If the No9 jersey fits, wear it

21 November 2014 - 02:20 By Simnikiwe Xabanisa
subscribe Just R20 for the first month. Support independent journalism by subscribing to our digital news package.
Subscribe now

When Cobus Reinach finally got what many thought was a deserved Springbok call-up, a coach who should know what he is talking about said he wasn't a Test player.

This was said with the kind of certainty that made one rethink the idea that the selection had been a long time coming, but by the looks of it somebody forgot to tell Reinach.

Playing in his first start for the Springboks, Reinach did a heck of a job pretending to be a Test-level scrumhalf against England last weekend - kicking judiciously, tackling with intent, running with intensity, and even grabbing a try in the process.

That denialist approach is the kind of healthy attitude needed against the Springboks' closed-shop attitude to the scrumhalf position.

The rigidly entrenched hierarchy appears to be simple: it's Fourie du Preez and Ruan Pienaar first, and the rest have to battle for minor placings.

Reinach's performance against England showed how presumptuous that approach is, and that the pecking order needs to be revisited.

As things stand, the scrumhalves not named, Du Preez and Pienaar, are given the impression they're keeping the No9 jersey warm instead of staking a proper claim to it.

Sure, if you have a fit and healthy Du Preez you'd be daft not to play him.

But as things stand he is injured, so the best scrumhalves the Boks have are the ones they are reluctant to back.

A lot of South African rugby fans are baffled by the variance in Pienaar's performances for the Boks and his Irish club, Leinster, but the answer could be that he has always felt he is a stopgap measure for Du Preez.

Players are very intuitive when it comes to whether they have the coaching staff's backing, and most of them react by doing the bare minimum until the favourite returns.

A great example of that can be found in Patrick Lambie's recent dip in form and confidence.

Over the past two years, Lambie was in Morné Steyn's shadow, and the frustrating thing for him was that most felt he was playing better than the former Bulls flyhalf but was being picked behind him.

The arrival of Handre Pollard meant not only were the selectors looking elsewhere for answers, they also appeared to think Lambie wasn't part of the answer.

But the 24-year-old, no doubt miffed, was intelligent enough to recognise that flyhalf was no longer a closed shop and for once he was in a fair fight.

The same thing needs to happen with the halfback situation, where Pienaar, still one of the most gifted players produced by this country, is encouraged to forget aboutDu Preez, and Reinach and Francois Hougaard are told the same about him.

A player like Hougaard, a sensational athlete, also needs to have his strengths backed instead of constantly being nagged about his shortcomings.

The insistent highlighting of his weaknesses is giving the poor blighter an inferiority complex, which doesn't go well with instinctive players.

And, instead of constantly carping about how crap he is in the wet, why is he not given more opportunities to fix it in those conditions?

It's all good and well to believe that Du Preez will make things alright when he gets back, or that Pienaar has to play because he has played in the northern hemisphere conditions in the last few years.

But it is holding the Boks back from developing someone who may well be pressed into being the number one, when they've been led to believe they are actually third choice.

subscribe Just R20 for the first month. Support independent journalism by subscribing to our digital news package.
Subscribe now