I'm not sure what to make of the boks.
I was a big fan of Heyneke Meyer, but I'm not so sure now. There is all the talent there, but the coaching and selections are terrible.
Matfield was a passenger for the most part...steadies the lineout a bit, but the boks lose so much in the tight and around the park it's scary. In contact he is knocked around.
Lood de Jager has played far better than him this year, and you can only hope Meyer selects the two youngsters (Lood and Eben) and lets the combination grow and flower.
I thought Marcel van der Merwe at tighthead went well, although it is easy to find sympathy for Vincent Koch after last weeks Romain Poite's scrum debacle, where Poite looked to be trying to end Kochs career. I'm not convinced by Malherbe. He is a steady scrummager, but is completely anonymous outside the scrum. Jannie Doep seemed to have picked up his game in the last two games after an indifferent patch in his career, so probably remains the number 1 tighthead.
In some quarters there was moaning at selecting Pieter Steph du Toit as flank cover, but people forget that is where he was playing when the Junior boks won their world ***le. I've always had the suspicion that he would be better used at flank. Either way, Alberts at least got some gametime, and it shows that the boks were missing our tradional style ball carrier.
Schalk Burger at 8 remains a quandry for me. He plays well in that he is everywhere, and puts hard yards in, but he is definitely not the same player he was in the collisions.
In the backline, Ruan Pienaar is terrible. His denied try was a case in point. Even as a kid I was trained to shift the ball into the touchline side hand when running along the touchline to the tryline. This is such a basic thing it is worrying. If he had done this schoolboy level task, he would have scored that try...the ball would not have been dislodged as it was. It is a classic example of exactly why kids are taught that. Pienaar, after a good fast service against the Wallabies, has reverted back into his "two steps then pass" mode again. This puts pressure on the whole backline. As mentioned by the commentators, he never snipes himself anymore, and so is predictable. Lastly, he shies away from contact, even when he is the only player there. That is a bad trait on a rugby pitch.
The problem is, no one has put their hand up. Well, Faf de Klerk from the Lions has, but Meyer refuses to select a scrumhalf that has the scrumhalf skills. Instead, he selects great athletes (but poor scrumhalves) like Cobus Reinach, all the while praying that Fourie du Preez, who has played no rugby this year, shows form when he finally makes it back from injury.
Lamby played well, but those overcooked kicks remain a concern. He has done this before at test level, and against better sides in a close match in a RWC knockout, those are crucial. I still think Pollard has the better running game by far, but anyway, at least there are two flyhalves competing.
De Allende and Kriel should not have been split up last week. That was ludicrous. Jean De Villiers should have come off the bench if they wanted to guage how he was. There are other very talented young centres in South Africa who have been ignored whilst Meyer wasted a precious year playing an over-the-hill Jean de Villiers and a right wing in JP Pietersen as his centre combination. Players like Jan Serfontein, Harold Vorster, Andre Esterhuisen, Lionel Mapoe, and S'bura Sithole could have been given time, whilst De Allende and Kriel could have been allowed to blossom. This was my first inkling of concern with Meyer, the was he mishandled the centre partnership, especially last year playing a variety of pl;ayers out of position at 13 and playing Jean de Villiers in every single game until he broke, with no other player been given a look in.
I thought Mvovo did well on the wing. There is no substitute for pace, so I'd like to see him get more gametime.
Willie le Roux is mercurial on attack, but I remain concerned about his defence. There is nobody else out there, because Meyer hasn't really picked anybody else, except for Kirchner.
Kirchner is awful. He is safe, but offers absolutely nothing on offence. If you want to beat the boks and Kirchner is playing, simply kick to him all day and you will win. The rare time he does run it up, he immediately looks around for an opposition player that he can sidestep into, so ending his run as soon as possible. He is the very antithesis of a basic rugby rule...run into space.
For what it is worth, my starting lineup would be:
15. Le Roux
14. Mvovo
13. Kriel
12. De Allende
11. Habana
10. Pollard
9. (who knows what form Fourie du Preez is in)
8. Vermeulen
7. Alberts
6. Louw
5. De Jager
4. Etzebeth
3. Du Plessis
2. Du Plessis
1. Mtawarira
More than enough talent to win the RWC, but with an archaic gameplan, and a coach who has frittered away his time and isn't even sure who his starting lineup will be, don't hold your breath. It's very disappointing.