The Springboks are on a charm offensive. South Africa have won two World Cups, a British & Irish Lions series and added a rare Rugby Championship crown this summer to further cement their place as the rulers of the rugby realm. Yet outside of their homeland, there is a sense of a side not feted widely, as much loathed as liked.
And everyone wants to be loved. “You don’t want to make other people unhappy,” Springboks supremo Rassie Erasmus admits. “You don’t want people not to like you. You don’t want people to think you are stubborn. You don’t want people to think you are arrogant, especially if you see the characters in this team.
“It has been years, from the Bakkies Botha era, that [people have said] we are bullies who don’t really care what people think. But we do. I care what people think about the players because they are very good guys. They can’t take the blame for what I have done or said or not said. I hope the world sees me trying to change.”
In Erasmus’s six years in charge – some as head coach, some as director of rugby – he has been the fascinating figure at the heart of a transformed team. Having arrived at a low ebb, the 2019 triumph united a side and a nation; four years later, in France last October, the Springboks did it again.
Denne historien er fra November 07, 2024-utgaven av The Independent.
Start din 7-dagers gratis prøveperiode på Magzter GOLD for å få tilgang til tusenvis av utvalgte premiumhistorier og 9000+ magasiner og aviser.
Allerede abonnent ? Logg på
Denne historien er fra November 07, 2024-utgaven av The Independent.
Start din 7-dagers gratis prøveperiode på Magzter GOLD for å få tilgang til tusenvis av utvalgte premiumhistorier og 9000+ magasiner og aviser.
Allerede abonnent? Logg på
'Unknown' Opetaia could offer Usyk a fresh challenge
Oleksandr Usyk's special brand of dominance is the type that can leave a vacuum.
Chaos meets continuity as Amorim makes it to Anfield
United's head coach Ruben Amorim will be wondering what might have been as his failing side take on a flying Liverpool
There's a storm coming as Littler takes on Van Gerwen
Luke Littler, 17, could break all the records set by opponent Michael van Gerwen in tonight's World Championship final
NICKEL AND CRIMES
'Nickel Boys' uses a POV camera to achieve a feat of fullbodied immersion, while romantic weepie 'We Live in Time' makes cancer remarkably cosy, writes Clarisse Loughrey
'Cult chose me, I just got on the river and stayed on it'
Former 'Xena' star Lucy Lawless tells Adam White about her blazing documentary debut, her turn away from acting, and her sadness over the distortion of what it means to be 'woke'
LIVING COLOUR
Helen Wilson-Beevers tests a selection of makeup palettes
Our five-day keto diet plan really begins to take shape
Day two on keto with Lisa Butterworth's perfectly planned regime. Hannah Twiggs talks you through the treats in store
Meghan's influencer era will mean she has the last laugh
As the former royal launches a brand new Instagram account, Katie Rosseinsky looks at why it could be the way forward for the duchess, whose social media credentials are pretty sound
Toxic waste from world's deadliest industrial disaster is removed after 40 years
A convoy of trucks has taken away 337 metric tonnes of hazardous waste from the site of the Bhopal gas tragedy, 40 years after what is regarded as the world's worst industrial disaster.
Investigators move to arrest South Korea president Yoon
South Korea's impeached president Yoon Suk Yeol has vowed to \"fight to the end\" as authorities dispatched investigators to execute a warrant to detain him over his shock attempt to impose martial law.