The core group of senior Springboks stood up at Loftus Versfeld to guide the hosts to a much-needed win over the Wallabies on Saturday.
Lacking leadership prior to the weekend’s clash, captain Jean de Villiers and veterans Ruan Pienaar and Bryan Habana came to the fore and inspired the inexperienced players.
They led by example and should get much of the credit for what was a comfortable win.
Quintin van Jaarsveld, Rugby365 rates the Springbok players.
15 Zane Kirchner
Knew when to join the line and rounded off well to score the opening try. Almost scored a second and did little wrong.
7/10
14 Bryan Habana
A brilliant, lively performance by the hat-trick hero. He truly led by example and popped up absolutely everywhere. He made the right decision to spread the ball wide for Kirchner to score and broke another in a list of individual records with his three touchdowns.
9/10
13 Jaco Taute
The debutant’s hands were a bit shaky and as a result he made a couple of handling errors and wasn’t his dangerous self on attack. On defence, however, he couldn’t be faulted.
7/10
12 Jean de Villiers
He made a couple of inspired decisions as skipper that bolstered the team’s fortunes greater than his strong running and defending in midfield did. There was the decision to take the pressure off Johan Goosen with a change of goal-kicker and turning down kickable penalties that saw the Boks claim the first four-try bonus point of the Rugby Championship.
7.5/10
11 Francois Hougaard
Needed to inject himself into the game and slipped the tackle on Kurtley Beale that led to Mike Harris’ try.
6/10
10 Johan Goosen
A shaky run-on debut as far as goal-kicking was concerned but he showed character not to let the two early misses effect his overall performance. Yes his goal-kicking was disappointing, but his attacking game was promising. He played flat, made a scintillating break and got the backline firing with his accurate distribution.
7/10
9 Ruan Pienaar
The way in which he stood up as a senior player and took the pressure off the younger backs superseded his primary scrumhalves responsibilities, which he also executed well.
8/10
8 Duane Vermeulen
He’s really coming into his own on the international stage and was particularly influential at the breakdown, where he won a couple of turnovers, and on defence.
8/10
7 Willem Alberts
A juggernaut with ball in hand and on defence. His workrate and intensity on defence should not be underestimated. He’s taken on the enforcer role and smashed back many a Wallaby ball-carrier with his aggressive tackling.
8/10
6 Francois Louw
Perhaps didn’t make the most of the opportunity in Dunedin but boy did he shine at Loftus! He was equally brilliant at the breakdown and as a link between forwards and backs and had a hand in two of the Boks’ try, the latter an excellent long ball that put Habana in for his third.
9/10
5 Andries Bekker
He wanted to prove a point and he did with seven takes, 10 tackles and offloads backline players would be proud of. Mendoza was but a distant memory – Bekker is back!
8.5/10
4 Eben Etzebeth
Like a caged animal, Etzebeth channelled and unleashed his power after serving his suspension and rag-dolled Wallaby captain Nathan Sharpe when the two behemoths collided. It wasn’t all brute force from the youngster as he also managed a couple of steals against the throw.
8/10
3 Jannie du Plessis
Showed some good ball skills for a big man as his offload from the deck contributed to one of Habana’s tries.
7/10
2 Adriaan Strauss
An unsung hero, he was prominent with ball in hand, hard-as-nails and sublime at the set-piece. A truly accomplished performance by a class act.
8/10
1 Tendai Mtawarira
Fronted up at scrum time but his real value was on defence, where he made eight tackles.
7/10
Replacements:
16 Tiaan Liebenberg (on for Strauss, 75th minute)
Not enough time to be rated.
17 Pat Cilliers (on for Du Plessis, 70th minute)
Not enough time to be rated.
18 Flip van der Merwe (on for Etzebeth, 58th minute)
A solid cameo, especially on defence.
7/10
19 Marcell Coetzee (on for Alberts, 58th minute)
Acted quickly to pounce on a loose ball and save a possible try in his first act from the bench and injected power and pace into the game.
7/10
20 Elton Jantjies (on for Goosen, 75th minute)
Not enough time to be rated.
21 Juan de Jongh (on for Taute, 75th minute)
Not enough time to be rated.
22 Pat Lambie (on for Kirchner,54th minute)
Relished some game time but had little attacking opportunities. He was composed at the back and got good distance with his defensive clearing kicks.
7/10









September 29th, 2012 at 8:42 pm
I just want to say this, decision making by talented players and positive play has shown us tonight what the boks can do.
Granted Goosen missed his kicks and showed nerves, but he also showed he has the mettle. Taute was immense on defence and running strong.
Was it not great to see players running onto the ball at pace and looking for the offload.
And like Meyer said, the gameplan didn’t change.
I guess my bugbear about players seeing opportunities and making the right decisions was not quite off the mark.
September 29th, 2012 at 9:35 pm
Suddenly suffered in the rucks when Etzebeth and Alberts went off – not sure if that was only reason? Replacement scrumhalve for Oz made massive difference in last 20 minutes – when they were supposed to be tired at highveld.
September 29th, 2012 at 10:17 pm
Good score
September 30th, 2012 at 2:00 am
Finally Strauss plays the game I always knew he could…
September 30th, 2012 at 12:03 pm
Boks still are not pick-and-driving at pace nor are they hitting rucks properly on their own ball and counter-rucking on opposition ball…
This game against the Wallaby B side was farcical by the end too… so it’s hard to take that much out of it… but a win is a win… here’s hoping this really was a turning point…
September 30th, 2012 at 12:26 pm
I agree BiOz,
We run the risk
To cry new dawn
Before nightfall .
Let’s appreciate a win
Happily
Simply for what it was.
And build on it
October 1st, 2012 at 9:46 am
Well done Boks!
http://sarugbyview.blogspot.com/
Awesome performance by the Boks at Loftus yesterday.
It was a weak Aussie side and they were hit by injuries, but you play the team in front of you.
I thought the Bok loose trio were outstanding, with Francois Louw being brilliant.
I thought Bekker had his best game in a Bok jersey. I have always believed he shirked the hard stuff and hid on the wing. It was fantastic to see him tackling and hitting rucks. It he played like this every time, he’d be the complete number 5.
Habana is playing some of his best rugby again. His work rate was outstanding and he was justly rewarded.
Goosen made a good debut. It was stirring to see his emotion during the anthems and wonderful to see him taking front-foot ball and attacking the gain line. It would be churlish too criticise too much, but I would like to see him straighten his running lines a bit more and commit the opposition defenders.
Ruan Pienaar looked every bit the European player he was during the Heineken Cup. Thank goodness he cleared quickly and gave up his annoying habit of toeing the ball at ruck time.
Taute was good – a solid if unspectacular debut.
Kudos to Jean de Villiers. I thought he read the game brilliantly yesterday. His decisions were made fully aware of opposition players down injured and who was lined up in defence ahead of him.
Finally, if that was the same game plan, then clearly they didn’t execute the plan in the earlier games of the rugby championship this season…