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Moerat, Nortje and Van Heerden: Three Bok locks playing for more than a final spot
Rich profiles three departing Bok locks — Moerat, Van Heerden and Nortje — whose franchise careers end with a semifinal defeat, drawing out their shared history and assessing their Bok trajectories heading into a busy Rugby Championship build-up.
Moerat, Van Heerden and Nortje face potential farewell weekends in URC semis
Three departing Bok locks — Moerat, Van Heerden and Nortje — could be playing their final games for the Stormers and Bulls respectively this weekend. Rich profiles their intertwined careers and argues the semifinal stakes carry an extra personal dimension for all three.
Alexander kills Champions Cup exit talk — but the load problem hasn't gone away
Alexander has dismissed Champions Cup exit talk as 'hogwash', but the load-management crisis driving the speculation is very much unresolved — the piece maps the competing pressures on SA Rugby heading into the July workshop.
Defence coaches are the IPL's bowlers — and Sacha's injury is a reminder of rugby's brutal attrition
Rich argues that Nienaber and Edwards are collateral damage from rugby's structural shift toward high-scoring attack — not personal failures — and draws the IPL bowler analogy to explain why defence coaches are being unfairly measured. He also unpacks Sacha's injury in the context of rugby's brutal attrition rate, and makes a case that the Bulls have the easier semifinal path to a potential Cape Town final.
Kriel unbothered by year-round rugby grind — but the calendar debate rages on
Kriel shrugs off the 11-months-a-year grind while SA Rugby battles New Zealand's resistance to a global calendar overhaul — the piece maps both the player reality and the political impasse.
Jackman: Nienaber was right, coherent — but the coaching structure raises bigger questions
Jackman rates Nienaber's press conference as coherent and factually grounded, but his breakdown of Nienaber's described role — coordinating logistics rather than owning the game plan — raises pointed questions about where strategic accountability actually sits in the Leinster coaching structure.
Jackman backs Nienaber: 'He had his facts' — and the press conference revealed something bigger
Jackman validates Nienaber's press conference as coherent and largely correct, then offers a pointed structural critique: based on Nienaber's own description of his role, nobody at Leinster appears to be co-ordinating the overall game plan — which, Jackman argues, shows on the pitch.
Umaga wants the All Blacks feared again — and Rennie's the man to do it
Umaga admits the All Blacks have lost their shine and outlines how Rennie's leadership culture — and Savea's role as a players' voice — aims to restore it ahead of a season that ends with four Tests against the Springboks.
150 caps, one goal: Grobbelaar wants a Murrayfield final
Grobbelaar reaches 150 Bulls caps in the URC semifinal against Glasgow — the piece looks at what he brings, how he's processed the pain of previous finals, and why the Bulls scrum could be the difference at Murrayfield.
Nienaber questions his Leinster future ahead of Stormers semi
Nienaber publicly questioned his future at Leinster ahead of the URC semifinal against the Stormers, saying sustained media hostility has left him unsure whether he'll see out his contract — adding a charged backdrop to what is already a high-stakes clash for the Cape side.
Grobbelaar's 150th Cap Means Nothing Without the Win
With 150 Bulls caps on the line in the URC semi-final, Grobbelaar is focused entirely on the result — the feature traces his career, his role in the Bulls' set-piece game plan, and why he's treating Murrayfield as opportunity rather than revenge.
Who steps up at hooker if Marx is seriously hurt?
Marx's playoff injury has exposed South Africa's unresolved hooker depth problem. The piece assesses the full candidate pool — Wessels, Grobbelaar, Van Staden, Venter, Dweba and teenage prospect Mnebelele — and what 2026 might look like as the last real development window before the World Cup.
Nienaber puts his Leinster future on the line over defensive system
Nienaber says he'll adapt his defensive system if it serves Leinster, but warns that if he can't coach the alternative to the highest level, he's not the right guy — a candid statement that frames his entire Leinster future around whether the blitz can be made to work.
Why 'Gazza' Willemse is the insurance policy Bok fans should trust
Rich maps the 2022 injury-to-opportunity parallel to argue that Libbok and Willemse provide Erasmus real cover at 10 — and that Bok fans fretting about Feinberg-Mngomezulu's absence are underselling the depth already in the system.
Mchunu's scrum dominance is making him impossible to ignore
Mchunu has been dismantling opposing scrums and collecting MoM awards at DHL Stadium, and his coach says there's still plenty more to come. Rich frames him as a future Bok regular and draws the Beast Mtawarira comparison with some justification.
Matfield unbothered by SFM injury — backs Pollard, Libbok and a resurgent Papier
Matfield is relaxed about SFM's likely three-month absence, backing Pollard and Libbok to cover at 10 while making a strong case that Papier — despite a decimated scrum-half pool — is playing well enough to be a genuine asset rather than a contingency.
Mchunu is becoming a problem for everyone who isn't a Stormers fan
Mchunu has been the Stormers' standout performer in the URC knockouts, and his coach's warning that there's still more to come from the converted loosehead is the kind of thing Bok selectors should be reading carefully.
Janse van Rensburg stakes his England claim in Planet Rugby's PREM Team of the Week
Planet Rugby's Round 17 PREM Team of the Week spotlights Janse van Rensburg's timely statement against his England rivals, Feyi-Waboso's relentless form, and Fitz Harding's growing case for a Lions or England call-up.
Blitzboks need a final appearance in Bordeaux to seal a historic double
The Blitzboks arrive in Bordeaux four points clear at the top of the World Championship standings — a final appearance seals the double. The piece breaks down the points permutations and a tough pool draw featuring Kenya, Great Britain and Fiji.
Bulls favourites, Stormers bloodied but unbowed — URC semi-final verdicts
Nel argues the Bulls are legitimate semi-final favourites given Glasgow's recent vulnerabilities and the Murrayfield venue switch, while the Stormers head to Dublin shorthanded — Feinberg-Mngomezulu, Reinach, Senatla and possibly Du Plessis all out — but with a powerful pack and nothing to lose against Leinster.