
‘There is going to be disappointment': Faf and Kriel admit fans expected dominance
Springbok captain Jesse Kriel scores a try against Italy. After the game he said his side failed to follow up on their momentum from the first half. Picture: Anton Geyser/Gallo Images
Although they expected a tough challenge and acknowledged their opponents' performance, the Springboks conceded they did not meet the expectations of their supporters in Saturday's Test at Loftus.
The Springboks won six tries to four (final score 42–24) in their first Test of the season, which was expected to be entirely one-sided.
Italy may be vastly improved when compared to previous years. But they are ranked 10th in the world and playing away against the world champions with an understrength side.
Still, they fought back from a 28–3 deficit at half-time to win the battle at the breakdown and show up some of the best locks in the world in the lineout. Italy even scored a try from a driving maul that started around the Springboks' 22, something unheard of against the traditionally dominant forward pack.
They controlled momentum to score 21 points to the Springboks' 14 in the second half.
Kriel says the world wrote Italy off
'We knew from the beginning of the week it was going to be a tough Test match,' said Jesse Kriel, standing in for Siya Kolisi to become the 67th Springbok captain on the day. He had warned fans earlier in the week not to write Italy off.
'We know the Italians are extremely passionate nation. They pitched up tonight very energetic, and that showed up in their play. We didn't get exactly what we wanted with the quick ball on attack. In defence, we are not happy with four tries [against us]…
'There's a lot of things for us to work on. We drive extremely high standards in the squad. The whole rugby world were writing them off and we certainly weren't.'
He said the Springboks failed to follow up on their strong first-half performance. 'In the second half they defended like their lives depended on it. So we are happy with the win but a big Test match awaits us next week.'
Springboks could not hold onto momentum against Italy
Scrumhalf Faf de Klerk, who returned after missing much of last season due to injury, said 'there is going to be disappointment in tonight's performance'.
'There was a lot of good stuff and bad things we can work on,' he said. 'Credit to Italy, they really made it hard for us, especially at the breakdown. We couldn't get that momentum going.
'I thought their forwards were phenomenal tonight. That is definitely something we must look in the week at, make sure we fix it before the next Test.'
The Springboks play their second and final Test against Italy at Nelson Mandela Bay Stadium in Gqeberha next Saturday.

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


The Citizen
29 minutes ago
- The Citizen
Springboks may change plans for Gqeberha Test, says Rassie
Despite a comfortable opening win over Italy, the Springboks are frustrated with their performance, which will impact their selection for the second match. After a lacklustre 42-24 win over Italy in their incoming series opener at Loftus on Saturday, the Springboks may have to change their plans heading into the second Test in Gqeberha this coming weekend, according to coach Rassie Erasmus. The Boks were overwhelming favourites for the match after naming a strong team and coming up against a weakened and inexperienced Italy side, missing a number of their star players through being left at home and injury. But instead it was the European visitors who impressed the most, defending like demons over the game and fighting back from a 28-3 half time deficit, to eventually trail 35-24 at a late stage, before the Boks made it safe. Changing plan Before the match Erasmus had already told the majority of the players who would be in action in the second Test, but admitted on Saturday evening that things might now be a bit different as they decide who to start and play off the bench to try and get the best result in the coming match. 'Internally we've announced the 13 or 14 players that will definitely get a run next week, and that we'd build the bench or starting line-up around those guys,' explained Erasmus. 'We won't discard those guys but some of them might move to the bench, and some of the real standout players (in the first Test) might start again. So the make-up of the team may change to handle the physicality that Italy threw at us. 'You'd think a team that made 120 tackles in the first half would break in the second half. But it's a team that's fit and passionate and we have to make sure that the team that we put out next week is not just a team that can go 50 or 60 minutes, it must be a team that can go 80 minutes. 'We have to pick nine guys to go with the others we have (already chosen), and decide whether they start or come off the bench. Damian de Allende has a bit of a hamstring (niggle) but luckily, we don't have any (big) injuries, just a few bruised egos.' Italy defence Italy's rush defence managed to stop the evolving Bok attack in its tracks for the most part, despite the home team running in six tries, and ran in three tries of their own in the second 40 to win the second half, which left Erasmus scratching his head at what he called a very frustrating performance. 'It was frustrating because we had a really lekker week. The guys got really into it (training), things went well (in the build-up), and it was nice and physical. But I think we as coaches sometimes make a mistake with that,' said Erasmus. 'We felt we were really ready for this game, but you need to drive it even more when it's going so well during the week. So it wasn't just the players who made mistakes, but us as coaches as well who didn't push the right buttons. 'We can't just point fingers at them (the players). So we will have to relook at everything. But also give Italy credit, hell they manned up, buckled down and really gave it to us, and we should have handled that a lot better. We as the coaching staff will need to get that right.'


The South African
an hour ago
- The South African
When will Springboks name new-look team for Italy rematch?
When the Springboks conduct their post-match review from the first Test against Italy, there will undoubtedly be some stern examinations of certain shortcomings despite a comfortable victory. Rassie Erasmus will know that perspective is just as important as expectation at the start of a Test season when the Springboks are just getting their wheels in motion, but he has already made it clear that there will be a change in thinking when it comes to selection. 'Internally we've announced that 13, 14 players that will definitely get a run next week, and that we'd build the bench or starting line-up around those guys,' he said. 'We won't discard those guys but some of them might move to the bench, some of the real standout players who played today might start again.' The Springbok team for the second Test against at Italy this weekend will be named on Tuesday at 15:00. The teams will meet again at the Nelson Mandela Bay Stadium in Gqeberha this weekend before the Springboks wrap up their July campaign against Georgia at the Mbombela Stadium in Nelspruit a week later on 19 July. 'We let ourselves down at the breakdown a bit,' Springbok captain Jesse Kriel commented. 'I thought they slowed our ball down pretty well. We obviously wanted to attack off quick ball there, but we couldn't get that at stages in the game. 'But we're looking forward to the Test match this week. I think it's set up nicely and lots of work for us to do before then.' WHAT TEAM CHANGES WOULD YOU MAKE? Let us know by leaving a comment below, or send a WhatsApp to 060 011 0211. Subscribe to The South African website's newsletters and follow us on WhatsApp, Facebook, X and Bluesky for the latest news.


The Citizen
3 hours ago
- The Citizen
Kwagga says Boks did not meet their standards against Italy
The Springbok loose forward also bemoaned their loss of momentum after Tshituka's disallowed try, and the loss of the breakdown battle. Kwagga Smith says the Springboks even though they analysed Italy well during the week, they were still not up to scratch. Picture: Ashley Vlotman/Gallo Images Springbok loose forward Kwagga Smith said there were several areas they needed to improve after their frustrating 42–24 victory against Italy on Saturday. The world champions hosted the 10th-ranked side (which was also understrength) at Loftus, with the rugby world expecting a big win, even though Italy had been playing well. They beat Namibia 73–6 a week ago. Additionally, since the start of last year, they have beaten Wales (twice), Georgia, Japan, Tonga, and Scotland, while drawing against France and losing to Ireland by five points and England by three. The 18-point victory almost felt like a loss, however. While Springbok players and coach Rassie Erasmus were dejected after the game, the Italy squad were all smiles. Boks did not meet their standards 'We want to be the best team in the world,' Smith said. 'You've got to be honest with yourself. If you know you didn't play to your ability and you didn't play well, although you win by 18 points, it doesn't matter. It's all about your standards and living up to those standards.' He said the Springboks knew Italy would be physical after analysing them this week. 'They really did well, even though we knew it was coming. All credit to them.' The scoreline would have looked different if not for Italy's disallowed try and another that was held up, while the Springboks had one try disallowed. But it was Italy's try from a driving maul starting around the South Africans' 22, that silenced the crowd and appeared to emotionally hurt the Springboks, who are traditionally dominant in pack battles. 'We are disappointed in that. We never want to give away a maul try,' Smith added. 'I think in the last three years we didn't give away a lot of maul tries. So that obviously hurts. We will definitely look at that and see where we can rectify to be better next week.' Springboks fail to maintain momentum against Italy After leading 28–3 at the break, the Springboks lost all their momentum in the second half, scoring 14 points against Italy's 21 in that period. It all seemed to change after Vincent Tshituka's try was disallowed for an earlier obstruction. Smith said the Springboks should have 'kept punching' after that. 'We allowed them in, and that obviously gave them a lot of confidence and momentum.' He said momentum is hard to stop when you cannot get continuity, 'and the breakdown is a mess every time, and the ball spits out. It is difficult because you are just playing scrappy rugby, literally just fixing mistakes the whole time.' He said the South Africans would have to analyse how they lost the breakdown battle.