South African effort trumps errors, coach says there is plenty to fix

Monday, 20 August 2018 00:00 -     - {{hitsCtrl.values.hits}}

Argentina’s Nicolas Sanchez kicks under pressure from South Africa’s Malcolm Marx and Handre Pollard – Reuters

Durban (Reuters): South Africa showed their real potential for only 20 minutes of Saturday’s 34-21 win over Argentina in the Rugby Championship but it was on expected lines with several key players returning after layoffs, according to coach Rassie Erasmus.

Players like Eben Etzebeth, Malcolm Marx and Warren Whiteley were in the side after missing June’s three tests against England while England-based Faf de Klerk and Francois Louw were fresh from post-season holidays.

It made for a disjointed and error-ridden showing at Kings’ Park although in the end pure force and aggression saw the Springboks to a comfortable bonus-point victory.

Erasmus said South Africa had their momentum stymied by the Pumas who were effective in slowing down the ball but “lucky the boys fixed it in the second half”.

Yet again, they were forced to rally in the second half after going into the break 14-10 down but eventually outscored their visitors by six tries to three. “There were some technical errors, particularly in the line-ups but the pack put on a dominant performance, maybe not the most crisp and perfect,” the new Springbok coach added. Erasmus rued five botched line outs close to the Pumas try line after the Boks had turned down penalty opportunities to rather go for tries. “It was terrible to lose line outs inside their 22. That’s terrible, you can’t do that,” he said. “We didn’t capitalise on any of the five times we were right there in the first half.”

Experiment 

But the mistakes were buffeted by an impressive number of tackles and drives from the tight five, he added. “You have to look at the positives because there is still some gelling that needs to happen in this team because we did experiment a little bit again,” Erasmus said.

“But as long as the effort is there, that’s something you can’t coach. That’s within a team. But technically and tactically we weren’t on par.”

Erasmus suggested there might be four to five changes for the next game in the four-nation southern hemisphere championship - again against Argentina but away in Mendoza on Saturday.

“We’re expecting a massive physical onslaught next week, I know they are fuming and will want to get at us,” he said.

“We’ll play around a little in terms of what we think they are going to throw at us and what we think is the best team to handle that.

“We tried a few things here with an eye the World Cup and you can do that at home but going there, I don’t think we’ve got the luxury of experimenting too much.”

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