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'It was 100 per cent the right decision': Springbok coach on last year's 'failure'

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South Africa coach Jacques Nienaber says the Springboks will continue to evolve their game-plan and add more attacking strings to their bow ahead of the defence of their Rugby World Cup title in France later this year.

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The champions were noticeably more attacking with ball in hand in the autumn internationals at the end of 2022, which included narrow defeats by Ireland and France, and wins over Italy and England.

The side were roundly criticised for being one-dimensional and too reliant on a territorial kicking game in the wake of their 2019 World Cup win in Japan, but Nienaber says they are learning new ways to pick opponents apart.

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“We must not be arrogant and say because we won a World Cup in 2019, if we do the same things we will win it again. You have to change, adapt and evolve. Last season was big for us in terms of that,” Nienaber told reporters.

“The team has embraced the changes we have made. You have to make sure you stay creative otherwise other teams will catch up to you.”

The Boks lost five of their 13 Tests in 2022, considered a below-par year, but with Nienaber having widened the player pool extensively, he says it was necessary ahead of the World Cup after the side remained idle for 20 months following their World Cup win due to the COVID-19 pandemic.

Those defeats included a first-ever home loss to Wales after Nienaber made 18 changes to the match-day squad from the team that won the first Test of the series.

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“It was 100 per cent the right decision. It sounds funny, but failure is a way of evolving and developing. When you start learning to ride a bike, no-one just gets on and goes. You have to fall a few times to learn,” he said.

“If you just bat for your own win percentages, you don’t make those changes. Then guys like (wings) Kurt-Lee Arendse and Canan Moodie would not have had an opportunity.

“While winning will always be our main goal, squad development and getting experience into players was a big drive last year.”

The Boks play a truncated three-game Rugby Championship and take on Wales and New Zealand in warm-up games ahead of the World Cup.

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They have been pooled with Ireland, Scotland, Tonga and Romania in France.

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Phantom 45 minutes ago
Nations Championship: 'The data shows the north has finally caught up with the south'

Fact: the gap between the North and the South has narrowed considerably - that I get. However, determining that only selecting only Home grown players or playing in the home country is is the optimal strategy is a bit of a toss up and highly reliant on the economies of the home union. I do understand that England and to a lesser degree Ireland selects home based only. The top 14 is a massive threat to their domestic product. France would probably not be affected (the money is at home). Fiji, Argentina, Samoa, Italy and you could even argue Scotland have only benefitted from this. Their players either go overseas to learn at higher levels (Fiji, Samoa, Argentina) or players coming into their leagues to strengthen the home product and their National teams (Scotland, Italy, Japan).

South Africa used to limit its selection to the home based players, but the reality of a weak currency vs what players could earn oversees meant that you lost access to your best players at some stage of their careers, with very few exceptions. Kolbe left SA as he was considered too small for International Rugby (yes coaches/selectors view), but ironically in France he forced selectors to notice his endeavors and select him. He is only reaching 50 caps now despite being north of 30 - granted rotation and the odd injury also played a role, but for the most part it is having debuted or becoming a regular so late.



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