sighted, a yes man toeing the political line and simply endorsing the populist views of players.

He must make unpopular decisions and be proactive, live and die by his decisions, be prepared to fall in his own sword if things backfire spectacularly.

At this stage, it seems De Villiers is unwilling or unable to take this unpopular and highly controversial stand, as epitomised by White when he sent a B team into the Tri-Nations, but ultimately won the World Cup because of it.

Nick Mallett had the courage of his convictions to drop Gary Teichmann before the Rugby World Cup in 1999. Rugby supporters were enraged, and with the 20/20 vision of hindsight, it turned out to be a faulty decision.

Yet, it almost paid off, as South Africa was only beaten in the extra time period in the semifinals of the World Cup as Australia squeezed through to the final.

South Africa can ill afford to persist with its very predictable style of structured rugby and a love for using high kicks in a vain attempt to force the opposition into defensive blunders.

And, because the Boks have rarely protected possession and have had to defend all the time, they have ultimately imploded under the enormous pressure.

Hug a ref

The Boks have also become defensive in their evaluation of the performances by northern hemisphere referees.

Sure, they have made cardinal errors, but how do you get the best of out of the referees? What good can come from publically humiliating them and questioning their bona fides?

Perhaps dealing with referees calls for a different game plan altogether. Perhaps a more phlegmatic approach with a mid-week conference by the coach and captain with the referee prior to the game would do South Africa’s cause much more good than a public pasting of their northern hemisphere ‘shortcomings’.

As was mentioned previously in this column, the definition of insanity is to do the same things over and over again and to expect a different result.

South Africa will have to change lanes – or course; adapt their game plan to a more expansive style of play, while berating De Villiers for his controversial media statements.

And, the coach will have to make tough choices before the home leg of the Tri-Nations.

If he is not prepared to rest some senior Springboks and give some of the best performing solo ‘artists’ of the Super 14 campaign a run, South Africa’s downward spiral will continue.

Surely it is time to give Francois Hougaard an extensive run, to contemplate the claims of Francois Steyn and to rethink the wisdom of persisting with the Olivier/Fourie combination.

Time will tell if De Villiers would be bold or timid. A return to his conservative style of play may see the All Blacks and the Wallabies ‘green-washing’ the Boks.

Comments (2)
  • Lance Dixon  - Where To Now Coach
    Two things come to mind here which in many cases have been ignored. The amount of rugby that has been played over the last two years by the likes of Matfield, Spies, Habana, Olivier, Kirtchner, Roussouw and to a marginally lesser extent Burger,Smit and others
    is absolurtely astonishing and there is absolutely no doubt that this team is in melt down. The concerning issue is that the administrators and coaching staff have just naively and stupidly barged ahead and played these guys into absolute exhaustion. Hoskins and his chronies just continue to accept more fixtures which mean nothing other than bucks in the pocket of SARU. It is sad that we are prepered to chase money to this degree and that De Villiers and his bunch of merry coaches has just ignored fatigue and burnout , an issue which they have been continually warned about.
    Secondly the Tri Nations Tournament itself.In 2009 we basked in the glory of victory and lost sight of the fact that we had a massive boost in respect of fixtures having two home matches against New Zealand. As I said we accepted that gleefully.Now we have to accept the counter handicap and that did not go down quite as well. The Tournament itself has been seriously unbalanced by greedy, blundering adminstrators who one would guess were so busy stuffing there pockets that they forgot to ask what they weere trying to achieve when they moved away from the home and away fixture format to the current format which has made the fixture list the most important fact when it comes to who wins the tournament.They have done the tournament no favours, the players have not benefited from it and the game of rugby has once again come off second best on decisions made by short sighted greedy administrators.I certainly would be far more secure in placing a bet on the fixtures list as opposed to whom I beleive is the best team. As a nation perhaps we should do the same thing and base our hopes, ambitions and expectations on the fixtures list as opposed to the Springbok team. But having said that it should favour us from time to time and we should win the tournament more regularly than we have in the past. Certainly , winning the tournament a couple of years ago was far more valuable and carried a lot more prestige than it does now.Perhaps we just need to put our 2009 warm and fuzzies into context and be far more realistic and expect less than we have this year. We had it last year and NZ had it this year and it is going to influence and unbalance more tournaments in years to come.
  • Zagrijs Venter
    I agree with most sentiments already expressed and want to add the following:
    1. While John Smit is an excelent captain while the going is good, I have doubts about his ability to lead the players when the going gets tough and make the right decisions. Not kicking for goal when you are in a predicament is one of his bad decisions that repeats itself like clock work - in the last test twice! Two years ago we lost 49/0 against Oz because of exactly the same reason. In the dying moments of the game he still prefered not to kick for goal; if you have not been able to score any points in 77 minutes of the game you changes are virtually zero to score a try in the dying minutes of the game.
    2. Is John Smith sure that he is still up to it. Is it not time that he does the honourable thing and decide to retire from international rugby?
    3. The same might apply to Victor M.
    4. The kicking game seems to be so deeply rooted in the rugby psyche of South African players that I don't know how we are going to get it out of them. Maybe Alistair Coetzee should take over as coach, because he achieved it with the Stormers.
    5. It is also time that we get past the idea of a win-is-a-win, irrespective of the way it is achieved. As long as we are winning we don't seem to care about the cracks in our game and then we are shocked when the cracks became canyons. We should have seen this disaster coming.
    6. It is very short sighted to complain about refs when wrong decisions go against you, but nicely keep quiet and accept it when the wrong decision goes your way. If we want to really win the refs over we will have to point out on the veld when a wrong decision was made that unfairly advantaged us. We will not only gain respect, but refs would probably be much more inclined to listen when we question a decision against us.
Write comment
Your Contact Details:
Comment:
Security
Please input the anti-spam code that you can read in the image.
Move
-

Recent Articles

Top Headline

Football watch

Football watch

Pirates do it again Benni McCarthy for Orlando Pirates and Didier Drogba for Chelsea dominated the  highlight packages of the past week’s football. Both secured a league trophy for their respective teams with match-winning performances.

Read More...

Rugby watch

Rugby watch

SA teams dominate the Super 15 log The DHL Stormers are back at the summit of the Vodacom Super Rugby log thanks to another dedicated defensive effort against the Waratahs. With the Bulls and the Sharks, after a bonus-point win over the Free State Cheetahs, three South African teams are now amongst the top six in the Super 15 competition....

Read More...

Europe

Europe

The socio-political spinoff of economic difficulty Most of the attention in Europe since the election shocks in France and Greece has been focused on whether France and Germany can keep a solid working relationship going in dealing with the continent's protracted financial crisis. However, deeper analysis suggests that the European...

Read More...

Local Politics

Local Politics

The broader picture behind the DA and Cosatu clash With 75%, or three million, of South Africans aged between 18 and 34 unemployed, last week’s clash between the Democratic Alliance (DA) and the South African Congress of Trade Unions (Cosatu) is but the tip of the iceberg of a complex problem. Much more is at stake than just the...

Read More...

Worth a read

Worth a read

Apartheid’s Endgame Endgame is a book about South Africa's recent political history that saw the end of apartheid and the pre-dawn of democracy. It also has a lot to say about the now and the hopes and the fears for the country's future.

Read More...
Leadership magazine is South Africa's number one award winning business magazine having won the Tabbie Gold Award for Best Single Issue in the world (TABPI), PICA Awards for Magazine of the Year, Best Publication, Editor of the Year, Cover Design

The Leadership Bullentin


Archive