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World Cup-winning Springbok says South African Super Rugby exile poses many questions

South Africa wing Bryan Habana

Former South Africa wing and 2007 World Cup winner Bryan Habana said on Wednesday he would like to see a global calendar introduced for the sport.

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World Rugby chairman Bill Beaumont said in May plans about aligning fixtures in both the northern and southern hemispheres are under way.

Habana, 36, who retired in 2017 as the Springboks’ record try-scorer (with 67 tries) after 124 Tests and had successful domestic stints at home and with Toulon in France, told AFP in an interview that he was an advocate of changing the window for international matches.

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“I’m extremely supportive of a global season, I’ve had the question asked a lot in the last while. The difficulty for me is that rugby is a winter sport. Winter in the northern and southern hemisphere are at different times,” said Habana, who has helped launched the MatchKit application since ending his playing career.

“I’m all for changing the seasons and having the autumn series down in the southern hemisphere and vice-versa, not that I hate the cold but the viewing experience is that much better,” he said.

Despite his approval of the idea Habana admitted there will be teething problems as national unions, leagues and other bodies discuss the proposals.

“You can’t expect people in the northern hemisphere to give up their summer holidays over July and August to watch rugby and adversely you can’t expect the same from the southern hemisphere,” he told AFP.

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“Aligning the calendars, somebody has to sacrifice somewhere with the calendar and timing and all that.”

SA’s SANZAAR ‘debate’

As part of the changes reports claim South Africa Rugby are set to leave SANZAAR, the body which governs the sport in the southern hemisphere, for Europe.

Two South African franchises, the Bloemfontein-based Cheetahs and the Southern Kings in Port Elizabeth are already part of the Pro14 league with sides from Ireland, Wales, Scotland and Italy.

But Habana said there were too many questions to be answered about the Springboks playing in an European competition despite practical benefits related to similar time zones.

“Where in the Six Nations do they fit in? Is there now promotion and relegation? Then why can’t Japan be included in the Six Nations?” he said.

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“I want to say there are pros and cons both ways, having that overnight travel, potentially being able to be at home a lot more but where would we fit in the schedule is the biggest debate for me and one that will be ongoing.

“If we were to go to the northern hemisphere, yes, it’s easy to travel, you don’t have jet-lag, you don’t have time differences, where do you fit in competition-wise? There have been mixed reviews of South African teams in the Pro14,” he said.

– Rugby365

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Hellhound 1 hour ago
Pat Lam blasts 'archaic' process that lost the All Blacks Tony Brown

Now you are just being a woke, jealous fool. With the way things are run in NZ, no wonder he couldn't make a success there. Now that he is out shining any other New Zealanders, including their star players, now he is bitter and resentful and all sorts of hate speeches against him. That is what the fans like you do. Those in NZ who does have enough sense not to let pride cloud their vision, is all saying the same thing. NZ needs TB. Razor was made out to be a rugby coaching God by the fans, so much so that Foz was treated like the worst piece of shitte. Especially after the Twickenham disaster right before the WC. Ad then he nearly won the WC too with 14 players. As a Saffa the way he handled the media and the pressure leading up to the WC, was just extraordinary and I have gained a lot of respect for that man. Now your so called rugby coaching God managed to lose by an even bigger margin, IN NZ. All Razor does is overplay his players and he will never get the best out of those players, and let's face it, the current crop is good enough to be the best. However, they need an coach they can believe in completely. I don't think the players have bought into his coaching gig. TB was lucky to shake the dust of his boots when he left NZ, because only when he did that, did his career go from strength to strength. He got a WC medal to his name. Might get another if the Boks can keep up the good work. New exciting young talent is set to join soon after the WC as dangerous as SFM and Kolbe. Trust me, he doesn't want the AB's job. He is very happy in SA with the Boks. We score, you lose a great coach. We know quality when we see it, we don't chuck it in the bin like NZRU likes to do. Your coaching God is hanging on by a thread to keep his job🤣🤣🤣🤣

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