South Africa host world champions New Zealand at Ellis Park today in the latest episode of a rivalry between the top two ranked rugby nations that invariably delivers drama.
Last year at the same Johannesburg stadium, a monster last-minute penalty goal by replacement flyhalf Patrick Lambie earned the Springboks a rare recent victory.
It was only the second loss suffered by the No. 1-ranked All Blacks since they won the 2011 World Cup in Auckland, and ended a run of five consecutive victories over their greatest rivals.
Photo: Reuters
Despite home advantage and the backing of most in an expected sell-out 62,000 crowd, the Springboks start as underdogs in the Rugby Championship second-round showdown.
South Africa surrendered a 13-point lead when losing at the death in Australia on Saturday last week a day after New Zealand cruised to a five-try 39-18 victory over Argentina in Christchurch.
With the southern hemisphere tournament trimmed from six rounds to three because the World Cup kicks off on Sept. 18 in England, the All Blacks could clinch a fourth consecutive title this weekend.
A bonus-point New Zealand victory and a home win for Argentina over Australia in which no bonus points are secured would give the title-holders an unassailable six-point advantage with one round left.
However, when the Test begins as dusk envelopes African financial hub Johannesburg, rival coaches Heyneke Meyer and Steve Hansen will have one eye on the Championship and one on the World Cup.
All Blacks handler Hansen has rung the changes when announcing three starting line-ups, with the visit to Johannesburg preceded by a 25-16 Test win in Samoa and the pounding of the Pumas. The coach who succeeded Graham Henry after the 2011 World Cup triumph has chosen three right wingers, three center partnerships, three scrum-halves and three lock pairings.
So deep is the reservoir of All Blacks talent, first-choice fly-half Dan Carter and center-cum-offload magician Sonny Bill Williams have been “rested” for the Ellis Park game.
“We have got to develop combinations and versatility, because if a player is injured during the World Cup he is out for the rest of the tournament,” Hansen said. “Facing South Africa will be a pressure situation and there is no better place than Johannesburg to get answers about players.”
He will demand a plan to stop South Africa copying Argentina, who scored two tries in quick succession off driving mauls from line-outs. Driving-maul tries are a Springbok speciality, with flanker Heinrich Brussow, recalled after four years in the Test wilderness, a regular scorer.
Hansen has no love of the tactic, labeling the eight-man drives “bloody boring” and “illegal obstruction” and wants the law changed to permit collapsing them.
Meyer has plenty on his mind, including the timing of substitutions, tactical kicking and a promising, but raw center partnership of Jesse Kriel and Damian de Allende.
The coach came under heavy fire for replacing impressive hooker Bismarck du Plessis and props Tendai “The Beast” Mtawarira and Jannie du Plessis midway through the second half in Australia.
“Did the coach not have a feel for the game?” former All Blacks scrum-half turned TV analyst Justin Marshall asked. “Is he premeditating that certain guys can play only 60 minutes?”
South African columnist Mark Keohane was equally critical: “Meyer got it wrong and cost the ’Boks victory ... he showed a disregard for the flow of the game.”
An area where the Springboks have traditionally been second best to the All Blacks is field kicking with many kicks in Australia uncontestable and an invitation for the Wallabies full-back Israel Folau to counterattack.
Converted fullback Kriel has one cap and De Allende four while rival centers Conrad Smith and Ma’a Nonu boast 180 Test appearances between them.
However, Meyer has faith in his “’Bok babes,” saying: “I would not have selected them if I did not believe they can do the job.”
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