Powell plans to outwit England

Springbok Sevens coach Neil Powell will study the footage of the Blitzboks defeat to England. Photo: File

Springbok Sevens coach Neil Powell will study the footage of the Blitzboks defeat to England. Photo: File

Published Mar 14, 2017

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JOHANNESBURG - Expect Neil Powell to spend a good few hours studying video footage of the England Sevens team in the coming days.

This after the Blitzboks fell to the English in the Cup final of the Vancouver Sevens tournament. England are the only team Powell’s men have lost to in the current series.

On Sunday, the Blitzboks were downed 19-7 by England to lose just their third game in the World Sevens Series; after previously losing to England in the final in Cape Town (17-19) and 15-21 in a pool game in Sydney a few weeks ago.

Powell’s men also drew to England in pool play this last weekend, in Vancouver.

Besides those defeats and the draw, the BlitzBoks have swept aside every other opponent, including New Zealand and Fiji.

Powell though will be keen to find a weakness in the England team, especially with four tournaments still to be played.

“It does seem that we have a problem against England,” admitted Powell. “We will have to go and look how and where to do things better when we face them."

The Blitzboks though, despite coming up short at the weekend, still enjoy a healthy lead atop the standings after the sixth tournament of 10. Wins in Dubai, Wellington, Sydney and Las Vegas and runners-up finishes in Cape Town and Vancouver have left them 23 points clear of second-placed England and 26 points in front of Fiji.

And making this phenomenal run more remarkable is the fact Powell has had to chop and change his squad almost each tournament. Injuries and Super Rugby commitments have robbed him of some of the team’s biggest stars, among them Seabelo Senatla, Kwagga Smith, Kyle Brown, Justin Geduld, Stephan Dippenaar, and now also Rosco Speckman.

While disappointed with his team’s showing in the knock-out rounds in Vancouver, Powell was happy with his team’s overall showing over the past fortnight.

“We have a short turn-around and in two and a half weeks we will be on our way to Hong Kong again. We still need to do medicals, but it seems that we will lose a number of players and might need to travel to Hong Kong with a much younger squad. We have some hard work ahead of us,” he said, including finding a way to get the better of England.

The Hong Kong tournament starts on April 7.

The Star

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