Bok eyes on the big picture

Handre Pollard of of South Africa runs at Steffon Armitage of World XV during the Rugby Match between South Africa v World XV at Newlands Stadium, Cape Town, 11 July 2015 ©Chris Ricco/BackpagePix

Handre Pollard of of South Africa runs at Steffon Armitage of World XV during the Rugby Match between South Africa v World XV at Newlands Stadium, Cape Town, 11 July 2015 ©Chris Ricco/BackpagePix

Published Jul 17, 2015

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Brisbane – Now that the charade that was the warm-up match against the makeshift World XV is behind us, the Boks’ preparations for the Rugby World Cup begin in earnest tomorrow when they tackle an ominously dangerous Wallabies team.

It is a match the Boks will probably lose but for coach Heyneke Meyer so much of the game is about the bigger picture of the World Cup and the performances of key individuals, such as flyhalf Handré Pollard and the testing of newcomers in the white-hot heat of Test rugby at its toughest.

The Boks have won just four times in Australia since the professional rugby era dawned in 1996, three of those wins being in Perth.

They won in Brisbane two years ago to buck a trend of losing in Queensland that goes back to the 70s, but they will be hard pressed to replicate that famous win against a fired-up local team that closely resembles the side coach Michael Cheika will pick for the World Cup while his opposite number, Meyer, has a host of first-choice players doing rehab in South Africa.

Before the Super Rugby kicked off this year, Meyer would have had this team in mind for a World Cup final: Willie le Roux, JP Pietersen, Jaque Fourie, Jean de Villiers, Bryan Habana, Pollard, Fourie du Preez; Duane Vermeulen, Willem Alberts, Francois Louw, Victor Matfield, Eben Etzebeth, Jannie du Plessis, Bismarck du Plessis and Tendai Mtawariria.

Half of that lot are still making their way to full fitness after injury while others such as Pieter-Steph du Toit and Francois Steyn are likewise in a race against time for the big September kick-off in England.

There are others, such as props Du Plessis and The Beast that are feeling the heat from in-form players in Frans Malherbe and Heinke van der Merwe, who will get their chance off the bench tomorrow.

Meyer desperately needs his back-up players to perform tomorrow as well as some front-line stars that are not showing the form the coach would have hoped.

Notably, Meyer needs Pollard to step up his game. The young Bull was off key at Newlands last week, missing four kicks at goal and kicking inaccurately out of hand. Tomorrow he faces a major test of character, and Meyer will also get a better idea of the capabilities at the highest level of centres Damian de Allende and Jessie Kriel.

The experiment of moving veteran Schalk Burger to No8 will also be closely scrutinised as Meyer examines his diminishing options in the position given that Vermuelen will take contact for the first time in the Group games at the World Cup and Alberts is notoriously injury prone.

But it is hardly doom and gloom. Some of the newcomers might have the games of their lives and Meyer will sleep a lot better on the flight home on Sunday night in the knowledge that his options for the Word Cup have increased.

There is a bigger picture at stake in the Rugby Championship this year.

This is a match in which veterans such as Burger, Louw, Matfield and Bismarck have to lead the way up front and stem the flow of fast ball to the lethal Wallabies backs. Bismarck, the quintessential face of a belligerent Springbok forward, has a major role to play and needs to be at his competitive best in what will be a fierce battle with opposite number Stephen Moore, the captain of the home side.

Cheika will also have his microscope out. He has recalled halfback pairing Will Genia and Quade Cooper, to see if they can rejuvenate their once irresistible combination. They have not played together at Test level for 20 months. In giving the pair a chance on their home ground, Cheika is resting “first choice” duo Nick Phipps and Bernard Foley. Likewise, all eyes will be on 32-year-old Matt Giteau, who won 92 caps for his country before moving to France four years ago, and has now been recalled with a view to the World Cup. - The Star

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