Heyneke Meyer will select players with experience rather than form

By Andrew Jardine / Roar Guru

I don’t have a crystal ball and haven’t chatted to Nostradamus for years, but I’ll cheekily take a shot at predicting who will be included in the Springbok squad before coach Heyneke Meyer announces it.

Judging from the past, Meyer hasn’t got the political guts to make hard choices. I am not talking about racial quotas, just his record of taking conservative decisions.

Meyer has been big on ‘experience’, and appears to believe that the opposition can be buried under the sheer weight of caps. Experience, not form, is more important is his view.

The old sporting cliché ‘form is temporary and class permanent’ is true to a point. However, there is nothing to say that an in-form player’s performances will necessarily dip.

While experience is an asset, it isn’t everything. Getting older is also a permanent condition and Old Man Time catches up with everyone eventually.

Victor Matfield is a case in point. Much is said about his lineout skills and his more than 120 Test caps, but little from his fans concerning his painfully slow pace in general play.

The Springboks have done well with Lood de Jager and Eben Etzebeth at lock, so why play the 38-year-old Matfield? Experience is the answer. So Meyer will go with Matfield when the going gets tough in the World Cup. I suspect, too, that he retreaded Pieter-Steph du Toit as a loose forward for the Argentina Test so he could justify choosing Matfield at lock.

The Springboks coach will follow the same line over the captaincy. Jean de Villiers is his first-choice captain and apparently Matfield is the stand-in.

As for a calm head for the captaincy, there are several other players, such as Duane Vermeulen and even Schalk Burger, both far younger and with enough experience to lead.

In his comeback from injury, De Villiers didn’t do enough to justify a place ahead of the centre pairing of Damian de Allende and Jesse Kriel. But Meyer will go with De Villiers. Why? Experience.

It’s not a case of either experience or form. You need both. In any case, just how much experience does a player need? Rugby is not rocket science. Although De Allende and Kriel are newbies to Test rugby, they have experience in other forms of the game and I doubt they would let the Springboks down.

Because of Meyer’s failure to bring through younger players in the past few years, he is left relying on the old brigade, some of them survivors from the 2011 World Cup squad and even the winning 2007 one.

However, Meyer appears happy to rely on the inexperienced Handre Pollard at flyhalf, who has a handful of caps, with Pat Lambie as his other option. Lambie does have more than 40 Test caps, but he has been given scant game time over the years.

Will Morne Steyn be in the squad? I wouldn’t be surprised. Apparently, he has been playing well for French club Stade Francais, but why pick Morne? He is a kicking machine, but another player who’s past his best days.

Meyer’s decision to bolster his winning percentage by relying on ageing players has seriously undermined our chances. In contrast, both the All Blacks and the Wallabies have been bringing through younger players, giving them Test experience, and now have far better options.

Like other South African fans, I am hoping for the best in the battle for the Webb Ellis Trophy starting next month.

What would Nostradamus have said? Who knows? I just hope that my predictions won’t have him turning in his grave.

The Crowd Says:

2015-08-27T18:05:25+00:00

canaadiankiwi

Guest


I was at Murrayfield this past March when Scotland played Ireland. Scotland are terrible. They have an average pack- mediocre front row but good second and back rowers. However, none of their halfbacks and centres would make a NZ Super franchise- I am not kidding. They lack the explosiveness, pace, athleticism, and ball skills to play Super Rugby. Samoa, on the other hand, lack structure in attack and defense but they are explosive athletes and enormously physical. They are more than capable of an upset if the catch the Springbok on an off day.

AUTHOR

2015-08-26T06:01:29+00:00

Andrew Jardine

Roar Guru


Samoa are no easy beats and Scotland ditto. Samoa have the forwards to give us trouble. It will depend on what Heyneke Meyer comes up with and we will need be on our game.

2015-08-26T04:20:05+00:00

Sabine

Guest


Scotland is looking okay these days. No easy beats. And Samoa can leave you sore and limping win, lose or draw. The Boks will win their pool without a doubt, but they'll be feeling their lumps.

2015-08-26T00:52:52+00:00


You really could have put a lot more thought into that comment. Samoa an easy game? They are a very physical team, Scotland an easy game? Scotland has done better than any other Six Nations team against the big three the past four years.

2015-08-26T00:19:35+00:00

pjm

Roar Rookie


With this selection policy plus 4 easy pool games South Africa are going to get trounced in the QF (Runner up Pool of Death) no matter who it is.

2015-08-25T17:53:22+00:00


Yeah Andrew when you look at the Lambie/Pollard scenario then Meyer is a contradiction onto himself. Victor over Lood - Experience counts Jean de Villiers over De Allende - Experience trumps form Pollard over Lambie - Hogwash.

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