World Rugby has handed the Springboks a big favour

By Spiro Zavos / Expert

Let me be blunt: it will be a disaster for rugby as an inventive, clever and attractive game to play and watch if the Springboks win the World Cup final playing the thuggish, boring, one-dimensional rugby they employed to defeat Wales in the semi-finals.

The semi-final, with Wales also playing one-dimensional, brain-dead rugby, was the most boring World Cup match since the 2007 final between the Springboks and England.

On last Sunday night there were 81 kicks inflicted on a massive audience at the ground and around the world by two teams that were determined not to lose.

The previous night the rugby world was treated to a match that was totally engrossing, as a spectacle and an intellectual pleasure, as the All Blacks struggled to get out of a masterful straitjacket imposed on them by a brilliant England side who switched effortlessly between effective attack and shuddering defence.

This match was refereed brilliantly by the Welshman, Nigel Owens.

Owens established a rapport with the players on both sides that encouraged them to use all 15 players on the field, which is the essence of the spirit of the rugby game.

The Springboks-Wales match, on the other hand, was refereed erratically and nervously by Jerome Garces.

The players responded to this refereeing performance by Garces by doubling down on their negative game plans in a way that suggested they did not trust Garces to allow them to play open and free-wheeling rugby.

This is what usually happens when Garces referees a big match.

So it is bizarre that World Rugby has announced that Garces, rather than Owens, will referee the final of the 2019 Rugby World Cup tournament.

(Photo by Francois Nel – World Rugby/World Rugby via Getty Images)

This is the showcase match of the tournament with its massive world-wide audience tuning in.

The statement issued by World Rugby announcing the Garces appointment stated this: “The appointments were made after comprehensive review of the weekend’s semi-finals by the World Rugby Match Officials Selection Committee comprising Chairman Anthony Buchanan (council member), Joel Jutge (EPCR), Lyndon Bray (SANZAAR), Nick Mallett (international coach) and Alain Rolland (World Rugby).”

How this group of rugby experts could rate Garces’ refereeing performance as better than Owens’ is a mystery.

The argument against the appointment of Garces is entirely about his refereeing style. It is a nit-picky, nervous, sometimes eccentric style that does not encourage teams to play adventurous and attractive rugby. The games that Garces referees are rarely entertaining affairs.

This style suits the unadventurous and negative game plan adopted by the Springboks so far in the finals.

Exhibit A is the truly awful semi-final between the Springboks and Wales that Garces refereed. Garces is the referee as a policemen. He is forever on the lookout for an infringements. As a consequence of this method, too many of his matches end up as boring penalty shoot-outs. The Springboks-Wales semi-final proves that.

Owens is the referee as a manager. He referees to prevent infringements from being perpetrated. The Owens style goes back to the exuberant and open method of the first referee to control a World Cup final, the Australian Kerry Fitzgerald of blessed memory.

Fitzgerald, like Owens, had a refereeing technique that saw his role as enabling the players to play as well and as expansively as they could. The first final under Fitzgerald – between New Zealand and France in RWC 1987 – was an entertaining and dynamic match, one of the best finals in terms of a spectacle in World Cup history.

Ensuring that the final is an exciting spectacle is important because millions and millions of people who are not rugby enthusiasts tune in.

Unfortunately, Fitzgerald passed away as a relatively young man. The officials who followed him as World Cup finals referees – Derek Bevan (1991), Ed Morrison (1995), Andre Watson (1999, 2003), Alain Rolland (2007), and Craig Joubert (2011) to a lesser degree – tended to referee as policemen and not as managers.

So why wasn’t Owens appointed to the control the final after his superb performance in the England-New Zealand semi-final?

None of this takes away from the massive turnaround that Rassie Erasmus has achieved with the Springboks.

(Photo by David Rogers/Getty Images)

Two years ago, the Springboks had no chance of getting through to the World Cup final. They had lost to Italy! Had been thrashed 57-0 by the All Blacks, the worst defeat ever in the history of the Springboks. And then were smashed by Ireland in another record defeat. Under coach Allister Coetzee, the Springboks won only 11 of 25 Tests.

It is important to note that Rassie Erasmus – who combined the director of rugby job with Boks head coach role – came into this World Cup losing only one Test this year and winning the Rugby Championship.

Rugby Australia was going through the same crisis as the South Africa about a losing coach. Rugby Australia decided to stick with Michael Cheika, a decision that has proved to be a disaster.

All credit to Erasmus for turning around the fortunes of the Springboks.

During the pool round matches – during which the Springboks lost a close, tense match to the All Blacks – the South Africans scored more points (185) and more tries (27) than any other team. They virtually closed up shop, though, in the quarter-final against Japan and the semi-final against Wales.

There has been a tendency to write off the Springboks after these lacklustre but brutal performances in the finals. People who do this, however, do not understand the Springboks’ history in the World Cup.

The Springboks, even more than the All Blacks, have been the outstanding side in World Cup tournaments. The All Blacks won three of their nine tournaments from RWC 1987 through to RWC 2019.

The Springboks played their first World Cup tournament in 1995. They won two of their first six tournaments, and in their seventh this year, they are in the final with a chance to equal the All Blacks’ haul of silverware.

This suggests that their traditional game plan – the kick-and-smash style – is very effective in World Cup finals.

It should not be forgotten, as well, that the Springboks came within two points of defeating the All Blacks in their 2015 semi-final.

The last time the Springboks played England was last year at Twickenham. England won 12-11 after being smashed in the first half. This loss by the Springboks exposed the dangers of their kick-and-smash style. They can be totally dominate but not accumulate points through tries, unless the opposition collapses.

Generally, the Springboks rely on successful penalties to win matches.

A side with a more varied suite of styles – like England in this World Cup – could take the game away from the Springboks if they do not concede penalties and score, say, two tries themselves.

According to John Mitchell, England’s defence coach, the Springboks’ power game does not worry them as much as it might other teams.

“What we are going to witness are the two most powerful rugby teams in the world,” he said. “They are strong, well-coached, the gain line is going to be huge… Going back to our DNA, we feel it is really important for us.”

On the evidence of the two semi-finals, I am going to write something I never thought would be recorded on my laptop.

I want England to win the 2019 World Cup final playing the smart, efficient, hard-shouldered rugby they used to boot the All Blacks out of the tournament.

The Crowd Says:

2019-11-02T18:28:11+00:00

Andrew

Guest


At the top of the article it reads “Spiro Zavos - Expert” , as always, with so many Editorials written by Spiro for decades. Naturally, I was looking forward to reading an intelligently written, well balanced, informative and objective article. Instead I found this rubbish. You’ve done some good work in the past sir, it’s time now to put your pen away, close your folder, and make way for better writers.

2019-11-02T15:03:23+00:00

Jeremy

Guest


"I want England to win the 2019 World Cup final playing the smart, efficient, hard-shouldered rugby they used to boot the All Blacks out of the tournament." ... eating those comments now Spiro because South Africa won with dominant forward play, smart, efficient and hard-shouldered rugby that they used to win the Rugby Championship to beat the All Blacks in 2019 !

2019-11-02T07:20:52+00:00

Gill Hayes

Guest


I've just read an article by Nigel Jones which says he was injured in the last match and wouldn't be able to ref the final anyway!!

2019-11-02T00:25:19+00:00

Malotru

Roar Rookie


No-one on the planet wants Garces Rusty, only the referee selection panel. My word World Rugby has problems.

2019-11-02T00:23:06+00:00

Malotru

Roar Rookie


Offside and PeterK, well done that's got rid of Brookvalesouth.

2019-11-02T00:20:43+00:00

Malotru

Roar Rookie


Very few clean breakdown steals either. Quite often nowadays the first man in will have hands on the ground past the ball, but still gets the penalty.

2019-11-01T06:26:21+00:00

Justin

Guest


This was long ago proven to be absolute hogwash. Time to move along.

2019-11-01T05:06:17+00:00

Uriah Heep

Roar Rookie


She's a diamond that lady. IMO the top end difference the Bok had going into 2007. I'm sure Eddie saw that - well done that man. Eddie really has served up a master class of rugby management from top to bottom.

2019-11-01T04:15:07+00:00

Cadfael

Roar Guru


I thought Owens was injured.

2019-11-01T02:46:27+00:00

Perthstayer

Roar Rookie


If Faf puts up the same quality then England will lap[ it up. Watch for their backs linking with their remarkably nimble front 5, looking to get in behind SA. As for what is quality play? It's in the eye of the beholder. I can't understand how people drink Riesling!!

2019-11-01T01:09:22+00:00

Carlos the Argie

Roar Guru


He’ll bite you!

2019-11-01T00:15:46+00:00

Double Agent

Guest


Everyone in the world loves a huge tackle, a great scrum, a well placed kick. What I don't enjoy is watching Faf and Davies put up box kicks one after the other the entire match. Most of which were not even good box kicks.

2019-11-01T00:12:16+00:00

Double Agent

Guest


So if FAF had put up 60 box kicks and lost by three points would that have been boring? Is it because SA won that made it interesting?

2019-10-31T23:56:58+00:00

Lindsay Amner

Roar Guru


Yeah likewise. Mr Garces is the only one of the top flight I don’t think is up to it. I reckon they’ve been keeping him on just to give him a big farewell as he’s the longest serving ref in the panel.

2019-10-31T22:59:05+00:00

sheek

Roar Guru


Lindsay, Obviously Garces has upset you horribly. I don't find him any worse or better than most other international refs. Then again, not enough to say he's awful. I try not to pay too much attention to the refs. They have to be pretty bad for me to notice how awful they are.

2019-10-31T22:38:56+00:00

Lindsay Amner

Roar Guru


He’s so slow. He just can’t keep up. I recall a game a few years ago when the all blacks began a move from just outside their 22. By the time they scored Mr Garces was just crossing the halfway, running like an obese arthritic old man. This, added to his pedanticness and a hopeless ‘feel’ for the game demonstrates to me that he should have retired about four years ago. The 2nd Lions test of 2017 is one of the worst reffing performances of modern times, a horrible mishmash of major things missed, eg Sean OBrien knocking out Naholo with a swinging arm, constant random penalties against both sides, ending with a penalty to give the Lions the win, for Faumauina tackling someone in the air after he’d reached up to catch a high pass and had both feet a few inches off the ground. This penalty could have been given for virtually every tackle in the game as when running you tend to have both feet off the ground much of the time. Most people think the SBW red card ruined the game but I reckon it was all the other penalties which seemed to be guesses by Mr Garces out of position and out of breath. Time to retire, I won’t miss him.

2019-10-31T22:25:00+00:00

Faith

Roar Rookie


I watched the semi-finals again just to remind myself of the strengths of these two teams and the forward battle is going to be something. England's tight 5 can play. Sinckler, Mako, Itoje, Lawes and Billy can all pass like the best of them and can also do brutal. Boks will go out to really hurt so that they cannot get Ford and Farrell up ti their trickery. Boks know how to play Finals footy and they'll manage this game better that Oz and ABs who tried to run it from everywhere. One mistake will determine the winner and its going to be brutal. Hope there are no cards.

2019-10-31T22:23:31+00:00

Il Primo

Roar Rookie


All these comments about the Boks being underdogs... I remember the game after the 0-57 loss to the All Blacks in 2017...I think it was a tie. There was no gameplan for those Boks, but the showing of pure aggresiveness, physicality in the contact made the game worth seeing. If you think the ABs were smashed at contact at the semi then search for that match. Also as a rugby spectator I enjoy the so called "negative" rugby from the SBs, that defence is poetry, the way they squeeze teams to death... man, that is also rugby, the tricks at the formations, the breakdown, the maul. Rugby is not about the pretty boys runnin the show. From Uruguay... GO BOKKE!!!

2019-10-31T21:34:52+00:00

Dieskrywersepoes

Guest


:thumbup: look at South Africa's poor history with Garces. Some pretty average (bias) writers here at Roar. https://www.sport24.co.za/Rugby/RugbyWorldCup2019/the-springboks-shocking-record-under-referee-garces-20190918

2019-10-31T21:32:33+00:00

stillmissit

Roar Guru


Good comment Pete. I would like to have seen Angus Gardiner more prominent in this RWC. Joubert is still the best ref I have seen since the last RWC. There is a young NZ ref who did some good games in Super rugby but can't remember his name.

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