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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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f
fl 35 minutes ago
What is the future of rugby in 2025?

on the article "Why defensive aggressor Felix Jones will drive new-look England" I said:


"Look at the kick:pass ratio from England’s games under Borthwick:

Italy 20:100

Argentina 50:100

South Africa 53:100

Fiji 24:100

Samoa 22:100

Chile 12:100

Japan 25:100

Argentina 55:100

Fiji 30:100

Ireland 21:100

Wales 24:100

Wales 13:100

Ireland 26:100

France 22:100

Wales 26:100

Italy 23:100

Scotland 18:100

The average is 27:100

The average in games we have won is 28:100

The average in games we have lost is 26:100, but these averages are skewed by the fact that we have tended to kick less and pass more against worse sides

The average in games where we have beaten current top 10 sides is 35:100

The average in games where we have beaten current top 8 sides is 39:100

The average in games where we have beaten current top 7 sides is 53:100

The average in games where we have lost to teams currently ranked lower than us is 20:100"


on the article "Four talking points after England's narrowest-ever win over Italy" I said:


"Look at the kick:pass ratio from England’s last 8 games

Italy 20:100

Argentina 50:100

South Africa 53:100

Fiji 24:100

Samoa 22:100

Chile 12:100

Japan 25:100

Argentina 55:100

So (1) England spread it wide more yesterday than against anyone bar Chile, and (2) all of england’s best performances have been when we kick loads, and in every match where we kick loads we have had a good performance."


"In particular you're neglecting the impact of the type of D Felix Jones was trying to introduce, which demanded most of England's training energy at the time."


I'm not, actually, I'm hyper aware of that fact and of its impact. I think it is because of the defence that England's new attack faltered so much for the first three games, something you ignore when you try to judge England's attack in the six nations by taking an average of either the trys scored or the rucks completed over the whole tournament.


"International coaches don't just pick those styles like sweets from a sweet shop!"

Yeah, I know. England's defence wasn't exactly the same as SA's, but it was similar. England's attack did rely on turnovers more than the Irish system did, but it was still pretty similar to it, and then shifted to something similar-but-not-identitcal to the Labit/Nick Evans systems, which are themselves similar but not identical.

102 Go to comments
f
fl 1 hour ago
The Fergus Burke test and rugby's free market

"So who were these 6 teams and circumstances of Marcus's loses?"


so in the 2023 six nations, England lost both games where Marcus started at 10, which was the games against Scotland and France. The scotland game was poor, but spirited, and the french game was maybe the worst math england have played in almost 30 years. In all 3 games where Marcus didn't start England were pretty good.


The next game he started after that was the loss against Wales in the RWC warmups, which is one of only three games Borthwick has lost against teams currently ranked lower than england.


The next game he's started have been the last 7, so that's two wins against Japan, three losses against NZ, a loss to SA, and a loss to Australia (again, one of borthwicks only losses to teams ranked lower than england).


"I think I understand were you're coming from, and you make a good observation that the 10 has a fair bit to do with how fast a side can play (though what you said was a 'Marcus neutral' statement)"


no, it wasn't a marcus neutral statement.


"Fin could be, but as you've said with Marcus, that would require a lot of change elsewhere in the team 2 years out of a WC"


how? what? why? Fin could slot in easily; its Marcus who requires the team to change around him.


"Marcus will get a 6N to prove himself so to speak"


yes, the 2022 six nations, which was a disaster, just as its been a disaster every other time he's been given the reigns.

224 Go to comments
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