Springboks to hammer small Wallabies side

By Bokkie / Roar Rookie

No rest for the wicked. The Springboks get little reprieve from their disappointing tour of New Zealand as they prepare to continue their Tri Nation’s defence at Suncorp Stadium in Brisbane on Saturday night.

The Wallabies will be looking to make the most of the Springboks’ disappointing form during the opening stages of the tournament and get their campaign off to a perfect start.

The Springboks have made nine changes to their squad for Saturday night’s must win game, four of the changes in the starting fifteen.

Ruan Pienaar comes in for Ricky Janurie, who falls out of the match 22 completely after poor performances during the two losses to the All Blacks. Gio Aplon replaces Jean De Villiers on the right wing, while Sharks’ loose forward, Ryan Kankowski, takes the place of Francois Louw.

BJ Botha is promoted to the starting side ahead of CJ Van der linde, who will come off the bench.

The remaining changes on the bench sees the inclusion of Juan De Jongh, Flip van der Merwe, Dewald Potgieter and Francois Hougaard.

Springbok coach Peter De Villiers said on Tuesday that his selections are a reflection of the fast paced nature of Suncorp Stadium: “Statistics show that Suncorp has the fastest playing surface in Super 14 and we have to be prepared for a faster game,” he said.

“We have two tough games behind us, but if we stick to our structures and use our opportunities I believe this team is capable of getting a result.”

The Wallabies announced a fairly predictable squad, with perhaps the only surprise being the inclusion of Drew Mitchell in the starting side after he was dropped from the squad by Wallabies coach Robbie Deans for under-performing in the June tests against England and Ireland.

Matt Giteau made the squad, despite speculation he would not be preferred over Reds inside centre Anthony Fainga. Rob Horne gets his first Tri Nations start at outside centre, while Adam Ashley Cooper starts at fullback.

James O’Connor will be starting on the right wing in the fourteen jersey, as a result.

The Springboks have not been successful at Suncorp in the past, conceding seven losses in a row at the Brisbane venue – the latest being last year’s 21 – 6 loss. Overall, the two countries have met on 71 occasions, with the Springboks winning 43, the Wallabies 27 and one draw.

So the teams have been announced and the stage is set.

Who is going to win and why?

History suggests the Wallabies. But it would seem history is wrong. The Springboks are wounded and angry after they were hammered by the All Blacks, amidst controversy. A statement which in itself may be controversial, depending on which team you bat for, figuratively speaking.

The inclusion of Ruan Pienaar in place of Ricky Janurie means the Springboks can play the game at a higher tempo and give Morne Steyn the space he needs to unleash the likes of Habana and Fourie. We can expect a lot of up and unders during the opening stages of play from the Springboks.

But I am sure we will see more running from the Boks as the game continues.

The Springboks will be looking to exploit weaknesses in some of the Wallabies less effective defenders. I believe the Boks have stuck with Olivier at 12 because he likes to run hard and straight and he will be aiming to run straight down Quad Coopers channel.

Cooper is not the best defender in world rugby, missing more than 30 percent of his tackles during the Super 14 and often being forced to make a move to fullback during set piece defence.

The Springboks’ big hard running forwards will be looking to simply overpower their smaller Wallaby counterparts.

Ruan Pienaars quicker service should suit this purpose and go a long way to ensuring a significantly improved Springbok performance. Gio Aplon will be a handful in attack and provide the pace that has been lacking.

The Wallabies on the other hand only have history to suggest that they have what it takes to win. Brilliant individual players such as James O’Connor and Adam Ashley Cooper are unlikely to win the game on their own.

The Wallabies simply lack the personal to compete at the collision zone because they are just too small. The All Blacks showed that beating the Springboks meant taking it to them upfront.

I don’t know that the Wallabies are capable of doing so.

My pick: Springboks by 45 to 10.

Big strong forwards will win the battle upfront and Ruan Pienaars service will prove the difference in attack and allow the Boks to capitalize on their considerable size advantage and the Wallabies weaker defenders.

The Crowd Says:

2010-07-25T20:19:45+00:00

niwdEyaJ

Guest


what is says is that the boks are a "has been" team and have absolutely zero chance of rebuilding in time for the world cup next year, the final of which will be played between the two best teams in the world - New Zealand and Australia - who incidentally play the best brand of rugby: fast, hard and CLEAN. Something for the Boks to aspire to for 2015... it also says that the misinformed author of the above article had his head up his backside when he came up with that ridiculous scoreline prediction... 45-10? sounds as delusional as the Sprinkbok coach!

2010-07-25T14:12:12+00:00

Dan

Guest


"we all have humble days", yes, but seldom do we have one each week for making the same prediction :P.

2010-07-25T06:34:50+00:00

Damo

Guest


Its Sunday now and Bokkie probably has forgotten all he wrote above. We all have humble days and generalisations such as "lack of skills in Wallabies" can make those days even more humble. Thugby R.I.P. , SA Triumphalism of Recent History R.I.P. SA "Whinge-watching" RIP

2010-07-24T23:39:17+00:00

ilikedahoodoogurusingha

Guest


"History suggests the Wallabies. But it would seem history is wrong" OOPS!! :-)

2010-07-24T12:50:08+00:00

Dan

Guest


Oh dear, what does that say about the boks then?

2010-07-24T12:32:36+00:00

Dan

Guest


Well you were almost Right Bokke, the score line was definitely decisive, but unfortunately for you it was in the wrong direction. Sorry, but you knew this was coming. Bahahahahahahahahahaha can't wait to hear what PdV has to say now

2010-07-24T12:24:41+00:00

ohtani's jacket

Guest


I think Bokke is actually Bobby Skinstad.

2010-07-24T12:02:44+00:00

katzilla

Roar Guru


Your 0 from 3 Bokkie. Time for you to start really supporting your team and picking the other side. Your obviously putting the mockers on em.

2010-07-24T02:21:57+00:00

katzilla

Roar Guru


Fair enough, it is something thats hard to judge. But they were certainly more highly rated then the ABs.

2010-07-23T11:41:09+00:00

mickh

Guest


Problem is I don't think they know what hard is. They may play erratic, high energy footy for 60 mins then fizzle out but this Wallaby side doesn't understand hard.

2010-07-23T04:42:11+00:00

Republican

Guest


Absolute drubbing of the Wallabies by the Boks in a series that has for two long been a two horse race yawn fest of predicatbility

2010-07-23T01:20:41+00:00

TembaVJ

Roar Guru


Here is my team for this weekends match and just because we will never know id say they will beat the wallabies by 50 + 1 Gurthrö Steenkamp 2 John Smit 3 BJ Botha 4 Danie Rossouw 5 Victor Matfield 6 Schalk Burger 7 Potgieter 8 Ryan Kankowski 9 Ruan Pienaar 10 Butch James 11 Bryan Habana 12 Jean De Jong 13 Jaque Fourie 14 Hougard 15 Gio Aplon

2010-07-23T00:25:07+00:00

kovana

Guest


Sounds like a good crowd. Hopefully they can get close to 50K....

2010-07-22T19:33:57+00:00

Ben S

Roar Guru


I don't think the SA pack travelled to NZ with the 'best pack in the world' tag, katzilla.

2010-07-22T16:48:56+00:00

MattakII

Guest


Good to see Aussie rugby is moving on front the school blazer BS... Sorry FOS.

2010-07-22T16:37:52+00:00

MattakII

Guest


What is true is that the saffer scrum last weekend was the best is years..

2010-07-22T13:23:36+00:00

Arm Chair Expert

Guest


The ARC was a great competition and benefited many players. There r plenty of 24-30 year olds that would give more skill passion and blood to rugby before the academy juniors. Alot of the games were better to watch than the rubbish being dished up by the Wallabies. Hot cold. When we run hot we don't shut up and next thing we are smashed heads down but we are still building. 3 years dean, not happy Dean. Selectors you suck.

2010-07-22T12:16:34+00:00

katzilla

Roar Guru


Most definately Rusty, sections of that team were highly over rated and found wanting in that tour. What was found to be the most highly over rated about the ABs and NZ rugby in general was that our depth in crucial positions was 'Over Rated' We still havent fixed that problem either and that could still hurt us.

AUTHOR

2010-07-22T11:49:05+00:00

Bokkie

Roar Rookie


Haha, I like your optimism. Skill is not often used in the same sentence as "wallabeies" unless it is preceeded by "lack of".

2010-07-22T11:33:13+00:00

Fush and Chups

Guest


C'mon Ozzy, let's show our Boets the meaning of "fair play, skill, speed, fitness and most importantly rugby" Apparently Habana is the 'Best' winger in the world even though he's a little slow off the mark especially regarding intercepts concerning last years rules (OFF SIDE), when the Boks fail to play fair running ball instead of kick/kick/kick expose their space- Ball in hand compared to head butts always makes the score tick over

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