Bok coach Rassie Erasmus to help Pote Human at Bulls

11 December 2018 - 13:00 By Craig Ray
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Springboks head coach and director of rugby Rassie Erasmus addresses the media during the Rugby Championship SA press conference in Port Elizabeth on September 27, 2018.
Springboks head coach and director of rugby Rassie Erasmus addresses the media during the Rugby Championship SA press conference in Port Elizabeth on September 27, 2018.
Image: Deryck Foster/BackpagePix

Springbok coach Rassie Erasmus will assist newly appointed Bulls coach Pote Human during the Super Rugby pre-season.

Erasmus’ deployment to the Bulls is part of wider programme of Springbok coaches helping South Africa’s Super Rugby and PRO 14 franchises throughout the season

SA Rugby confirmed on Tuesday that Erasmus‚ as well as Springbok assistant coaches Matt Proudfoot‚ Mzwandile Stick and Jacques Nienaber‚ and Springbok Head of Athletic Performance‚ Aled Walters‚ would be deployed to the teams at their request.

Erasmus has been invited by the Bulls to assist Human‚ who on Tuesday was named as successor to John Mitchell.

Erasmus said: “We started making the national panel available to the franchises a number of years ago and we want to continue to forge closer links between the national coaches and the Super Rugby and PRO14 teams. “All of the coaches worked with one or other of the franchises in the past year to exchange ideas and expertise and hopefully assist the teams in raising the performance bar. Strong performances at franchise level will translate into strong Springbok performances – it’s a win-win.” Erasmus said the national coaches would in no way be dictating style or tactics or trying to impose a national blueprint on teams. “We will assist in generic areas such as skills and conditioning‚ mauling‚ scrumming and lineouts‚” said Erasmus. “It will also give the national coaches a chance to discuss individual players with the franchise coaches and work on specific areas for specific individuals. “But it is not our role to have input on selection or gameplan – that can only be determined by the franchise head coach. But we do believe this is approach can work for South African rugby in its broadest sense at the start of a very important Rugby World Cup year.”

- TimesLIVE



Source: TMG Digital.

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