Rassie Erasmus Springboks plan
Rassie shares his plans for the Springboks. Image: Geoff Caddick / AFP

Home » England will be no pushovers – Rassie Erasmus

England will be no pushovers – Rassie Erasmus

SA Rugby’s director of rugby Rassie Erasmus says they have not been taken in by the outside noise about England being a bad team.

16-10-23 21:01
Rassie Erasmus Springboks plan
Rassie shares his plans for the Springboks. Image: Geoff Caddick / AFP

SA Rugby’s director of rugby Rassie Erasmus says they have not been taken in by the outside noise about England being a bad team and the statistics suggest Saturday’s Rugby World Cup semi-final will be tight.

VIDEOS | Relive the best of the Boks against France

The 50-year-old, who coached the Springboks to 2019 World Cup glory with a 32-12 thumping of England, added that unlike them England had won all their matches thus far.

The English, though, have had the easier run of opponents and generally not raised the roof with their performances.

Erasmus and head coach Jacques Nienaber’s side have on the other hand emerged from a tougher pool albeit having lost 13-8 to Ireland, whom they replaced as world number one on Monday.

WATCH | Siya Kolisi dedicates Springbok win to ‘everyone back home’

Their remarkable 29-28 victory over hosts and title favourites France in Sunday’s thrilling quarter-final makes the Springboks firm favourites to reach the final.

“If we think England is bad because people from outside say that they are not doing well… our reality is the truth, not the reality that people create outside our camp,” said Erasmus told reporters on Monday.

“We know from the (English) Premiership, a lot of our players play against them and we know (Steve) Borthwick is an excellent coach which he showed at Leicester and as a captain and a player for England.

“It will be a very tough test against a team that hasn’t lost a game and more or less conceded the same amount of tries and racked up the same amount of points.

“You can know how close this game (will be) – if you just look at stats and I know stats don’t always tell the whole picture.”

‘HAD TO ADAPT’

Erasmus said he had been taken aback by how open all four quarter-finals were, but believes the semis will see a return to more traditional hard fought rugby.

“I was surprised how in the quarter-finals there were so many tries scored,” said Erasmus.

“That was something different.

“But I guess when we go into semi-finals, again defence, scrum, mauls, tactical kicking.

“As it get’s closer to that final, and hopefully we are in that final if we get past England, those deep, mechanical fundamentals of the game will always start getting more and more important.”

ALSO READ: Classic: France sends the Springboks a message after home defeat

Erasmus has been much more restrained on social media at this tournament and has not criticised referees, something which earned him two bans in the past.

The first was a year-long-ban in 2021 and then having just returned from that suspension he was banned again in November last year for criticising the refereeing in the Springboks’ ferocious Test match with the French which they lost 30-26.

ALSO READ | Springboks v France: Siya Kolisi fronts Antoine Dupont before kick-off

Erasmus, though, defended himself on Monday saying it was more a wake up call to his team.

“We had to adapt,” he said.

“To try and score tries through more open, fluent, running rugby.

“You can see in our try-scoring tally, there’s a lot scored by our backs, more than our forwards.

“If you only rely on a certain aspect of the game which is very tough for the referee to referee and he gets two (decisions) wrong but you are only relying on those three or four or five opportunities that you get, 50 percent of your opportunities are gone.

“But if you fire shots in open play, general play from the top of lineouts or counter-attack, it’s clearer decisions for the referee and easier to make.

“As a team we don’t want to be this wonderful playing rugby team that the whole world loves, but we do want to score tries.”

By Garrin Lambley © Agence France-Presse