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Portugal change five for showdown with Springboks

Tomas Appleton of Portugal looks on during the Rugby World Cup France 2023 match between Wales and Portugal at Stade de Nice on September 16, 2023 in Nice, France. (Photo by Cameron Spencer/Getty Images)

Tomas Appleton will captain Portugal this Saturday against South Africa in Bloemfontein, replacing Nicolas Martins, who misses the match.

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Martins is one of five changes to the starting XV from the team that beat Namibia 37-22 last week.

The flanker has been replaced by Diego Pinheiro in the No.7 jersey, with Vasco Baptista also taking the place of Joao Granate in the back row at No.8.

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      The only other change in the pack sees Nicolas Fernandes come in for Antonio Rebelo Andrade in the second row.

      The two changes in the back line see fly-half Domingos Cabral drop to the bench with Joris Moura starting in his place, and Simao Bento start at fullback in place of Jose Paiva dos Santos. Manuel Cardoso Pinto will shift to the wing this week after starting at fullback against Namibia.

      Fixture
      Internationals
      South Africa
      64 - 21
      Full-time
      Portugal
      All Stats and Data

      Looking ahead to the match after naming his Springboks side, Rassie Erasmus said: “Portugal are a quality team as we saw with their victory against Fiji in the RWC, while they also drew their clash against Georgia 18-18.

      “They proved that they could compete successfully against some of the top teams in the world and we believe they will lift their game even more this weekend given the magnitude of facing the Springboks.

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      “This occasion will really excite them, and they’ll certainly give everything to make a statement for the Tier Two nations, so we have to deliver a top-quality performance to get a result.”

      Portugal XV
      15. Simao Bento
      14. Manuel Cardoso Pinto
      13. Jose Lima
      12. Tomas Appleton (c)
      11. Rodrigo Marta
      10. Joris Moura
      9. Hugo Camacho
      1. Francisco Fernandes
      2. Luka Begic
      3. Diogo Hasse Ferreira
      4. Nicolas Fernandes
      5. Duarte Torgal
      6. Jose Maderia
      7. Diego Pinheiro
      8. Vasco Baptista

      Replacements
      16. David Costa
      17. Pedro Vicente
      18. Abel Cunha
      19. Antionio R. Andrade
      20. Andre Cunha
      21. Pedro Lucas
      22. Domingos Cabral
      23. Jose P. Santos

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      NB 1 hour ago
      How 'misunderstood' Rassie Erasmus is rolling back the clock

      Oh you mean this https://www.rugbypass.com/news/the-raw-data-that-proves-super-rugby-pacific-is-currently-a-cut-above/ . We know you like it because it finds a way to claim that SRP is the highest standard of club/provinicial comp in the world! So there is an agenda.


      “Data analysts ask us to produce reports from tables with millions of records, with live dashboards that constantly get updated. So unless there's a really good reason to use a median instead of a mean, we'll go with the mean.”


      That’s from the mouth of a guy who uses data analysis every day. Median is a useful tool, but much less wieldy than Mean for big datasets.


      Your suppositions about French forwards are completely wrong. The lightest member of any pack is typically the #7. Top 14 clubs all play without dedicated open-sides, they play hybrids instead. Thus Francois Cros in the national side is 110 kilos, Boudenhent at #6 is 112 kilos, and Alldritt is 115 k’s at #8. They are all similar in build.


      The topic of all sizes and shapes is not for the 75’s and the 140’s to get representation, it is that 90 to 110 range where everyone should probably be for the best rugby.

      This is where we disagree and where you are clouded by your preference for the SR model. I like the fact that rugby can include 140k and 75k guys in the same team, and that’s what France and SA are doing.


      It’s inclusive and democratic, not authoritarian and bureaucratic like your notion of narrowing the weight range between 90-110k’s.

      108 Go to comments
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