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The best sports teams constantly look to reinvent themselves. Their core principles remain in place but, crucially, they never, ever stand still. To do so is to risk slipping backwards relative to their competitors and arrive at the worst of all possible outcomes: a poorer, less successful version of themselves.

The ultimate example in rugby, until now, has probably been the All Blacks. For decades it was not only about winning the next game, but underlining their position, to quote one of their motivational whiteboard slogans from 2013, as “the most dominant team in the history of the world”. When you are chasing that kind of rarefied target you don’t allow the grass grow beneath your jandals.

Even the greatest All Black sides, however, never won three consecutive Rugby World Cups. Something or someone would always get in the way, whether it be a mystery South African waitress or a temporarily inspired bunch of Frenchmen. New Zealand did lift the Webb Ellis trophy in 2011 and 2015, but an unprecedented treble has remained stubbornly elusive.

Which now leaves the door ajar for their longtime rivals South Africa, champions in Japan in 2019 and in France in 2023. To be inside a fervid Ellis Park, their traditional citadel, last Saturday and witness their 45-21 win over England was instructive on several fronts, but there was one entirely unavoidable takeaway. Is there anyone out there with the physical firepower to stop the Springboks when the world’s leading sides converge on Australia next year?

England were gallant, but anyone would have struggled to contain the hosts when they were in full flow. “They’re just very good when they get into that cycle,” said Jamie George, England’s captain. That was despite the Boks being without, among others, Siya Kolisi, Eben Etzebeth, Lood de Jager, RG Snyman, Franco Mostert, Wilco Louw and Sacha Feinberg-Mngomezulu. A new green machine with go-faster stripes is emerging from Rassie Erasmus’s workshop and it spells potential trouble for all and sundry.

We are certainly going to see plenty more of Zach Porthen, Cameron Hanekom and Paul de Villiers in the years ahead. Even if one or two old reliables do dip over the hill in the next couple of years, Erasmus already looks to have pulled off the cutest of tricks. Blood talented youngsters, encourage them to stake a permanent claim and then watch their seniors respond accordingly. Get that balance right and there is no surer way to regenerate the collective.

The same applies to those who have already been around the squad for a while. Damian Willemse, Grant Williams, Canan Moodie … their ability has never been in doubt and experience is improving them further. Which puts the onus on everyone else to try to catch them up. New Zealand and France, as demonstrated by last Saturday’s excellent game in Christchurch, are the likeliest candidates and both camps will have been cautiously encouraged by their initial Nations Championship outing.

The All Blacks have started to play proactive All Black-style rugby again under Dave Rennie and look much happier for it. France, without numerous frontliners, scored four tries and gave notice of their own impressive depth. On another day Matthieu Jalibert might easily have conjured another score or two and their missing Toulouse aristocrats will be back this autumn to complicate life further for their opponents.

It will also be interesting to see what unfolds when Ireland pitch up in Auckland on 18 July. The All Blacks’ unbeaten sequence at Eden Park stretches back 52 Tests to 1994, but old certainties are under increasing strain. There was an average of 63 points per game on the opening week of the Nations Championship and sides unable to rack up in the region of 30 points will find it hard to win games regardless of the opposition or the venue.

Which is another reason why the Boks are going to take some beating. There are ways to outflank their suffocating rush defence, but good luck trying to run through Damian de Allende and Jesse Kriel. Kicking the ball to space invaders such as Willemse, Cheslin Kolbe and Kurt-Lee Arendse is also a tactic fraught with obvious danger. Scotland, their opponents in Pretoria on Saturday, will have to be even more ruthless than they were against Argentina in Córdoba to make consistent inroads.

The same will apply to the All Blacks when they head to South Africa for their “Greatest Rivalry” tour next month. Erasmus, Felix Jones, Tony Brown, Mzwandile Stick, Jerry Flannery and the rest of South Africa’s eclectic coaching setup will assuredly have a plan to discomfort them. There is a savage beauty to the way the Springboks keep on coming, either in the air or wider out. If Jasper Wiese doesn’t come thundering around the corner to smash people head-on, the chances are the lightning quick Williams will nip through the slightest gap instead.

Much can change in 15 months, but it is meant as a compliment to describe South Africa as a beastly proposition. Might they, at full strength, even be a match for the New Zealand side spearheaded by Richie McCaw, Dan Carter, Brodie Retallick and co? Or even the all-powerful All Blacks teams of the late 1980s and 1990s? Time will tell, but Erasmus’s rejuvenated Springboks have an increasingly ominous look about them.

Nations Championship racks up air miles

The Nations Championship is up and running with 53 tries in the opening six games. Which is a tiny number compared to the thousands of air miles being amassed as teams zigzag around the southern hemisphere to fulfil the first block of fixtures. At some stage the travel conundrum will have to be re-addressed with one compromise offering itself: how much easier would it next time to have two “pods” – one in New Zealand, say, and the other in either South Africa or Argentina – hosting nine games each.

The travel demands would be reduced and mini-World Cups could be held in places that cannot commit to the onerous financial guarantees required to stage the Rugby World Cup proper. There would also be more of a festival feel, with games potentially spread over two or three days rather than all six games taking place on a Saturday. Nations losing out on gate income would either be given a “hub” to host next time around or be compensated from central funds. Players everywhere, meanwhile, would spend fewer hours in departure lounges, enhancing their preparation. It makes obvious sense, which means it almost certainly won’t happen.

Memory lane

19 January 1991 | Neil Jenkins, who turns 55 on Wednesday, made his debut for Wales in their Five Nations match against England in Cardiff. He kicked one successful penalty, the first three points of what became a record tally for Wales, amassing 1,049 in total. The day itself was more notable from England’s point of view, winning in Cardiff for the first time in 28 years with a 25-6 victory.

Ones to watch

Some established teams stood up to be counted on the opening Nations Championship weekend, but so too did some underrated individual talents. Step forward the fleet-footed Japan fly-half Ryunosuke Ito, Fiji’s brilliant Jiuta Wainiqolo and the Wallaby lock Josh Canham, all of whom stood out last Saturday.

The return of Jac Morgan also made a massive difference for Wales against Fiji while Kyle Rowe ripped it up for Scotland against Argentina. A word, too, for England’s Luke Pearce who gave another outstanding refereeing performance, this time in Christchurch, and South Africa’s Damian Willemse, denied the man of the match award against England because of an administrative mix-up with Damian de Allende awarded it instead. Chapeau to all concerned.

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