De Bruin praises experimental Bok Women's half-back pairing of Roos and Webb
Springbok Women's performance coach Swys de Bruin is happy with the early signs from his experimental half-back pairing of Nadine Roos and Eloise Webb.
Roos started at scrumhalf after she had started at fullback in the first Test at Loftus, with regular centre Webb coming off the bench to start at flyhalf in Saturday's second Test against Canada in Gqeberha. The move was part of a backline reshuffle that had also seen Byrhandré Dolf start at fullback. Libbie Janse van Rensburg, who started at flyhalf in Pretoria, slotted in at inside centre.
The South Africans succumbed 33-5 to the world's No 2 team in the second Test at the Nelson Mandela Bay Stadium after losing the first 50-20.
'For the amount of pressure, it was a tough ask of Eloise to play her first game ever at 10. Apart from two little mistakes she recovered lovely. And Nadine plays great wherever she plays,' De Bruin said in his post-match media conference.
'I thought all our steppers, the faster girls, did well. Dolfy was superb, Jakkie (Cilliers) had a few good runs, Zintle (Mpupha) also had good runs. So the score mustn't now confuse what we're doing.'

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IOL News
8 hours ago
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De Bruin praises experimental Bok Women's half-back pairing of Roos and Webb
Springbok Women's Sevens star Eloise Webb got her first start at flyhalf for the Springbok Women against Canada on Saturday. Springbok Women's performance coach Swys de Bruin is happy with the early signs from his experimental half-back pairing of Nadine Roos and Eloise Webb. Roos started at scrumhalf after she had started at fullback in the first Test at Loftus, with regular centre Webb coming off the bench to start at flyhalf in Saturday's second Test against Canada in Gqeberha. The move was part of a backline reshuffle that had also seen Byrhandré Dolf start at fullback. Libbie Janse van Rensburg, who started at flyhalf in Pretoria, slotted in at inside centre. The South Africans succumbed 33-5 to the world's No 2 team in the second Test at the Nelson Mandela Bay Stadium after losing the first 50-20. 'For the amount of pressure, it was a tough ask of Eloise to play her first game ever at 10. Apart from two little mistakes she recovered lovely. And Nadine plays great wherever she plays,' De Bruin said in his post-match media conference. 'I thought all our steppers, the faster girls, did well. Dolfy was superb, Jakkie (Cilliers) had a few good runs, Zintle (Mpupha) also had good runs. So the score mustn't now confuse what we're doing.'


The Citizen
13 hours ago
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Grant Williams on the ‘stolen' Willie le Roux try and return to green and gold
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IOL News
18 hours ago
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Springbok Women's coach reflects on missed opportunities in defeat to Canada
Springbok Women's performance coach Swys de Bruin feels had they converted the breaks they created in the defeat against Canada, it could have been a different story. The South Africans were left to rue missed opportunities as they succumbed 33-5 to the world's No 2 team in the second Test at the Nelson Mandela Bay Stadium in Gqeberha on Saturday afternoon. But with 15 minutes to go in the match, De Bruin felt the Springbok Women were still in the contest. 'At 19-5 and we get three line breaks, scoring chances, with 15 minutes to go I thought, 'okay, they're number two and we're number 12, we've closed the gap',' he said at the post-match media conference. 'I mustn't let the fact that they scored those two tries at the and pull the wool over my eyes. We had so many line breaks against a top side like that. 'And then we almost get the jitters when someone runs through, we're not used to it. Because Jakkie (Cilliers) went weak, Libbie (Janse van Rensburg) is through and just lost the ball, Zintle (Mpupha) is through and just drops the ball, where they finished. "That was the difference. Every one of their points came from great finishing and we got the line breaks but we didn't finish. I felt if we could finish, it would have been a totally different story.' The Springbok Women did well to recover from an error-strewn first Test at Loftus in Pretoria last weekend against one of the favourites for next month's World Cup. De Bruin said the growth the team has shown over the past two weeks against the second-ranked team in the world was commendable and made him a proud coach. 'I will be the first one to admit that we are far from the finished product, but the improvement was real and we were in this match for a long time,' he said. 'We only scored once, but had so many other opportunities and that was very pleasing. Those are all fixable errors. "We needed these two Test matches to see where we are, and I am very happy with the report card thus far.'