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  • Heyneke Meyer worried about the poor form of Morne Steyn




    Springboks coach Heyneke Meyer is worried about the poor form of fly-half Morne Steyn before the August kick-off of the new Rugby Championship.

    Leading 2011 Rugby World Cup points scorer Steyn missed 12 of 22 kicks at goal and several drop goal attempts during a 2-0 series victory over England with the third Test drawn 14-14 Saturday in Port Elizabeth.

    Usually the darling of South African crowds, the 29-year-old Northern Bulls player was booed by some spectators at Nelson Mandela Bay Stadium after a second-half drop goal effort drifted wide.

    Steyn gave a virtuoso performance at the same ground last year before the World Cup, kicking all 18 points in a Tri-Nations win against the All Blacks.

    In the endless public and media debate about who among Steyn, Patrick Lambie, Peter Grant, Johan Goosen and Elton Jantjies should wear the No 10 green and gold shirt, the superb goal kicking of the Bulls star has settled many arguments.

    But as the ability to constantly plant the ball between the posts from all angles and distances deserts Steyn, Meyer is hoping a return to Super 15 action from next weekend will help the first-choice pivot recover his form.

    "Morne is a worry at the moment as we know he is not playing well," admitted Meyer, "but I thought he played well in the previous two games, it was just his kicking that was off.

    "He has high standards and will come back stronger with at least three Super games to get himself right and he knows we need him in the Rugby Championship. I have a lot of confidence in him although he is not striking the ball well now."

    Meyer, who coached the Pretoria-based Bulls to Super 14 and Currie Cup glory before succeeding Peter de Villiers as Springboks coach this year, said he opted not to replace Steyn with Jantjies in Port Elizabeth because of inexperience.

    "I did not make that move because there was a lack of experience on the field as the match approached the closing stages," he said of his decision to leave the young Golden Lions fly-half on the bench.

    Meyer admitted England were the better team in the dead rubber as they ended a run of nine consecutive losses against South Africa, including defeats in Durban (22-17) and Johannesburg (36-27) this month.

    "All credit to England as they were the better team on the night. They adapted much better than us to the wet, windy conditions and probed once or twice behind us and defended for their lives."

    England coach Stuart Lancaster, another post-World Cup appointment as Martin Johnson quit after a disappointing campaign, said he was "gutted" not to win in Port Elizabeth.

    "We wanted to win the game and the series. We failed, but there are plenty of positives to take as well. When you look at where we were and where we are now, I think we are in a good place," he stressed.

    "Go back six months and we lost a huge amount of experience out of this England side. When you take out Jonny Wilkinson, Simon Shaw, Mike Tindall and Lewis Moody -- it takes time to rebuild.

    "When Owen Farrell came on for Toby Flood we had under-21 players wearing the No 10, 12 and 13 shirts. We have young lads making debuts and I thought Alex Goode was outstanding at full-back."

    Formerly known as the Tri- Nations, the Rugby Championship features world champions New Zealand, Australia, South Africa and debutants Argentina with the six-round series running from mid-August to early October.
    Comments 45 Comments
    1. DJ...'s Avatar
      DJ... -
      Guys, please remember that Heineken is a beer. His name is Heyneke...
    1. joeymojo's Avatar
      joeymojo -
      Cant understand why Grant hasn't been given a chance
    1. thestaggy's Avatar
      thestaggy -
      Quote Originally Posted by Guantanamo View Post
      Johan Goosen is the future. Hougaard performed much better when the forwards were doing there jobs.

      The future could look like this:
      9 Hougaard
      10 Goosen
      11 Habana/Mvovo
      12/13 Serfontein
      13/12 Lambie
      14 JP Pietersen
      15 Steyn

      That is a solid backline in my eyes. Also our forwards were pretty much 3rd string. Etzbeth looks like he could be a starter in the future but we were missing Bekker, Alberts, Burger, Smith, Vermulen... A long list of very influential players. Also the one Baby Bok might find himself in the squad soon. Him and Kolisi could very well be our future 6/7 pairing.
      No ways Steyn plays anywhere but 12. When he's on his game you wil be hard-pressed to find a better 12. He can kick, defend like a trojan and shatter defensive lines. At fullback he is a complete waste of ability.
    1. Picard's Avatar
      Picard -
      Gio Aplon is also golden at 15.

      Hougaard needs to get back to his quickness of old otherwise he will become a burden.
    1. thestaggy's Avatar
      thestaggy -
      Quote Originally Posted by Picard View Post
      At my school we teach our children not to boo anything, anytime, anywhere. We even drill our provincial and national track en field athletes to not celebrate in the manner as Usain Bolt.

      Be gracious in victory, magnanimous in defeat.
      +1.

      I think it is shockingly distasteful when a kicker from an opposing team is booed. I don't know where that nonsense started. If you watch rugger from themid 90s and backwards you could hear a pin drop when anybody was aiming for the sticks.