Northern Edition

Select Edition

Northern Northern
Southern Southern
Global Global
New Zealand New Zealand
France France

What Jake White has been telling his players about the Champions Cup

Jake White

Vodacom Bulls boss Jake White has been giving his players a crash course in the Heineken Champions Cup as his BKT United Rugby Championship high-fliers prepare for their European debut.

ADVERTISEMENT

White, who guided the Springboks to World Cup glory in 2007, knows all about the Champions Cup from the three years he spent in charge of French club Montpellier.

Now he is taking the Vodacom Bulls on a ground-breaking Euro adventure as they embark on home and away group matches against Lyon and Exeter.

Video Spacer

Video Spacer

“Having coached at Montpellier, I know how tough the Champions Cup is,” said the 58-year-old from Johannesburg.

“From the point of view of young players and supporters here, there’s probably a little bit of naivety about just how intense the competition is.

“If you look at the kind of teams that come running out every weekend, there’s virtually a Test international in every position, plus the bench, whether it’s a South African or a Kiwi or a Samoan or a Fijian.

“We are a long way off from that. We don’t have Springboks in every position. It’s not across the board with an international in every position like with the overseas sides. Generally the depth of those teams is much stronger than the South African teams.

ADVERTISEMENT

“I have tried really hard in the last couple of weeks to explain to our players how tough this competition is. I have explained to them how seriously these teams take it and how physical it is. You can play against a pack that weighs 1,000 kgs and that’s just completely different to what we normally experience.

“Once it gets going, with the games on TV, I think the whole public here will understand the enormity of it. A lot of our supporters have watched the likes of Clermont, Racing, Toulouse, La Rochelle and all the top sides play. We obviously see Leinster and those sides in the BKT URC.

“But when you see Clermont on fire at home and you see a rampant Toulouse cut you apart or you see how good Saracens can be when they have all their internationals, I am thinking after next weekend there will be a massive mind-shift from the average supporter that will see it is just another level.

The Vodacom Bulls launch their Champions Cup campaign at home to French club Lyon at Pretoria’s Loftus Versfeld on Saturday evening. They warmed up for that Euro debut by beating Cardiff 45-9 to move up to second place in the BKT URC, pulling away after leading 17-9 at the break.

ADVERTISEMENT

“In the first half, we had a lot of slow ball and struggled to get any rhythm. Cardiff are a good side and they started well. They attacked our breakdown heavily and were really hard on the ball every time we went to ground,” said White.

“The message for the second half was to stay up longer in the contact, make sure you buy some yards and don’t go to ground too early and we got the rewards.

“Cardiff have beaten two South African sides this season, the DHL Stormers and the Cell C Sharks. Let’s not forget they also beat Munster in the first round. So they have had three really big scalps this season.

“So for us to have a five point win against them is a massive swing in the competition. It was obviously a pleasing result to win with six tries and not concede one. There’s a lot of positives we can take out of that.”

ADVERTISEMENT

LIVE

{{item.title}}

Trending on RugbyPass

Comments

0 Comments
Be the first to comment...

Join free and tell us what you really think!

Sign up for free
ADVERTISEMENT

Latest Features

Comments on RugbyPass

H
Hellhound 1 hour ago
Does South Africa have a future in European competition?

All you can do is hate on SA. Jealousy makes you nasty and it's never a good look. Those who actually knows rugby is all talking about the depth and standards of the SA players. They don't wear blinders like you. The NH had many years to build the depth and players for multiple competition the SA teams didn't. There will be growing pains. Not least travel issues. The NH teams barely have to travel to play an opponent opposed to the SA teams. That is just one issue. There is many more issues, hence the "growing pains". The CC isn't yet a priority and this is what most people have a problem with. Saying SA is disrespecting that competition which isn't true. SA don't have the funds yet to go big and get the players needed for 3 competitions. It all costs a lot of money. It's over using players and get them injured or prioritising what they can deliver with what are available. To qualify for CC, they need to perform well in the URC, so that is where the main priorities is currently. In time that will change with sponsors coming in fast. They are at a distinct disadvantage currently compared to the rest. Be happy about that, because they already are the best international team. You would have hated it if they kept winning the club competitions like the URC and CC every year too. Don't be such a sourmouth loser. See the complete picture and judge accordingly. There is many factors you aren't even aware of at play that you completely ignore just to sound relevant. Instead of being an positive influence and spread the game and help it grow, we have to read nonsense like this from haters. Just grow up and stop hating on the game. Go watch soccer or something that loves people like you.

129 Go to comments
LONG READ
LONG READ Does South Africa have a future in European competition? Does South Africa have a future in European competition?
Search