The Prague Post - Erasmus proud of Boks' title triumph as Rugby Championship faces uncertain future

EUR -
AED 4.23314
AFN 72.617879
ALL 95.320581
AMD 434.389651
ANG 2.063355
AOA 1056.988043
ARS 1604.2054
AUD 1.67735
AWG 2.077667
AZN 1.942947
BAM 1.944084
BBD 2.322144
BDT 141.825278
BGN 1.970249
BHD 0.435169
BIF 3425.794717
BMD 1.152658
BND 1.47916
BOB 7.966986
BRL 5.941834
BSD 1.152991
BTN 107.013928
BWP 15.680683
BYN 3.428758
BYR 22592.104774
BZD 2.318765
CAD 1.603457
CDF 2645.350418
CHF 0.921436
CLF 0.026651
CLP 1052.330777
CNY 7.921083
CNH 7.944785
COP 4234.175392
CRC 536.048531
CUC 1.152658
CUP 30.545448
CVE 109.60635
CZK 24.53889
DJF 205.311983
DKK 7.472811
DOP 69.369232
DZD 153.347397
EGP 61.817125
ERN 17.289876
ETB 180.028018
FJD 2.597865
FKP 0.874293
GBP 0.87228
GEL 3.10063
GGP 0.874293
GHS 12.683671
GIP 0.874293
GMD 84.722046
GNF 10111.840822
GTQ 8.820993
GYD 241.315691
HKD 9.033673
HNL 30.628089
HRK 7.533431
HTG 151.343321
HUF 384.985599
IDR 19622.856718
ILS 3.634027
IMP 0.874293
INR 107.642561
IQD 1510.319316
IRR 1520212.356379
ISK 144.393626
JEP 0.874293
JMD 182.351551
JOD 0.817203
JPY 183.645568
KES 149.903239
KGS 100.799677
KHR 4613.058937
KMF 491.896805
KPW 1037.327263
KRW 1752.184846
KWD 0.356817
KYD 0.960859
KZT 548.128128
LAK 25409.325468
LBP 103246.998871
LKR 363.472161
LRD 211.578575
LSL 19.36449
LTL 3.4035
LVL 0.697232
LYD 7.354296
MAD 10.770988
MDL 20.309546
MGA 4878.346299
MKD 61.583891
MMK 2421.050631
MNT 4118.128299
MOP 9.309014
MRU 45.998789
MUR 54.117622
MVR 17.808518
MWK 1999.247299
MXN 20.67962
MYR 4.652709
MZN 73.72361
NAD 19.36449
NGN 1593.492727
NIO 42.433534
NOK 11.258418
NPR 171.212489
NZD 2.019918
OMR 0.443187
PAB 1.153051
PEN 4.011822
PGK 4.986795
PHP 69.873941
PKR 321.702984
PLN 4.289341
PYG 7488.351093
QAR 4.204236
RON 5.096479
RSD 117.406294
RUB 92.560066
RWF 1687.343251
SAR 4.327103
SBD 9.232765
SCR 16.546923
SDG 692.748161
SEK 10.945186
SGD 1.484053
SHP 0.864792
SLE 28.352602
SLL 24170.68294
SOS 658.894817
SRD 43.067962
STD 23857.701813
STN 24.352498
SVC 10.088675
SYP 127.653812
SZL 19.357334
THB 37.79686
TJS 11.025843
TMT 4.034304
TND 3.38486
TOP 2.775324
TRY 51.293065
TTD 7.825466
TWD 36.877025
TZS 2996.911576
UAH 50.454307
UGX 4295.115126
USD 1.152658
UYU 46.868357
UZS 14006.346544
VES 545.582274
VND 30363.904082
VUV 138.600246
WST 3.201755
XAF 651.993766
XAG 0.01638
XAU 0.000252
XCD 3.115117
XCG 2.077869
XDR 0.810871
XOF 651.993766
XPF 119.331742
YER 275.053061
ZAR 19.601855
ZMK 10375.321642
ZMW 22.222532
ZWL 371.155537
  • CMSD

    0.0500

    22.15

    +0.23%

  • CMSC

    0.0900

    21.99

    +0.41%

  • BCC

    -0.7700

    75.08

    -1.03%

  • BTI

    -0.5800

    57.89

    -1%

  • GSK

    0.8000

    55.99

    +1.43%

  • AZN

    3.5100

    200.73

    +1.75%

  • RBGPF

    -13.5000

    69

    -19.57%

  • BP

    -0.8300

    46.17

    -1.8%

  • BCE

    0.1400

    25.38

    +0.55%

  • NGG

    2.2400

    86.84

    +2.58%

  • JRI

    0.2200

    12.52

    +1.76%

  • RIO

    1.5200

    94.81

    +1.6%

  • RELX

    0.0800

    33.23

    +0.24%

  • RYCEF

    0.5500

    15.64

    +3.52%

  • VOD

    0.1100

    15.13

    +0.73%

Erasmus proud of Boks' title triumph as Rugby Championship faces uncertain future
Erasmus proud of Boks' title triumph as Rugby Championship faces uncertain future / Photo: Michael Bradley - AFP

Erasmus proud of Boks' title triumph as Rugby Championship faces uncertain future

South Africa coach Rassie Erasmus said it meant a "hell of a lot" for the Springboks to have won back-to-back Rugby Championship titles for the first time following a hard-fought victory over Argentina at Twickenham

Text size:

Saturday's 29-27 success, built on a dominant scrum with hooker Malcolm Marx scoring two tries, in the final match of the southern hemisphere tournament gave South Africa the title on points difference from arch-rivals New Zealand.

The Springboks had previously inflicted a record 43-10 defeat upon the All Blacks in Wellington in September before hammering Argentina 67-30 in Durban last weekend.

And all this after South Africa started one of the most exciting Rugby Championships by squandering a 22-0 lead at home to Australia while the Pumas were a force throughout in a tournament where they beat both the Wallabies and the All Blacks.

But the Springboks, the current double defending world champions after their 2019 and 2023 triumphs, may not get the chance to make it three Rugby Championships in a row.

Next year, New Zealand are set to travel to South Africa for a series billed as the "Greatest Rivalry" -- the first traditional tour involving rugby union's historic superpowers for three decades.

Complicating the picture, a new Nations Cup is being launched in 2026, bringing together the northern hemisphere teams that make up the Six Nations, the four sides in the Rugby Championship and most likely Japan and Fiji.

The revamped schedule means there is expected to be no official Rugby Championship next year, with doubts over subsequent editions.

"Maybe this is the last Rugby Championship," said Erasmus.

"I'm not 100 percent sure how it will work in the future. So it meant a hell of a lot."

The former South Africa back-row forward, a veteran of the original Tri-Nations, added: "None of us as players have achieved what they (the current team) have achieved as players.

"It was another opportunity for them to achieve something New Zealand has done (win successive Rugby Championship) many times, the great team they are.

"But we've never done it, you know. So, that definitely was a motivational thing for us."

- 'Bloody tough' -

Another sign of change in the international game was staging the finale of a competition featuring South Africa, New Zealand, Australia and Argentina at Twickenham, the London headquarters of England's Rugby Football Union.

Saturday's fixture was technically an Argentina 'home' match, but the vast bulk of a crowd of over 70,000 were sporting the Springboks' green and gold, rather than the Pumas' blue and white.

Twickenham, however, is now familiar territory for South Africa, with Saturday's success their fifth straight win at the ground and third in three years in matches not involving England.

They won't be back during next month's Autumn campaign but will play Japan at London's Wembley Stadium on November 1 -- the same day England face Australia at Twickenham.

And with £1 now worth 23 South African rand, the economic lure of drawing another big crowd from the large expatriate community of Springbok fans in London is clear.

Such was the Springboks set-piece dominance, with a last-ditch try by Argentina's Rodrigo Isgro too late to change Saturday's result, they might have won wherever the game took place.

Argentina coach Felipe Contepomi, while pleased by his side's improved showing following the Durban blow-out, praised the Springboks' scrum -- a traditional strength of the Pumas' game.

"It might sound boring to some but they're the best in the world at what they do for a reason," said Contepomi. "And I believe they're the best team in the world right now -- no doubt about it."

But Erasmus accepted the Springboks were "fortunate that we didn't play them in Argentina," a sentiment with which the second-placed All Blacks, beaten 29-23 by the Pumas in Buenos Aires in August, might agree.

"They were bloody tough here," he said. "But there's no doubt that they're tougher in Argentina."

B.Hornik--TPP