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SA Rugby confirm exit of Marius Schoeman

Marius Schoeman of South Africa celebrates his try with Mzwandile Stick and Deon Helberg during the IRB Sevens Series match between South Africa (29) and Zimbabwe (5) at Quteniqua Park on December 11, 2009 in George, South Africa. (Photo by Duif du Toit/Gallo Images/Getty Images)

SA Rugby have confirmed that Springbok Sevens high performance manager Marius Schoeman is leaving the national sevens programme after a decade of service.

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Schoeman – who joined SA Rugby in 2012 and has served as high performance Manager since 2018 – will step down from his role to become the CEO of the SA Rugby Legends Association on 1 November.

He thanked SA Rugby for their understanding and praised the organisation for their vision to start the Academy programme in 2011.

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“They accepted and bought into the vision Neil Powell and myself had for the Springbok Sevens programme, with the Academy in Stellenbosch turning out to be the foundation of massive successes by the Blitzboks, who went on to win multiple tournaments around the world and as such, became such great ambassadors for SA Rugby and South Africa,” said Schoeman.

“I loved every minute of this journey and based on the recent restructuring at SA Rugby, I feel that it is time to explore avenues where I can further express my passion for development and growth in not only sevens, but rugby in general.

“Therefore, it was a huge honour being approached by Mr Gavin Varejes, founder of SARLA, to join the biggest sporting charity and grassroots development platform in the Southern Hemisphere.

“The SA Rugby Legends Association has done amazing work in rugby, and I am honoured to become part of that family and still to be able to still give back to the game and the ex-players as part of SARLA.

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“I will stay involved with SA Rugby on a consultancy basis and as such, my deep-rooted love and passion for the Blitzboks, who I had the privilege to represent as a player myself, will continue, although in a different role.

“The second Olympic bronze medal is testament to an exceptional collective effort from world-class players and management whom I will always have close to my heart. Exciting times await not only the Springbok Sevens, but SARLA as well and I am honoured and privileged to be involved in that,” Schoeman said.

SA Rugby’s general manager for high performance Dave Wessels expressed gratitude for Schoeman’s service and wished him success in his new position.

“Marius was an integral part of the success achieved by the Springbok Sevens team, from his early involvement with the Sevens Academy to his more recent role as High Performance Manager, which finished on a high note with the team winning the bronze medal at the recent Olympic Games in Paris,” said Wessels.

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“Before that, he was part of the system that delivered a historic first bronze medal at the Rio Olympics, three World Series titles, two Commonwealth Games gold medals and a bronze medal at the Rugby World Cup Sevens in 2018.

“A number of Academy graduates also played significant roles with other national teams, most notably Kwagga Smith, Cheslin Kolbe and Kurt-Lee Arendse, who was part of the 2023 Rugby World Cup winning Springbok squad, to name a few.”

He confirmed that Schoman “will stay involved in a consultancy role” with SA Rugby.

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J
JW 1 hour ago
'Let's not sugarcoat it': Former All Black's urgent call to protect eligibility rules

The effects of allowing players to go overseas will only be known in 10, 20, or even 30 years time.


The lower quality professional level has to seep into the young viewership, those just starting school rugby now, along with the knockon affect of each immediate group, stars to professional, pro to emerging etc, and then it would have to cycle through 2 or 3 times before suddenly you notice you're rugby isn't as good as what it used to be.


This ideology only works for the best of the best of course. If you're someone on the outside, like an Australian player, and you come into the New Zealand game you only get better and as thats the best league, it filters into the Australian psyche just as well. Much the same idea for nations like Scotland, England, even Ireland, you probably get better from having players playing in France, because the level is so much higher. Risk is also reduced for a nation like South Africa as well, as they play in the URC and EPCR and thats what the audience watch their own stars play in. It wouldn't matter as much if that wasn't for a South African team.


So when you say Rassie has proven it can work, no, he hasn't. All he has shown is that a true master mind can deal with the difficulties of juggling players around, who all have different 'peak' points in their season, and get them to perform. And his players are freaks and he's only allowed the best of the best to go overseas. Not one All Black has come back from a sabbatical in is good nick/form as he left, yet. Cane was alright but he was injured and in NZ for most the Super season, Ardie was well off the pace when he came back.


Those benefits don't really exist for New Zealand. I would be far more happy if a billionaire South African drew a couple of stars, even just young ones, over to play in the URC, because we know their wouldn't be that drop in standard. Perhaps Jake should look there? I would have thought one of the main reasons we haven't already seen that is because SA teams don't need to pay to get players in though.

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