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Kolisi: Springboks plan to 'work around' not having Erasmus pitchside

Skipper Siya Kolisi shakes hands with South Africa coach Rassie Erasmus during training in Tokyo (Photo by Steve Haag/Gallo Images)

South Africa captain Siya Kolisi has said the absence of banned director of rugby Rassie Erasmus from Twickenham will be a blow to the team as they go up against England on Saturday.

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Erasmus is banned from any matchday activity until September 30 next year after being found guilty of misconduct by an independent committee for his hour-long video critique of the match officials during the British & Irish Lions series.

He had been masquerading as a waterboy for the Boks during the Lions series, coaching from the sidelines, and reprised the role for this month’s test wins over Wales and Scotland.

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Freddie Burns | All Access

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Freddie Burns | All Access

Yet he will not be involved at Twickenham on Saturday after the verdict – which he has appealed – was handed down by World Rugby on Wednesday.

“It will be tough to be without him as his presence makes a huge difference to us,” Kolisi said at a news conference on Friday that started with SA Rugby saying they would not comment on the case or the sentence handed to Erasmus.

Kolisi, however, did respond to a question about having to do without Erasmus for Saturday’s test.

“His insight, the stuff that he sees that we don’t see on the field is important. It helps a lot when someone has played rugby at this level. He is always motivating us and talking to us from the side of the field and also when the substitutions are made,” the captain said.

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“He makes a huge difference to us as a team and we’ll miss him. But I know the coaching staff have plans on how we can work around that as a group,” Kolisi added.

Though Jacques Nienaber is now coach of the side, taking over from Erasmus after South Africa won the 2019 World Cup, he has made no secret of the fact that Erasmus has a heavy input, from training to team selection.

Erasmus was unhappy with numerous decisions by Australian referee Nic Berry in the 22-17 first test loss to the Lions in Cape Town in July, and further displeased when his efforts to engage with the official the following day were rebuffed. He made a 62-minute video critique that was posted online.

England are focusing on what will happen on the pitch, especially between the packs.

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Forwards coach Richard Cockerill said: “Physically from a scrum, set-piece and line-out point of view, there isn’t a harder team to play against in the world.

“They have a very experienced pack that’s well drilled. Eighty-plus per cent of their lines-out are driven and they get a lot of success from that through penalties. It also enables them to march teams up the field.

“It’s very much the most physical test you’ll come across at Test level. Other teams are physical and fast, but play differently.”

England have lost hookers Jamie George and Luke Cowan-Dickie as well as prop Ellis Genge to a mixture of COVID-19 and injury and will start with 21-year-old prop Bevan Rodd – winning his second cap – and four-cap hooker Jamie Blamire.

On the bench will be Joe Marler, having just been released for Covid quarantine, during which time he says he has been running in a ‘chicken tun’ at home, working in his home gym, and ‘tucking into a bottle of red a day’.

“I want to test myself against the best in the hottest environment,” he said, “and I’m really excited about it.”

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JW 9 hours ago
How the four-team format will help the Wallabies defeat the Lions

Have to imagine it was a one off sorta thing were they were there (saying playing against the best private schools) because that is the level they could play at. I think I got carried away and misintrepted what you were saying, or maybe it was just that I thought it was something that should be brought in.


Of course now school is seen as so much more important, and sports as much more important to schooling, that those rural/public gets get these scholarships/free entry to play at private schools.


This might only be relevant in the tradition private rugby schools, so not worth implementing, but the same drain has been seen in NZ to the point where the public schools are not just impacted by the lost of their best talent to private schools, there is a whole flow on effect of losing players to other sports their school can' still compete at the highest levels in, and staff quality etc. So now and of that traditional sort of rivalry is near lost as I understand it.


The idea to force the top level competition into having equal public school participation would be someway to 'force' that neglect into reverse. The problem with such a simple idea is of course that if good rugby talent decides to stay put in order to get easier exposure, they suffer academically on principle. I wonder if a kid who say got selected for a school rep 1st/2nd team before being scouted by a private school, or even just say had two or three years there, could choose to rep their old school for some of their rugby still?


Like say a new Cup style comp throughout the season, kid's playing for the private school in their own local/private school grade comp or whatever, but when its Cup games they switch back? Better represent, areas, get more 2nd players switching back for top level 1st comp at their old school etc? Just even in order to have cool stories where Ella or Barrett brothers all switch back to show their old school is actually the best of the best?

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