Champions League PREVIEW | PSG vs Anderlecht

Josh Mart takes the chance to preview this Champions League encounter between Paris Saint Germain and Anderlecht at the Parc des Princes in Paris. These two sides met in Belgium last time out, with PSG coming away with all three points after a rather flattering 4-0 win.

This result puts Les Parisiens in a fantastic position in the group at the halfway stage as they sit top of the table ahead of Bavarian giants Bayern Munich, and with two very winnable home games to come (including this one), PSG have to be favourites to claim the coveted top spot in the standings which can lead to a more favourable tie in February’s knock-out phase.

Anderlecht on the other hand, sit rock bottom of the table with zero points gained and also no goals scored which means that the best they can realistically hope for is a Europa League spot but even that will be tricky, as Celtic already have the upper hand by beating the Belgians in Brussels.

Psg have been in swashbuckling form in Ligue 1 of late, a 2-2 draw with bitter rivals Marseille being the only slip up in the last 5 matches. Friday nights 3-0 victory over Nice was a perfect way to warm up for Tuesday’s match as Unai Emery was able to make some changes and give some players such as Julian Draxler and Yuri much needed game time as well as getting the all important three points which keeps PSG top of the Ligue 1 standings.

Anderlecht’s form has been better since coach Vanhaezebrouck took over last month with the reigning Belgian champions climbing to 3rd in the Pro League standings. Saturday’s enthralling 3-2 away victory at Eupen was Anderlecht’s second victory in a few days after also beating Zulte Waregem last midweek.

Despite this upturn in form though, Anderlecht are still a whopping 9 points behind Club Brugge who sit top of the table. That sort of points deficit will be difficult to make up, even with so many matches left this campaign.

Team News and Tactics:

PSG head coach Unai Emery can welcome back Neymar to the fold for this European match, as the Brazilian superstar has been serving a suspension in Ligue 1 following a red card against Marseille a few weeks ago. Mbappé however, could be a given a ‘rest’ in this one due to tiredness (or poor form depending on what source you read). Thiago Motta also misses out through injury here.

With this in mind I expect PSG to line up in a 4-3-3 formation with Areola in goals behind a probable back four of Dani Alves, Marquinhos, Thiago Silva and Kurzawa/Yuri. With Thiago Motta missing, Rabiot will deputise in the ‘number 6 role’ and will be supported by Verratti and one of Pastore/Draxler. Neymar is a certainty to start on the left of the front three which will be spearheaded by in form Edinson Cavani. With doubts over whether Mbappé will start, Angel Di Maria could start on the right side of the attack for this one.

Anderlecht have a few injury concerns with Andy Najar missing through injury and serious doubts over the availability of Kara Mbodji and Uros Spajic at the back.

With this in mind I expect Anderlecht to lineup in a sort of 5-4-1 formation which could turn into a 3-4-3 when attacking with Dendoncker, Sa and Deschacht to play as the back three. Obradovic and Appiah could start as wing backs with Onyekuru/Gerkens and Hanni likely to play in the wide positions higher up the pitch. Sven Kums and Trebel are set to start in midfield and will look to provide support to lone striker Teodorczyk.

Key Men:

Edinson Cavani (PSG) – El Matador has been in excellent form for PSG this season, and for 2017 as a whole. Even with potential issues with Neymar earlier in the season, Cavani just seems to keep working hard to do what he does best- score goals. His injury time equaliser against Marseille in Le Classique sums up how good he has been for PSG this campaign. Expect him to notch in this one.

Lukasz Teodorczyk (Anderlecht) – The Polish target man has been a great acquisition for the Belgian’s since his move from Dynamo Kiev. He has great aerial prowess and has a knack for being in the right place at the right time. This will be a hard game for him to shine though, and he will need plenty of support from Onyekuru/Hanni/Gerkens if Anderlecht are to get the best out of him here.

Prediction

Despite both previous meetings between the two sides at the Parc des Princes ending in stalemate, it is almost impossible to predict anything other than a PSG victory here, whether Mbappe plays or not. Anderlecht know that there crucial match is against Celtic but will hope to limit PSG as much as possible here.

Prediction: PSG 3-0 Anderlecht

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Italy: Star fly-half Paolo Garbisi returns for Six Nations clash with Ireland

Fly-half Paolo Garbisi has been brought straight into the Italy team for their Six Nations fixture against Ireland in Rome on Saturday.

The 22-year-old missed their opening two matches of the tournament through injury but proved his fitness by playing 30 minutes for Montpellier last weekend.

Impressive return

He assisted a try during his time on the field as they succumbed 31-21 to Lyon in the Top 14.

Garbisi combines with Stephen Varney at half-back, while Tommaso Allan, who started against France and England, drops to the Italy bench.

There is just one more alteration in the backline from the team that went down to the Red Rose, with Pierre Bruno coming in for Luca Morisi.

Bruno takes his place on the left wing with Menoncello moving to centre to partner Juan Ignacio Brex in the midfield.

One change in the pack

Up front, head coach Kieran Crowley has returned to the combination which impressed against Les Bleus, with Simone Ferrari coming in for Marco Riccioni.

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Giacomo Nicotera and Danilo Fischetti complete the front-row and they are supported by locks Niccolo Cannone and Federico Ruzza.

With Sebastian Negri, Michele Lamaro and Lorenzo Cannone the loose trio, it means that Crowley has gone for the same back five for the third Six Nations match in a row.

On the bench, Jake Polledri is injured which means Giovanni Pettinelli comes into the 23, and he is joined by fellow replacements Luca Bigi, Federico Zani, Riccioni, Edoardo Iachizzi, Alessandro Fusco and Morisi for the encounter with Ireland.

Italy: 15 Ange Capuozzo, 14 Edoardo Padovani, 13 Juan Ignacio Brex, 12 Tommaso Menoncello, 11 Pierre Bruno, 10 Paolo Garbisi, 9 Stephen Varney, 8 Lorenzo Cannone, 7 Michele Lamaro (c), 6 Sebastian Negri, 5 Federico Ruzza, 4 Niccolò Cannone, 3 Simone Ferrari, 2 Giacomo Nicotera, 1 Danilo Fischetti
Replacements: 16 Luca Bigi, 17 Federico Zani, 18 Marco Riccioni, 19 Edoardo Iachizzi, 20 Giovanni Pettinelli, 21 Alessandro Fusco, 22 Luca Morisi, 23 Tommaso Allan

Date: Saturday, February 25
Venue: Stadio Olimpico, Rome
Kick-off: 15:15 local (14:15 GMT)
Referee: Mike Adamson (Scotland)
Assistant Referees: Wayne Barnes (England), Craig Evans (Wales)
TMO: Marius Jonker (South Africa)

Ligue 1 Review – Week 15

Sitting and watching football is what Marcelo Bielsa does best. A touchline icebox doubled as his perch at Marseille, made famous by an unfortunate incident with a rogue coffee cup, he sat oddly unflinching on the Lille bench as his assistant had a blazing argument with the fourth official inches away during the trip to Amiens last week and he has even supposedly trained himself to sit and watch multiple games at once with the aim of picking out patterns of play. But as El Loco sat in a Lille restaurant, suspended from his duties and sacking imminent, watching his Lille side lose 3-0 at Montpellier on a laptop, Marcelo Bielsa’s fiery, enigmatic, mad-scientist persona seemed to ebb away and was replaced by a sense of inevitability and déja vu.

Despite the fanfare surrounding Bielsa’s arrival and his perpetual aura that bred genuine hope of a renaissance for Les Dogues under his tutelage, this disappointingly short episode of El Loco’s career has proven to be simply the latest lap of what has become a vitriolic, vicious cycle; disaster rarely far away. To solely blame Bielsa for bizarre departures from Marseille, Lazio and now Lille would be wrong but the bizarre situations that led to recent resignations, this will be his first genuine ’sacking’ for some time, all have one common denominator.

Bielsa’s perceived lack of control over the squad and the deterioration of his relationships as a result, in parallel to other recent abrupt departures, has again proved pivotal. Dissatisfaction at the loss of (and indeed lack of replacements for) Dimitri Payet, Florian Thauvin, André Pierre Gignac and others during his first summer at the Vélodrome preceded what the Argentine claims was an unsolicited reduction in pay and an increasingly belligerent relationship with prominent club officials while his 48-hour flirtation with Lazio ended due to the club’s inability to sign any of Bielsa’s transfer targets.

New Lille owner Gérard Lopez’s vision of transforming Les Dogues into a breeding ground for young talent orchestrated by Bielsa’s footballing ideology, a project the club have cringingly branded “LOSC Unlimited”, brought with it former Barcelona VP, Marc Ingla and Monaco Technical Director Luis Campos. Perhaps inevitably, the control Bielsa demanded has, in his eyes, been slowly eroded by Campos in particular and the relationship between the two men has become irrevocable. A situation which lead to Bielsa’s suspension after the 3-0 loss to Amiens last Monday although Campos has reportedly wanted “El Loco” gone for some time, rumours that an unauthorised visit to Chile caused the rift have proven to be false.

From a distance, it seemed Bielsa’s purview remained unfiltered over the summer as a huge overhaul of the playing staff drastically altered the landscape at the Stade Pierre-Mauroy with 22 players leaving and 17 joining in the last year. This remaking of the team started as soon as Lopez’s ownership of the club was ratified on the final day of the January window when 7 players were hastily bussed in before Bielsa’s arrival was announced, although heavily rumoured at the time, in February. However, these dealings were not approved by Bielsa despite his impending appointment and Campos has continued to take the lead on player recruitment since. Perhaps tellingly, Thiago Mendes, one of few outright Bielsa picks, has been a revelation in Ligue 1 this season.

Nevertheless, whether the influx was largely of Campos or Bielsa’s making, a very young and brand new team was going to take time to coalesce into one of the exuberant, gung-ho outfits that Bielsa is famous for building. However, since the 3-0 opening day flattening at the hands of Claudio Ranieri’s Nantes, Lille have been more lethargic, disjointed and wayward in front of goal that could have been foreseen, the decision to sell last season’s top scorer Nicolas de Préville to rivals Bordeaux no small factor and again a choice not taken by the manager.

Disagreements aside, a run of 9 games without a win that only produced 3 goals has seen Les Dogues floundering in the bottom three since and it seemed that Bielsa’s time had elapsed and that Campos and co. were right to want him out as their team looked capable of nothing better than a relegation scuffle. However, despite Campos’ influence, Bielsa remained the marquee signing for Lopez’s rebranded Lille; his footballing philosophy it’s centre-piece and the former Bilbao manager’s presence one of its key selling points, meaning removing him so early would be an admission of the project’s failure.

Nevertheless, the need for ‘LOSC Unlimited’ to succeed on financial and by extension sporting levels in the relative short term eventually combined with Bielsa’s rapidly depreciated relationships with both Campos and his players, who have become frustrated with the unwavering 3-3-3-1 setup and their coach’s insistence in deploying some of their number out of position, became too difficult to ignore after the desperate loss to promoted Amiens.

This was despite a brief upturn in results as Lille beat the hapless bottom club Metz and a St Etienne in chaos after their derby drubbing by Lyon. For now Bielsa remains in some bizarre form of Ligue 1 purgatory, awaiting a final decision on his future, Lille unwilling to pay the €9.5m it would cost to have him leave. The superb 2-1 win at second place Lyon last night might be a sign that Lopez should concede and pay up.

Pep Guardiola famously described Bielsa as “the best coach in the world” while those managers seen as his disciples such as Guardiola, Jorge Sampaoli and Mauricio Pochettino, are famed for their own similar departures from coaching norms. However, few follow the Argentine’s methods to the letter and, broken promises aside, it now seems as though Bielsa may be the latest manager which modern football has simply left behind. Disputes with the now ubiquitous directors of football and haughty frustration at a lack of ‘his’ signings bypasses recognition of the way in which the sport now conducts itself and the ever impinging disparate and conflicting motivations of players, agents, presidents and so on.

Marcelo Bielsa is ‘The Professor’ to some; an innovator, influencer and tactical genius and the combustible, enigmatic, mad-scientist ‘El Loco’ to others. But after this latest madcap run at management, the balance between the two schools of thought might be starting to shift and in truth he may now be neither genius nor enigma, simply a man sitting with his laptop watching along with everyone else.

1 | Bordeaux were finally back to winning ways on Tuesday evening, earning three points for the first time in more than two months, 3-0 at home. A St Étienne side still finding its feet under the team of Julien Sablé and Jean-Louis Gasset were easy pickings, but Jocelyn Gourvennec’s decision to play a reactive 4-2-3-1 as opposed to the team’s habitual, plodding 4-3-3 seems was handsomely rewarded. With François Kamano and Nicolas De Préville both suspended, some changes were inevitable, but the manager also dropped Younousse Sankharé in favour of the more prosaic duo of Otávio and Lukas Lerager. The pair, freed from much attacking responsibility, did well to control the match by playing a series of long balls and breaking up play, with Alexandre Mendy’s aerial ability seeing the side have a defined focal point. Mendy used his physicality to great effect, menacing the visitors’ back line on his way to a brace. Most Ligue 1 opposition won’t seek so much of the ball, but on the whole, Gourvennec’s game plan was superb, and provided a result which could well be the tonic the club need to resume their push for a top six finish.

2 | Florian Thauvin continued his good form of late, notching a goal and an assist to lead Marseille to a 3-0 win at Metz. Les Grenats hardly offered the sternest resistance, but after a limp display at home to Guingamp on Sunday, the result, coming as it did in concert with losses by Monaco and Lyon will do wonders for the team’s confidence, especially with a daunting encounter with Montpellier looming on Sunday. More to the point, though, Thauvin continues to thrive; where last season he could lean on Bafétimbi Gomis and Dimitri Payet to share the attacking work load, the current one has seen the winger offer up much of the team’s impetus on his own. A better defence and the sublime Luiz Gustavo have helped as well, but Thauvin’s steady improvement from the petulant youngster who moaned his way out of Lille continues apace, and looks be dovetailing nicely with Marseille’s progress as a club.

3 | After wins from Lille and Nice, the club looking most like chasing Metz into Ligue 2 now appears to be Angers. After just one loss in their first nine matches, Le SCO are now winless in six, and with Montpellier, Nantes and Monaco to come before the winter break, no respite appears on the horizon. Stéphane Moulin has attempted to evolve his side from a no-frills outfit relying on physicality into something more aesthetically pleasing, but with things yet to click going forward, Angers are now subpar in both defence and attack. Karl Toko Ekambi has generally been a force in attack, but a raft of talented youngsters bought in the summer have failed to play with any consistency. Enzo Crivelli, Angelo Fulgini, Baptiste Guillaume and Lassana Coulibaly have all had their moments, but have more often than not flattered to deceive. Moulin, in response, has frequently changed his line-ups, chopping and changing at will as he seeks to find an ideal eleven. His newfound penchant for experimentation is yet to pay off, and the veteran manager could find his job under threat despite his achievements to date.

A.W. with E.D.

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United Rugby Championship: Bulls bounce back from successive defeats in victory over Benetton, while Connacht beat Scarlets

Last season’s United Rugby Championship runners-up, the Bulls, produced a good response to their recent losses by overcoming Benetton 44-22 on Friday.

In a first half full or errors, the Italian outfit made slightly fewer and deservedly moved 9-3 ahead at the interval thanks to the accurate kicking of Tomas Albornoz.

Chris Smith responded for the Pretoria-based side before adding a second off the tee after a positive start to the final 40 minutes from the South Africans.

They remained in the ascendency and were rewarded with tries for Ruan Nortje and Elrigh Louw before Benetton went back in front after Manuel Zuliani went over and Albornoz kicked another three-pointer.

But the Bulls would finish the stronger and converted tries by Jan-Hendrik Wessels, Marcell Coetzee and Stravino Jacobs sealed an important URC win for the Bulls.

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Jake White’s men enjoyed a positive start to the campaign, winning their opening three matches, but they went into this game off the back of disappointing defeats to Glasgow Warriors and Munster.

Their final match of the tour initially saw them once again struggle to gain a foothold in the match as the hosts controlled matters in the first half.

Benetton dictated proceedings and deservedly went 6-0 ahead via a pair of Albornoz penalties.

The Bulls rarely found their way into the opposition half, despite Coetzee’s carrying ability and the pilfering brilliance of Bismarck du Plessis.

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When the away side did finally put the Italians under some pressure, they earned a penalty which Smith easily dispatched to reduce the arrears.

Almost immediately, however, the Bulls infringed and another successive Albornoz three-pointer gave Benetton a 9-3 advantage at the break.

Superb second half from the Bulls

White needed a response from his charges and he got it in the early stages of the second period. Firstly, Smith kicked a successful effort off the tee before they manufactured the opening try of the match.

It was brilliantly worked as Marco van Staden made the initial incursion with a bruising carry through the heart of the Benetton rearguard. With the opposition defence in retreat, Embrose Papier sniped around the fringes and Nortje was on hand to cross the whitewash.

Although Albornoz responded with a fourth penalty soon after, the Bulls had the momentum and they touched down for the second time when Louw went over from close range.

Zuliani’s converted try and Albornoz’s three-pointer took the hosts back ahead, but the away team’s physicality was beginning to tell.

The visitors were much the better side in the final 15 minutes and, after Smith had regained their advantage, Wessels crossed the whitewash to move them eight points clear.

The job was not quite done just yet but Coetzee and Jacobs put the result beyond doubt with late scores.

Connacht ease to victory over Scarlets

Mack Hansen hunted down a Jack Carty kick for Connacht’s fifth and final try in a runaway 36-14 victory over the Scarlets at the Sportsground.

Andy Friend’s men picked up their first bonus point of the United Rugby Championship season, finishing strongly with a penalty try and Hansen’s second score.

Adding to Niall Murray’s first-minute opener, Hansen touched down to give Connacht a 16-11 interval lead. Steff Evans crossed for the Scarlets, while Jack Carty and Sam Costelow kicked two penalties each.

In the second half, Connacht replacement prop Jack Aungier barged over for his third try of the season and David Hawkshaw also split the posts.

The Scarlets struggled for the remainder, replacement Rhys Patchell kicking their only points, and Sione Kalamafoni and Dan Thomas were both sin-binned late on.

Premiership: Jonny May’s elbow injury a concern for Gloucester boss George Skivington

Gloucester head coach George Skivington is concerned over an injury which England flyer Jonny May sustained in Friday’s Premiership triumph against London Irish.

May was forced off in the 27th minute of Friday’s clash at Gtech Community Stadium with a suspected dislocated elbow and the injury is the latest setback for the 32-year-old, who had lengthy stints on the sidelines with a knee problem and Covid-19.

Fearing the worst

“It didn’t look good. He walked off with a splint on his arm. It’s not ideal if he’s got another bang having been back for two games,” Skivington said.

Gloucester sealed their win courtesy of a monster drop-goal from Adam Hastings in the 62nd minute which saw the Cherry and Whites take the lead for the first time.

It was a remarkable effort with his kick launched from inside his own half.

“Adam described it as hanging in his interview but I thought it looked pretty good. He’s brilliant,” Skivington said.

“His boot has been really good for us at the start of the season. He’s worked really hard. It was an ugly game.

“Our discipline towards the end was brilliant. We had to address a few things at half-time and we did well against a very tough team to beat.”

There was more bad news for England as Henry Arundell limped off with taping on his right ankle after a collision with London Irish team-mate Ben Loader.

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The teenage wing will now be assessed to see if he can join up with Eddie Jones’ squad for next week’s training camp in Jersey.

“Henry’s sprained the outside of his ankle so he needs to stay off his feet today (Friday) and tomorrow at least,” director of rugby Declan Kidney said.

England to decide on rehab

“It will be England’s call whether they want to rehab him. Our medics will talk to the England medics, they’ll assess what it’s like and what the turnaround is.

“Eddie will probably make the call over whether it’s worth bringing him in or not.”

Thierry Henry on the infamous World Cup qualifier handball incident: “The collateral damage hurt the most.”

Speaking in an interview with Canal Plus, French football legend Thierry Henry discussed the infamous handball incident against Ireland in a World Cup qualifying play-off match in 2009.

“I reacted like an athlete. In my shell, and moved on. The problem is that sometimes, the shell breaks, and your friends are affected. Your father is affected, your mother is affected, your brothers are affected, your kids are affected, whoever it may be. That’s when it becomes difficult. But when you try to move past it because you’re strong and because you’ve struggled in the past, and you get a phone call saying “Oh did you see what they said?!” Regardless of what it may be. “Oh he’s not good anymore! Oh he’s done this, he’s done that.” You continue to get calls. And ultimately, you find yourself in a situation where you’re not well for others, but it’s in regards to you. The collateral damage hurts the most.” 

Y.H.

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Scotland: Jamie Ritchie happy with captaincy debut despite defeat to Australia

Scotland’s Jamie Ritchie believes his first game as captain “went well” after they succumbed to Australia at Murrayfield on Saturday.

Gregor Townsend’s men looked on course for a key victory with them 15-6 in front with just a quarter of the match remaining, but ill-discipline proved costly in the final 20 minutes.

The Scots consistently infringed, allowing the Wallabies to set up the position for James Slipper to go over, before Bernard Foley kicked the winning penalty late on.

It was a devastating way for Ritchie to end his first game as skipper but the Edinburgh flanker was still content with how everything went.

Enjoyed the experience

“I think it went well,” he said. “I thoroughly enjoyed it. I said from the get-go that I didn’t want to change anything. I speak a lot as a player as it is – just maybe people listen more to a captain.

“I enjoyed the experience and I will be looking to get some learnings moving forward.”

Ritchie also believes that they learned how to deal with setbacks in Saturday’s encounter, even though they eventually fell to a narrow loss.

“We talked a lot in the week that there would be moments in the game when we might go behind and be under pressure and we spoke of fighting to get those moments back,” he said.

“I think we did that well throughout the game. At the end we gave ourselves an opportunity to win it, but unfortunately it didn’t go over. I’m proud of the boys and the way they performed. I’m confident we can learn lessons.”

Scotland had a last-gasp kick to snatch the victory at Murrayfield but Blair Kinghorn’s penalty drifted wide.

Kinghorn had a good game despite that miss, scoring an outstanding individual try, and Ritchie has backed the fly-half to shrug off that frustration.

“Blair will bounce back, I know he will. It’s important that we get behind him because he did a lot of stuff really well. I back Blair,” he said.

“I’ve seen what he can do week in and week out. I’m confident he will bounce back and be great next week.

“I thought he had an outstanding game all over the park. Then he missed one kick. Everyone makes mistakes and we had opportunities to win the game before that so it shouldn’t have come down to it. I told him to keep his head up and be proud of how he performed.”

Sam Skinner injury

Scotland will face Fiji in their next match of the Autumn Nations Series but they will likely be without Sam Skinner, who went off injured in the first half of Saturday’s clash.

“He had a foot injury,” Scotland head coach Townsend said. “He’s in a boot and we don’t know how long that will keep him out.

“We’ve had three second-rows injured since we announced the squad, with Richie Gray and Scott Cummings during the week, and now Sam Skinner.

“Richie Gray should be in full training next week. He’s gone through the protocols up to Friday and let’s hope Sam is available for these games as well.”

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Marseille & Nice have made contact for Adrien Trebel

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Ligue 1 double act Marseille and Nice have made contact regarding Anderlecht central midfielder Adrien Trebel’s situation, according to L’Équipe.

OM are looking at the former Nantes man, currently 26, as a possible replacement for Morgan Sanson, who is reportedly soliciting interest from Sevilla.

Nice in the meantime have put Trebel’s name on their shortlist for eventual replacements for Jean-Michaël Seri, who will leave the club at the latest this summer, barring some miracle turnaround in events.

Anderlecht are set to ask for around between €8m and €10m in order to part with the player.

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Damian Willemse: Springbok fly-half reveals support from ‘selfless’ Elton Jantjies in the build-up to their win against the Wallabies

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Springbok utility back Damian Willemse has commended teammate Elton Jantjies for helping him prepare for his switch to fly-half this week.

Outside of goalkicking, Willemse brought a dynamic and attacking edge to the backline in a man-of-the-match performance that saw South Africa claim their first victory against the Wallabies in Australia since 2013, as they ran out 24-8 winners in Sydney.

Important support from Jantjies

The 24-year-old labelled Jantjies as “selfless” and underlined that the veteran made it easy to change positions, giving him full credit for his performance on the night.

“It wasn’t really that tough. Slotting in tonight was just a bit of a different role,” said Willemse.

“I have been getting reps there and I enjoyed tonight. Credit to the coaching staff and everybody who helped me throughout the week; Elton as well, he was massive and had a big contribution to my performance.”

Willemse added: “Elton is an absolute team guy. The way he has helped me since I came into the squad as a young guy in 2018 has been amazing. He has helped me a lot with my kicking. I have to give credit to him for the performance I had tonight. The way he helped me prepare, keeping me calm, that was very selfless.”

The starting fly-half believes a key component of the win was the balance the Springboks found in their play, particularly with their kick-chase game.

“The balance was pretty good. The way we suffocated the Wallabies, we had a lot of territory in their half and converted that into scoreboard pressure,” said Willemse. “We ran the ball when we had the overlap, but I thought the balance was good.

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“The tactical kicking from Willie with his left boot, Jaden was outstanding with his kicks from No 9 and we had two guys, Canan and Mapimpi, chasing those kicks. They got into a lot of contestables, which gave us the opportunity. So, our balance between running and kicking was pretty good.”

Dream debut

19-year-old Canan Moodie had a debut to remember for the Springboks, scoring a magnificent try, rising above Wallaby wing Marika Koroibete for a high ball before striding to an open try-line.

Moodie was delighted just to have made his debut, and scoring a try was the “cherry on top”. The Bulls star said it was “special” to be surrounded by the bench to celebrate his try.

“It was very special. Just putting on the jersey is already special enough. Having the opportunity to score a try was even more special,” Moodie said. “I am just happy that I was able to contribute to the team.

“I was just happy that I was able to contribute to the team and add a few points. That was obviously a very emotional moment for me, getting swarmed by the bench. It was very, very special. I quite enjoyed that. Scoring the try was the cherry on top for me.”

The 2022 Rugby Championship has been burst even more wide open with wins from the Springboks and All Blacks in Round Four, meaning there is only one point between the top and bottom place with only two rounds to go.