Why are we asking you to sign in? Find out more here
By continuing, you are indicating that you accept our Terms of Service and Privacy Policy .
Why are we asking you to sign in? Find out more here
By continuing, you are indicating that you accept our Terms of Service and Privacy Policy .
SARU to push for race quota in South African rugby
FORMER TWO-TIME World Cup winners South Africa will include seven non-white players in 23-man match squads next year if dramatic transformation proposals are adopted by the national rugby body.
And at least five of the seven should be on the field at any time during Tests leading up to the 2015 Rugby World Cup in England, a South African Rugby Union (SARU) statement said.
Only three non-whites — wings Cornal Hendricks and Bryan Habana and prop Tendai Mtawarira — started in a Rugby Championship defeat by Australia last Saturday.
They were among four black forwards and three black backs included in a 30-man Springboks squad selected by coach Heyneke Meyer to tour Australasia.
Facing intense government pressure to transform a historically white sport, SARU want half the national team to be non-white by the 2019 season.
The ’50-50′ plan would also apply to national sevens, youth and schoolboy teams and to the Currie Cup, the national inter-provincial rugby competition and a Springboks breeding ground.
SARU separates mixed-race players like Habana and black African players like Zimbabwe-born Mtawarira in their proposals amid government anger over the lack of black African Springboks.
When Meyer names his 30-man World Cup squad for England, at least five of the non-whites are expected to be black Africans.
SARU said in a statement that ignoring the racial imbalance in national teams would “put the sport at peril.
“The plan has been shared with SASCOC (national Olympic body) and the sports ministry and the next step is for the general council to sign it off.”
SARU development manager Mervin Green blamed the slow reform pace on “a lack of proper talent identification and development programmes” at provincial level.
Transformation plans come amid growing media unhappiness with Meyer for recalling veteran white players rather than giving emerging black Africans a sustained chance.
Respected senior rugby writer Dan Retief said in a City Press newspaper column that if anyone ever picked a rod for his own back it was Meyer.
“Meyer has made some odd selections and arguably failed to rebuild while being out of touch with the imperatives of the country he lives in.”
Retief singled out black African flank-cum-lock Teboho ‘Oupa’ Mohoje, who won his first cap as a replacement against Scotland this year.
Despite a short, impressive debut, he has not had a minute of game time since while 33-year-old Juan Smith was recalled to start against Argentina after a near-four-year Test absence and performed poorly.
Nobel peace prize laureate and leading anti-apartheid campaigner Desmond Tutu recently criticised the lack of Springbok game time for black Africans.
He lamented the “tortoise pace” at which racial integration had taken place in the national team since the collapse of apartheid 20 years ago.
“Particularly hurtful is the selection of black players as peripheral squad members — never given the chance to settle down and earn their spurs.”
Cricket is the most racially integrated of the three major sports in South Africa with half the team non-white while the football side contains one white, England-based midfielder Dean Furman.
Toulouse’s Gaël Fickou was turned completely inside out by a Brive winger last weekend
Neck injury rules Munster bound Bleyendaal out until 2015
To embed this post, copy the code below on your site
New Proposal South Africa