Can this Springbok squad save Coetzee's job?

By Harry Jones / Expert

Allister Coetzee has been told he must win the French Test series, or he will get the sack. But this is Africa, so that may or may not be true.

The coach who took a Rugby World Cup semi-finalist squad – which lost by only two points (a revenge drop-goal winner) to one of history’s greatest teams, led by several of New Zealand’s all-time legends, and kept the All Blacks scoreless in the final 20 minutes – and turned the Boks into a mild form of milquetoast, their worst iteration of the professional era, has been given a second chance.

Who did he select for his reprieve?

Nine Lions, seven Stormers, five Bulls, four Sharks, two Cheetahs, and four Saffas based in France.

Who replaces his hapless 2016 captain? The 29-year-old No.8 from the Lions, the fully bilingual and likable Warren Whiteley, born and bred in Durban.

Again, Coetzee has chosen a leader who does not command his starting jersey; Duane Vermuelen is the best No.8 from South Africa. But ‘Thor’ is also a classic Bok blindsider: he rocks ball-carriers in the tackle, can beat the first defender, is safe as houses in the lineout, and works all 80 minutes.

At least Whiteley seems to care whether his team wins or loses, an emotion seldom apparent from Adriaan Strauss last year.

Photo: AAP

What about the squad, as a whole?

Fullbacks
The hard-running, big booted Andries Coetzee deserves a chance, as his Super Rugby form has been clear. Jesse Kriel can fill in here, in a pinch, as can rookie Dillyn Leyds, or the original siege gun Frans Steyn. However, Steyn is probably looking at both the 10 and 12 jerseys, too.

I might have given Ruan Combrinck, one of the few 2016 Boks who added to his reputation, a gallop. SP Marais and Warrick Galant may also be a bit unlucky.

Wings
The one-way player (no tackling, please) Raymond Rhule beats out the doubly unlucky Combrinck, who has as much game time as (the selected) Damian de Allende, but misses out.

The old firm of Bryan Habana and JP Pietersen are gone. Try-scoring machine Courtnall Skosan makes the cut, with Leyds and utility back Francois Hougaard also a chance.

Centres
If there has been one position the Boks have struggled with since Jean de Villiers and Jaque Fourie left, it’s No 13. Maybe ‘Kootchie Koo’ Coetzee is retreading Heyneke Meyer’s experiment with Kriel? Or could the excellent snaffling Shark outside centre Lukhanyo Am be looked at, as quotas become ever more imperative? He would be a raw debutante on the most deserted defensive island in rugby.

At 12, the fit-again Steyn, Jan Serfontein and de Allende slide right back in, devoid of meaningful domestic game time. Perhaps a red-hot Harold Vorster might have been a better choice than Serfontein? But I am very happy about Steyn’s return. SARU was not good to him the last few years, and he’s a proven winner.

Flyhalves
The crucial playmaker position is thin. Handre Pollard, Pat Lambie, and several other potential pivots are not eligible due to injury. This leaves the mercurial Elton Jantjies and his ‘great at club, shaky in Tests’ past, as well as Steyn as a backup. Meanwhile, the impressive Lionel Cronje is not selected.

AAP Image/Julian Smith

Scrumhalves
No look here for the form South African Super Rugby No.9 of the season, Jano Vermaak. Instead, it’s woeful Rudy Paige of the slow Bulls, and Hougaard back from the UK. Ross Cronje completes the triumvirate.

I would start Hougie, who is combative, and won’t be afraid to win.

Backline verdict
If a couple of experienced players go down (Steyn, Hougaard, Serfontein), this is a callow group. It’s not clear if Coetzee intends to go ‘heavy’ (Hougaard-Steyn-de Allende-Serfontein) or Lionesque (Cronje-Jantjies).

Rhule cannot currently defend at Test level, Skosan seems a little light, too. You can pick a very fast seven men from this list, but it’s doubtful Coetzee will go that way.

Overall, not likely to inspire too much fear in the French.

Hookers
The best hooker in the Top 14 was available for selection, but Bismarck du Plessis cannot get a look from Coetzee. Instead, it’s the return of French league failure Chiliboy Ralepelle, along with the big steam-engine Malcolm Marx, and the rather tiny Bongi Mbonambi, who cannot even find Eben Etzebeth and Pieter-Steph du Toit in the Stormer lineout routinely.

Props
Coetzee favourite Steven Kitshoff, who is a very good prop at scrum time and in the tight-loose, comes back from France, even without the requisite Test caps, because that rule only kicks in later.

Ruan Dreyer deserves his spot, but Frans Malherbe and Beast Mtawarira are a bit lucky. Thomas du Toit has outplayed ‘The Beast’ for the Sharks this year. The Bulls’ scrum this season has belonged in the sevens circuit, but Lizo Gqoboka is selected ahead of ferocious Stormer Wilco Louw.

Coenie Oosthuizen takes his usual ‘I can scrum both sides, but not well’ position.

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Locks
No worries here. Four stellar big men who can easily go to France any time they want for big bucks: Etzebeth, du Toit, Franco Mostert, and Lood de Jager (Ruan Botha might be a tad unlucky not to beat out de Jager).

Loose forwards
The tough-as-nails Vermeulen may combine nicely with upskilled Whiteley, but Siya Kolisi or Jaco Kriel will have to balance them by slowing the ball, and not just looking for knockout tackles or open field rambles.

With Francois Louw and Marcell Coetzee out, the Bok 6 jersey is ripe for someone to take ownership. Chris Cloete may feel hard done by.

Oupa Mohoje has to keep his tackle height down, or he will be the most carded Bok this season. Vermuelen played blindside for a lot of his career, but Jean-Luc du Preez might wonder what the long-term plan for Japan 2019 is; he has been on fire for the Sharks.

Pack verdict
A mean-looking pack can start and end the Tests, but the only real changes from last year are at hooker and flank. What will the coaches coax out of this talented group? Is it smart to go to war without a true opensider nowadays?

Squad
The crucial selections of 9, 10, and 13 loom. Why select Serfontein? Why not have an out-and-out flyhalf duo? Can Rhule really tackle, at all? Depth is a problem, but the ‘A’ side (playing the French Barbarians) can furnish quality players.

What say you?

The Crowd Says:

2017-05-29T07:26:36+00:00

davSA

Guest


You are completely correct imo NV. I also got the impression that the Boks pitched up to lose to Italy whether by design from a few senior players or even at a lower level of consciousness. An interesting viewpoint from Brendan Venter who as you know is the new "exit" coach of the Boks is that Alistair had no chance last season given the prep time he had with the Boks. He did stop short of criticizing the support staff as obviously he has to still work with those guys but the fact that he is in the team at all is an implied acknowledgement that they are not up to standard. This season however there will be nowhere to hide for Coetzee .. Another disaster and he will have to be replaced .Or will he ?.. Firstly who the heck in World Rugby with competency wants the job ( Maybe Jake white because he understands the pitfalls ) and secondly SARU cannot afford to fire him.

2017-05-27T21:20:22+00:00

Sean

Guest


I wouldn't allow Coetzee to coach a schoolboy team. He lacks expertise,leadership skills and imagination. An All Black 3rd team would beat any team he coached by 30 points.

2017-05-27T21:15:17+00:00

Jonno

Guest


Coetzee must be the worst coach in world rugby and whomever he chooses will be adversely affected by his negative tactics and uninspiring leadership skills. He could turn Beauden Barrett into a Morne Steyn.

AUTHOR

2017-05-26T15:49:00+00:00

Harry Jones

Expert


Yes, and if Bongi is hooker in the final 20:00 with Jaco K on as a sub, we will have a seriously small scrum up against a giant French pack.

2017-05-26T15:26:46+00:00

davSA

Guest


I fully accept Bakkies that Coetzee had inadequate prep time with the Boks last season and in fact Brendan Venter himself has emphasised that . But his selections are confusing at best and lacking in direction. Is Vermeulen to play at nr 8 . If so what about the captain? Kolisi will get a run , quotas and stuff but where? He was terrific for The Stormers at 8 . If he is shifted to the side of the scrum , he together with Whiteley who himself is pretty lightweight ( 98kgs ) then I think the backrow seriously will lack impact . There just seems to be little common sense in it.

2017-05-26T03:19:58+00:00

P2R2

Roar Rookie


really....based on what...you are now speculating on another WC....I have to disagree....where would the improvement have come from for 2012-15....given the quotas...but I think the ABs would have still accounted for them quite well...me thinks

2017-05-26T03:17:15+00:00

Fionn

Guest


Can you imagine Bismarck love bombing anyone?

AUTHOR

2017-05-25T16:12:14+00:00

Harry Jones

Expert


Your poem me ouches As I sit on the couches Marsupials have pouches Argie cowboys are gauchos

2017-05-25T14:47:04+00:00

RobC

Roar Guru


Hazaaaaaaaaaaaaæáaaaaaaaaa!!!!! Koochie Koo is a tickler and feather duster. Trophy cupboards will be bare Rugby fans cannot bear His players will not care Fast Frenchies will sit them on their derriere.

2017-05-25T13:44:58+00:00

The Neutral View From Sweden

Roar Guru


It is always fun - and a little bit touching - to hear Creevy and Coles speaking about each other. Obviously most rugby players have a lot of respect for each other, but I doubt there are two players who love bombs each other in more than these two.

2017-05-25T07:33:57+00:00

Jeffrey

Guest


I agree. Even as an Ab fan, I would have BDP over Coles.

2017-05-25T05:05:36+00:00

taylorman

Roar Guru


Yes that's because a week earlier he tamed the Wallabies with Steynes boot, he thought the same gameplan would for some reason be successful again. At five penalties they subbed Morne off because they knew he wasn't going to get another 15 of them. Deluded...

2017-05-25T04:55:53+00:00

Oblonsky‘s Other Pun

Roar Guru


Perhaps he would. I think we can both agree that there is no team in the world would be upset with either :P. Agreed on Creevy, he's a clear third in my mind.

2017-05-25T04:48:49+00:00

BBA

Guest


While I don't disagree I think Hansen would still prefer Coles if fully fit over Bismarck for a NZ game plan, as the AB's are generally quite good over the ball across the park. Agree that Bismark offers Australia, England more. Actually Creevy is pretty good as well. There are a loot of good hookers out there (hope my wife doesn't read this).

2017-05-25T02:45:50+00:00

Playerfromwayback

Guest


Yep, tell it like is is BB, Coetzee is a terrible coach!!! How long does SA Rugby have to suffer while he "learns from his mistakes" and decides what style and game plan he is going to use?

2017-05-25T01:52:05+00:00

Oblonsky‘s Other Pun

Roar Guru


I believe Australia would have won a Bledisloe or two if they had had a player of Bismarck's quality (queue a bunch of irritated Kiwis :P ) It is a shame that White didn't have the Bok team of 2012-15 to work with, I think they might have won another world cup.

2017-05-25T01:16:16+00:00

Bakkies

Guest


Quiet possibly being a three test series nothing is set in stone with either squad. Will be interesting to see how Skosan goes if capped.

2017-05-25T00:54:25+00:00

Country boy

Guest


Baylion, I like your selection with Steyn in the centres and Kriel at the back. Kriel did show some semblance of his previous form in the game against the Lions.

2017-05-24T16:41:23+00:00

Hannes

Guest


And that was a backline that included exciting players like Jean dV, Jacque F and Brain Habana....

2017-05-24T16:36:36+00:00

Hannes

Guest


Shouldn't the coach be abke to change his game plan to suit the players he have. Coetzee was White's assistant. He is just applying a formula that is not good enough anymore to beat the All Blacks. A coach needs to be creative a osuh the boundaries. The only SA coach that can do that is Rassie.

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