The Springboks attack surgically dissected

By Pundit / Roar Guru

With 15 highly potent players on the pitch, the Boks have a style of play that effectively sets players into the gaps in the defensive line.

With a prolific halfback pair, the Springboks already have a set to anchor upon. Though most praise has been heaped upon the inner half Faf de Klerk, both players are equally integral as cogs in the Springboks attack.

Unlike the All Blacks, their attack isn’t as loose, colourful and wild, but their attack is tightly knitted together and the opposite of eccentricity. They centralise around a powerhouse forward pack, which drives the team. Modus operandi: tightly weaved three-man pods. The front row is one good example. Off forward set plays, Damian de Allende is the set-piece attack with hard carries, setting up the first-phase platform for the other talented handling backs to play off.

This is epitomised in the 16-16 draw with the All Blacks in the 2019 World Cup. The Springboks backs don’t try to jink past the defenders at the first chance they get. Willie Le Roux and Handre Pollard are the two key playmakers of the team.

In their try at the 11th hour, we see a solid carry from De Allende as the first-phase carry of the lineout. The whole plan is to play some phases off Le Roux and Pollard, move it to one end of the pitch, and back again. As they have got it to the left side of the field, one phase comes off the scrumhalf, and Pollard sets up a prop in another phase.

Le Roux lazily jogs behind the attack, being deliberately late in the attacking line. In the final phase, they use the massive Pieter-Steph Du Toit to draw in Ardie Savea as a dummy runner. Initially it seems that the All Blacks have it covered. Savea marks Pollard, George Bridge marks Cheslin Kolbe, Richie Mo’unga as one of the two defensive fullbacks is to stay behind and watch for any form of break.

Even with Savea out of line, it seems alright. Bridge still can hit Pollard. Mo’unga, who dwells behind, marks Cheslin Kolbe. Pollard took the ball fast, hitting the line with superb pace, putting the no-look pass to Le Roux, who does a similar action: a no-look to Kolbe.

Here, Du Toit is a dummy runner to draw in Ardie Savea. Le Roux flies in at top speed, forcing Mo’unga to bite in and hit Le Roux, who fixes his man and sends it wide. Kolbe takes the ball fast and is released with the space he needs to unleash his pace and agility. He fixes Beauden Barrett and puts in the chip kick, which resulted in Herschel Jantjies regathering and scoring the try for the Boks to equalise. Both men are hitting the lines at top speed and their passing just shows how the ball quickly goes through their sublime ball handling to the open winger. Playing flat, this is ideal to the Boks.

It is time to note another key man in the attack, Faf de Klerk. Not just is he the best defensive nine on the planet, his passing is lethally acute, similar to Handre Pollard and Willie Le Roux. His speed off any attacking platform is lethal towards any opposition.

In the World Cup, it is evident in his try in the quarter-finals. Malcom Marx carried hard off the lineout, one-handed offloading to the nine, who brushed aside the covering Kenki Fukuoka to score close to the uprights. His box-kicking is lethal and his work makes the ten’s job a lot easier.

Let us cap on the runners – players who drive the defenders mad with carrying impact, Cheslin Kolbe and Pieter-Steph Du Toit. Du Toit is a massive tackler. In the Rugby Championship and some parts of the World Cup, we see how he is such a colossal carrying impact. The flanker was a standout in their first loss to the All Blacks, scoring the only try of the night for the Springboks.

Off a ruck, he is the first supporting player. While in normal occasions, Du Toit just secures the ruck, he spots no defenders in his way. Thus, he picks up the ball and runs straight through the space to score directly under the posts. In the Rugby Championship another example is even more evident.

After a phase right, the Australian defence was thinned and not spread onto the other side. No defenders were marking Du Toit. Du Toit calls for ball, busting a tackle and bursting through. An excellent kick from the flanker, which was regathered by Jantjies, just epitomised the skill of such a player. From the ruck Jantjies’ recollection resulted in a strong carry from Lodewyk de Jager to get the Boks right over the line.

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For Kolbe, there are many incidents in which he has shown off his unreal sidestep and prolific pace. He is a phenomenal line-breaker who merely requires a single yard of space to turn any situation into a try-scoring opportunity. In the World Cup, the presence of Du Toit in attack attracted the All Blacks to bite in to hit him to allow De Klerk to send the ball to Kolbe on the outside, and give that man the space for a break. His grubber kick downfield found Barrett, who was smashed into touch again by Du Toit.

Kolbe’s speed means any cross kick to him from the sublime tactical boots of Le Roux and Pollard or De Klerk is an exhilarating try chance.

Ironically, Kolbe’s try in the World Cup final was created by Du Toit, who sent the ball out with a decent pass to find Kolbe in space. With that yard of space, Kolbe stepped English defenders to get a try for his team, being the second South African to score in a World Cup final.

The work of the playmakers is not directly linked to the try yet this is the effect of two highly skilled runners. With the five weaved into play, the Boks attack is one of the deadliest in the world.

The Crowd Says:

AUTHOR

2020-09-18T14:24:34+00:00

Pundit

Roar Guru


Sorry on that one. RC

2020-04-13T01:42:26+00:00

The masked soup-bone

Roar Rookie


The bedrock of the Bok's '19 WC victory was based on finely tuned dominant pack (with a 2nd set introduced off the splinters with the same quality) and rock solid defence; the known; traditional strengths of SA rugby. What surprised many and set them apart was a new arrow added to the Bok's arsenal. Kudo's to Mzwandile Stick; the skills coach with his sevens background that showcased his added impact on the "old school; traditional" Bok strengths with the addition of the sublime situational awareness and attacking skills of Am and Mapimpi to score the Boks first ever WC final try on their 3rd attempt. The late addition of the extremely gifted Kolbe; who had to leave our shores to gain recognition; hit the final nail into the coffin of England's shattered WC dreams. Bad news for the opposition is the conveyor belt of previously underutilized talent is bursting at the seams with players like Notshe; Fassi; Simelane; Tambwe etc. beating down the door to join in the newfound spirit of inclusive freedom of expression; players that 3 decades ago couldn't represent their country. Eddie Jones rightly says that SA is the sleeping giant of world rugby. All this made possible by a visionary coach that embraced the possible to achieve the almost impossible. Consolidate the Bok's traditional strengths and embrace the potential that new; inclusive fresh thinking brings. A renaissance in SA rugby...? You bet.

2020-04-07T03:49:29+00:00

frisky

Roar Rookie


A 16-16 draw in the 2019 World Cup??? In my universe it was a 23-16 to NZ. Maybe the 2019 Trinations?

2020-04-06T09:20:43+00:00

Shaun

Guest


Slightly perplexed by this view and its not the first time I've heard it either. People make it sound like the Boks have somehow found a loophole of sorts that other teams are unable to exploit. What is stopping our opponents from having 8 forwards on the bench? The boks of 2019 were of the fittest if not the fittest squad around. People forget the quality of the players on the bench...any one of the players on the bench were/are good enough to start the final. Bongi and Lood went off early and yet there subs played the majority of the game and still dominated.

2020-04-05T09:14:28+00:00


Well World rugby has to make a decision either way. The eighth forward was added to ensure a complete substitution front row to avoid uncontested scrums. That takes care of three subs already. Whatever they decide SA will adapt, the perception is they have slow immobile forwards, that perception will change when the opposition realise changing the number of subs won’t change the outcome in any significant way.

2020-04-05T03:50:44+00:00

Sinclair Whitbourne

Roar Rookie


Enjoyed this - thanks for taking the time to put it together. Faf is incredibly important to the Boks and is a magical player. In the last 2 years it has been a pleasure to watch SA honour its rugby culture and strengths (hard forward power) with an ability to utilise the athletic qualities of a host of excellent backs. They were worthy 2019 RWC winners, in no small part because they could play a variety of styles - they could grind it out when needed and turn on the afterburners when it was opportune. I have loved watching them. They didn't always get it right. In the loss to NZ in the RWC I thought they got sucked in to playing a bit loose in the first half, when a policy of playing tighter and taking points in 3's might have been more effective. However, NZ deserve credit for hanging on, at times by skin of teeth and then making the most of their (comparatively limited) forward resources and outstanding backs to counter punch like Ali in the Rumble in the Jungle.

2020-04-05T03:21:06+00:00

Kidjustakid1

Guest


The boks brand of super direct power rugby with huge men getting over the advantage line (De allange is as big as SBW) and rapid finishes out wide, has been helped by the current substitution laws. The ability to change almost your entire pack at half time suits big men. But I love the beautiful game and desperately hope the substitution laws will be paired back to force forwards to play deep into the game. That will result in big men being exposed by the more nimble players. Will world rugby see the light and reduce the number of subs that can be used? Or is Rugby destined to be dominated by massive men for the foreseeable future?

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