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Bok depth is giving the coaches selection headaches — and England should be worried
Joubert and Rich argue Bok depth is at an unprecedented level, creating real selection dilemmas for the coaches — and a serious warning for England ahead of Ellis Park.
Hougaard: Du Preez was so good the coaches sat down when he spoke
Hougaard recalls du Preez commanding such tactical authority at the Bulls that coaches would defer to him in meetings — a fascinating glimpse into how that era's dominant teams actually functioned.
Mallett: Pollard can't afford the same margin for error as his rivals
Mallett argues Pollard faces a stricter margin for error than Libbok or Feinberg-Mngomezulu — his value is built on flawless execution, not attacking flair, which makes costly errors against Leinster especially damaging heading into the England clash.
Burger backs Horn at 10 — but flags the real test still to come
Burger praises Horn's fullback-brained approach to fly-half but warns that game management under Test-match pressure remains the unproven part of the equation.
Full circle at Ellis Park: Kolisi on the moment that started it all
Kolisi revisits the 2018 Ellis Park comeback — down 24-3, no answers under the posts, and a crash course in shared leadership — as the Boks prepare to return to the same ground against the same opposition for the Nations Championship opener.
Erasmus: 'We don't see the Nations Championship as a competition'
Erasmus says the Boks won't adjust their approach to chase Nations Championship log points — each Test is treated as a standalone match, with squad rotation across the window as the priority over competition standings.
Joubert: Janse van Rensburg would've relished the Ellis Park stage
Joubert believes Janse van Rensburg had every reason to want to prove himself against the Boks at Ellis Park — and the full piece digs into what his absence means.
Ex-Bok: Janse van Rensburg would have had a point to prove against the Boks
Marius Joubert weighs in on Benhard Janse van Rensburg missing the chance to face the Boks in an England shirt — and why that fixture would have meant more than most.
Burger sees chaos-creator in Norton — with one fix needed
Burger backs Norton as a natural fit for Brown's chaos-style attack, identifies a clean offloading game as the one tweak needed — and the injury-ravaged lock stocks mean that fix could fast-track a full Test debut.
Graham Henry's praise puts Rassie's depth chart in sharp perspective
Graham Henry's public defence of Rassie's rotation policy gives this depth-chart breakdown an unusual angle — with position-by-position analysis showing just how far Springbok depth now extends beyond the current 46-man squad.
Rassie isn't buying into the Nations Championship bonus-point game
Erasmus has made clear the Boks aren't chasing bonus points in the Nations Championship — winning Tests and building toward the World Cup is the only metric that counts. This piece examines whether that mindset will hold across the top nations and what it means for the new competition's real-world impact.
Norton's Bok call-up wasn't luck — the numbers and the attitude back it up
Norton's Barbarians stats — 80 minutes, 100% tackle success, a try — underpin why Erasmus pulled him from the Junior World Championship. The piece builds a compelling case that this is a long-term bet on a player already embedded in Bok thinking, not a panic call.
Why Erasmus chose Norton over Van der Mescht — and what it reveals about Bok lock priorities
Erasmus explains the Norton-over-Van der Mescht call as a tactical fit decision rather than a quality judgment — the piece breaks down the Bok lock crisis and how the coaching staff are navigating it.
Riley Norton: The numbers behind a call-up that surprised everyone but Rassie
A stat-backed case for why Norton's Bok call-up reflects genuine coaching conviction rather than desperation — and why the Erasmus/van der Mescht comparison misses the point entirely.
Watson: Kolbe is England's biggest headache — but Bok versatility is the real danger
Watson names Kolbe as England's biggest individual concern but argues the Boks' real edge is their ability to change tactical identity based on which fly-half starts — a flexibility that makes them uniquely hard to prepare for.
Contepomi's warning: Boks are dangerous precisely because attack and forward dominance now combine
Contepomi argues the Boks' real danger isn't attack or forward dominance in isolation — it's that Tony Brown's influence has made them fluent in both, with the football intelligence to switch between them at will. A sharp external read ahead of the England test.
Bok Women targeting top-ten rankings push ahead of USA test at Ellis Park
Gunter frames the USA test as the opening move in a deliberate 2026 rankings push, with a high-intensity Stellenbosch camp and clear ambitions to go further than the World Cup quarter-final run suggested.
'A young Willie le Roux' — Bok legends see a golden generation emerging
De Villiers, Burger, and Shimange identify Luan Gilomee, Zekhethelo Siyaya, and Haashim Pead as the standout talents from SA A's win over Zimbabwe, with Kolisi adding his own praise for the U20s group now training with the senior squad.
Erasmus warns: don't read England's Six Nations form into what's coming at Ellis Park
Erasmus flags England's youth-plus-experience mix as a genuine danger at Ellis Park, draws parallels between his own squad rotation and Borthwick's, and reserves particular respect for Pollock's on-field output despite the surrounding hype.
Fit over form: Why Norton got the call ahead of Van der Mescht
Erasmus explains the Norton-over-Van der Mescht call: it's a player-type decision, not a form judgment. Norton's lineout leadership, athleticism and system familiarity won out over Van der Mescht's physicality — which the Boks can cover elsewhere. A useful read for understanding how Erasmus is managing a depleted lock group.