With Scotland stunned by Italy and Wales thrashed at Twickenham, the opening round of the Six Nations has given the Springbok coaching staff plenty to think about. Photo: AFP One round into the Six Nations and Springboks head coach Rassie Erasmus should already have some valuable answers — and a few new questions — as Scotland and Wales showed early signs of vulnerability ahead of their July Nations Championship clashes with the world champions. While France’s demolition job of Ireland in Paris stole the spotlight, it was the alarming early struggles of the Scots and Welsh that may have really caught the Bok coaches’ attention.
Scotland suffered a surprise 18-15 defeat to Italy, a side the Springboks will face later this year and first at the 2027 Rugby World Cup, while England comprehensively outplayed Wales 48-7 at Twickenham. The English, of course, will be South Africa’s first opponent in the July Nations Championship, making that Welsh capitulation particularly relevant. The Boks are scheduled to face England in the tournament’s opener, followed by Scotland and then Wales.
Early Six Nations form suggests that those final two fixtures could present opportunities beyond just winning for Erasmus and his side. Given their performances, both clashes may now be viewed as matches where Erasmus can afford to rotate his squad and test depth, particularly with the looming Greatest Rivalry series against the All Blacks later in the season. The July window, looking at how the Boks drove their campaign last season, should now be earmarked as another opportunity to broaden the Bok player pool even further, and these Six Nations results may reinforce that strategy over the next couple of months.
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