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Easter: England's losing streak is their biggest asset at Ellis Park
Easter argues England's four-game losing streak removes all pressure and makes Ellis Park a genuine free swing — but only if they achieve scrum parity against the 'freak' Nché and execute a disciplined kicking game before Libbok finds his rhythm.
Springboks vs England: Form, history and what the tape reveals ahead of Ellis Park
A five-match retrospective on the Springboks-England rivalry ahead of Saturday's Nations Championship opener at Ellis Park, with Louw identifying the tactical patterns — scrum dominance, bench impact, early England leads — that have defined recent encounters.
Joe Lewis appointment is Erasmus building for the long game — not just one England test
Joe Lewis's appointment as Bok analyst is less about what he knows of England and more about Erasmus systematically closing the gap between South Africa's lean analysis set-up and the multi-analyst departments that France, England and others now run.
50 caps, but Kolbe's Bok legacy runs far deeper
Kolbe hits 50 Springbok caps against England at Ellis Park — a milestone that feels light given his outsized impact. The piece revisits his most decisive moments and 21 Test tries, with Erasmus reflecting on how far he's come from the days when his size was questioned.
Nations Championship: World Cup audition or squad-building exercise?
Erasmus has publicly downplayed the Nations Championship as a squad-building platform rather than a trophy hunt — but the Boks still open against England at Ellis Park with points to prove. The piece maps the competitive landscape heading into the first round, with travel burdens, injury lists, and new coaching appointments all shaping how seriously each nation is treating the inaugural edition.
Erasmus: Libbok is the right 10 for Ellis Park — but Pollard's not going anywhere
Erasmus explains the Libbok selection as a match-specific call — Ellis Park altitude, England's likely tempo, and an extra week of preparation time all favour Libbok for the opener, while Pollard's place in the plans remains secure.
Rassie sees another gear in Thomas du Toit
Erasmus rates du Toit among the world's best tightheads but thinks Bath's influence has only unlocked part of his ceiling — worth reading for the insight into what the Bok coaching staff still expects from him.
Libbok gets his shot, Tony-ball gets its backline — five things Rassie's selection tells us
Erasmus's team selection is read as a full philosophical commitment to Tony-ball — Libbok over Pollard is the headline call, backed by a backline engineered for pace and broken play, while the forward pack stays brutally conservative. The one risk flag is a bench light on positional cover in key areas.
Erasmus tight-lipped on England team prediction — but delighted with analyst coup
Erasmus explains why he's staying quiet on England's team this time around, and goes deep on the Joe Lewis analyst recruitment — framing it as a long-overdue capacity fix rather than a spy coup, while acknowledging the intel flows both ways given England's current connections to former Bok staff.
Earl's blunt warning ahead of Ellis Park showdown
Earl is demanding a results-or-nothing mentality from England ahead of Ellis Park, framing the Bok encounter as the kind of brutal benchmark you can't bluff your way through.
Half-empty Ellis Park exposes the real cost of Springbok Test rugby
With Ellis Park half-empty ahead of the England Test, Jan de Koning unpacks why — steep ticket pricing, urban decay around the venue, and stretched consumer wallets are doing more damage than SARU's Iran-war explanation suggests.
Why Porthen over Louw is smarter than it looks
Porthen's tighthead bench selection over Louw comes down to scrumming form in camp, a mobility match-up against England's younger side, and Louw needing time to recover from a bruising personal and physical stretch — Nel breaks down Erasmus's full selection logic, including the Libbok call and the lockless bench.
Rassie banks on Northampton's DNA shaping England's Nations Championship game plan
Erasmus expects England's Saints-heavy squad to dictate an expansive, attacking approach at Ellis Park — a read that's already shaped his bench selection. The piece unpacks the logic and what it means for Saturday's Nations Championship opener.
Rassie's England selection: power up front, but the second half could tell a different story
Erasmus has named his strongest available pack to target England's scrum and maul from kick-off, but Cardinelli argues the real tactical intrigue lies on the bench — with Hanekom, Van Staden and a revised front-row rotation signalling a planned second-half tempo shift. Williams and Libbok also face a genuine audition running the show from the start.
Springboks could lose world No.1 ranking on Nations Championship opening weekend
The Boks' world No.1 ranking, intact since September, faces its first real test on the opening weekend of the Nations Championship — the piece breaks down exactly how they could be knocked off top spot.
Libbok gets his chance, Porthen earns his stripes — but Pollard's omission is the real story
Libbok starts, Porthen's future looks bright, and Etzebeth is back — but the real talking point is Pollard not making the 23 at all, with Erasmus choosing no specialist bench playmaker for the Nations Championship opener against England.
Libbok starts, Van der Merwe dropped despite four tries — Bok squad winners and losers dissected
Libbok starts at 10, Van der Merwe is dropped despite four tries against the Barbarians, and Pollard doesn't even make the 23 — Planet Rugby breaks down the key winners and losers from the Springbok squad named for the Nations Championship opener against England.
Libbok gets his shot, Porthen earns the hype — but Pollard's omission is the real talking point
A squad breakdown for the England Nations Championship opener — Libbok starts at 10, Porthen is tipped for a long future, but Pollard's total omission despite SFM's injury is the headline call worth examining.
Kitshoff explains how Erasmus gets Bok players to buy into his 5% moments
Kitshoff breaks down Erasmus's buy-in formula: 95% orthodox prep, 5% targeted innovation framed around manufacturing mismatches and unfair advantages — with Nyakane adding that the novelty also keeps the squad stimulated in training.
Kitshoff pulls back the curtain on Erasmus's 5% philosophy
Kitshoff reveals Erasmus frames trick plays as just 5% of weekly prep, selling each one on the specific mismatch it creates — with Nyakane adding that the novelty keeps players sharp in training and unpredictable on match day.