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Gqeberha double-header: What Erasmus is really looking for on Saturday
Gavin Rich unpacks the Gqeberha double-header as a deliberate personnel exercise: Quan Horn auditions at flyhalf for a six/two bench role ahead of the All Blacks series, Riley Norton gets early senior exposure, and the SA A curtain-raiser doubles as a star-watch for the next generation — all before England arrive in two weeks.
Bulls' best shot at Croke Park is to channel the Boks' November blueprint
Rich argues the Bulls' only viable path at Croke Park is the Bok November blueprint — scrum dominance and set-piece attrition — but questions whether their passive defensive system and identity drift this season will let them execute it before Leinster's fast start puts the game beyond reach.
Gqeberha double-header: depth audit or confidence builder?
Rich analyses the Gqeberha double-header as a depth audit ahead of the serious international season — with Horn at flyhalf, Norton at lock, and a raft of near-debutants in the A side all auditioning against limited opposition.
White: This Bulls squad is better equipped — and they know they can't waste this chance
Jake White makes a personnel-driven case for a Bulls upset on Friday, pointing to five returning Test-calibre starters as the difference from last year's final — while urging the squad to treat this as the chance they may not get again.
Bulls' URC Final Blueprint: Win Ugly or Don't Win at All
Rich argues the Bulls must commit fully to a Bok-style forward-dominated game plan — set piece pressure, direct ball, early physicality — or risk being picked apart by Leinster's phase attack. The identity question is the crux: will the Bulls back their pack, or try to play Leinster's game?
Robertson and Perenara: Bok depth makes them 'a very good team'
Robertson and Perenara have offered an frank pre-match assessment that doubles as a compliment to Erasmus's programme — with squad depth and selection integrity identified as the Boks' core strengths ahead of the Barbarians clash.
Erasmus flags a Covid-era hole in the Springbok depth chart
Erasmus credits SA Rugby's 2013 development pathway for the Boks' current depth, but warns that a Covid-era gap will create a thin spot in the 22–26 age bracket — and explains why he's less worried about lock depth than the outside world is.
Cullen backs 'defensive genius' Nienaber ahead of URC Final showdown with Bulls
Cullen dismisses criticism of Nienaber and calls him a defensive genius — with the added intrigue that Pollard and Le Roux know Nienaber's system inside out, making Friday's URC Final a fascinating tactical chess match.
Esterhuizen backs Horn experiment and relishes Baa-baas midfield battle
Esterhuizen previews the Barbarians clash, backing Quan Horn's surprise flyhalf start and flagging the Nankivell-Vakatawa midfield as a serious test — worth a look for anyone tracking the Nations Championship squad picture.
Mallett's blueprint: How the Bulls can upset Leinster at Croke Park
Mallett argues the Bulls' only realistic path to a URC title is to abandon phase-play ambitions and suffocate Leinster with set-piece pressure and Stormers-style line speed — a system that left Leinster visibly spent after the semi-final.
White: Bulls are better equipped this time — here's why
White argues the Bulls are meaningfully stronger than the side he led to last year's final, citing the return of five Springboks and a year's extra maturity — while cautioning that Leinster still need to be beaten, not just outprepared.
Rassie's blueprint: How the Bulls can break their Dublin curse
Erasmus points to the Stormers' near-upset as the tactical blueprint for the Bulls: physical dominance, pressure on Leinster's gain line, and the discipline to sustain it for a full 80 minutes — something ill-discipline denied the Cape side in Dublin.
Ackermann's Louw gamble: Is the Bulls boss getting his team selection wrong for the URC Final?
Jackman and White argue Ackermann is leaving a key tactical advantage on the bench by not starting Louw — with Leinster's front row already depleted, the Bulls should be targeting early scrum dominance rather than saving their best tighthead for the second half.
Bulls tipped to end URC final hoodoo — but the scrum is everything
Planet Rugby tips the Bulls to edge Leinster by three at Croke Park, with the set-piece battle — and Porter's absence — framed as the pivotal factor in what should be a far tighter affair than last year's final.
Bulls vs Leinster: Can Ackermann's Side Finally Break the Final Curse?
Erasmus points the Bulls to the Stormers' semifinal blueprint as Rugby365 previews Friday's URC Final, with full lineups, key matchup breakdowns, and a Leinster-by-six prediction.
The Zimbabwe fixture is Erasmus's masterstroke in locking down South Africa's next generation
The SA 'A' v Zimbabwe fixture is a deliberate regulatory play by Erasmus — World Rugby Regulation 8.2 means every uncapped player on the pitch is formally captured to their nation, locking 18 emerging Springboks prospects to South Africa before rival unions can pursue them via residency pathways.
Gavin Rich: Boks, Bulls, Barbarians — and a season full of promise (and problems)
Gavin Rich previews a packed Springbok season, with sharp criticism of the Baltimore leg undermining the All Blacks series concept, scepticism about the Nations Championship's credibility, and cautious optimism for the Bulls ahead of the URC final.
Kirwan wants Rennie to channel Erasmus — even if it means copying what he hates
Kirwan is using Erasmus's selection courage — Bomb Squad and all — as the yardstick for what Rennie must deliver, arguing Robertson's conservatism cost the All Blacks and that genuine boldness in selection is now the minimum standard post-Bok dominance.
Giliomee on blocking out the hype ahead of SA 'A' debut
Giliomee speaks ahead of his SA 'A' appearance against Zimbabwe — touching on managing the Bok-prospect hype, his unconventional development path through Sevens and multiple positions, and why familiar backline combinations could be a strength on Saturday.
Esterhuizen relishing the midfield test as Boks prepare to treat BaaBaas clash like a proper Test
Esterhuizen previews a spicy midfield contest against Nankivell and Vakatawa, explains why the Boks won't deviate from their processes regardless of the Barbarians' attacking intentions, and offers an insight into how Erasmus's squad thinks about positional versatility.