SA’s new sevens plan

SA’s new sevens plan

The Springbok Sevens side finished sixth in the last World Series and third at the Commonwealth Games, but coach Paul Treu is optimistic about the future, writes ANDY CAPOSTAGNO in SA Rugby magazine.

Paul Treu could be forgiven for groaning out loud when the draw for the first tournament of the 2010-11 Sevens World Series was announced at the end of October. That’s because the South African’s current bête noir, Australia, came out of the hat to join the Blitzboks in Pool B in Dubai.

Australia beat South Africa in the semi-finals of the Commonwealth Games in New Delhi in October and have lost just once to Treu’s team in their last six meetings. Happily, the one South African victory happened to be in Dubai last year, but 2010 has largely been a year to forget for the Blitzboks.

After winning their first-ever World Series title in 2008-09, Treu’s charges only finished sixth on the log the following season. This season’s defending champions are Samoa, while New Zealand won the gold medal at the Commonwealth Games. Injuries and moves into 15-a-side deprived South Africa of nearly all their hard won experience and under those circumstances, Treu was delighted to return from India with a bronze medal.

‘I think we’ve got to be happy, especially when you consider that most of those players played their first-ever sevens tournaments in Middelburg and Rustenburg a month before the Commonwealth Games in Delhi. Now they’re on the world stage and up against national players from the Wallabies and the All Blacks so it’s an amazing achievement really for these young boys.

‘Renfred Dazel was the only member of the squad who played in the last Commonwealth Games in Melbourne and the same group will stay together for the World Series tournaments in Dubai and George, so the future is looking good because a lot of them are still under 21.’

Among those missing due to injury were Frankie Horne (broken hand), Kyle Brown (hamstring), Stephen Hunt (knee ligaments) and Branco du Preez (shoulder). In addition, Mzwandile Stick, a former captain and playmaker, made the successful transition to 15-a-side that his talent has always suggested (Stick was at fullback for the EP Kings when they won the Currie Cup First Division title). So Treu was forced to dig deep into his playing resources and hope for the best in New Delhi.

The team won its opening four matches against Tonga, India and Wales in the group phase and then against Scotland in the quarter-finals. New boy Sibusiso Sithole scored a hat-trick on debut against India, and going into the semi-final against Australia the team had conceded just two tries in four starts.

‘I’ve been telling teams for years that defence wins you games and ultimately tournaments. I think we can be proud of the effort,’ says Treu. ‘The game against Scotland was really tough and if we hadn’t made a try-saving tackle at the end we would have missed out on a medal. Ryno Benjamin, Neil Powell and Cecil Afrika working back saved the day. Sometimes you need a bit of luck and we had it against Scotland.’

Sithole saw a new aspect of the game against the Scots.

‘Sibusiso got burnt in the quarter-final by one of the quickest players on the circuit, Andrew Turnbull, and I told him to keep his head up because even the best players get beaten sometimes,’ says Treu. ‘You’re bound to make mistakes; it’s about how you learn from them.’

Given the transient nature of coaching in South Africa it’s remarkable to think that Treu is about to enter his eighth season in charge of the Blitzboks. At the start of his first season he was still playing under the care of Chester Williams. But Williams signed to coach the Cats and the temporary position became a permanent one.

The team showed a gradual improvement under Treu, finishing as runners-up to New Zealand in 2007-08. That was the season Saru chose to contract players to the sevens squad for the first time and to base them in Stellenbosch. The reward was the  breakthrough season that came in 2008-09, when the Blitzboks won the World Series for the first time.

‘That was the culmination of a four-year plan and we’re at the beginning of a new one right now,’ says Treu. ‘Saru is buying into the plan. It’s the first time we’ve been allowed to sign schoolboys and that’s a sign that Saru sees value in building for the future. Saru understands that we are in a rebuilding process and most of the guys we’ve taken on have signed two-year contracts so that will smooth the way for us down the line.

‘Next year we’ll be working hard with the U16s and the U20s and some of our players are already with the SA U18 High Performance squad. What we would like to do is keep them in the system and keep exposing them to our culture and to international competition. Then they will learn what is required to win at international level.

‘We’re going to send an U18 team to the 2011 Junior Commonwealth Games and then in 2014 the Commonwealth Games are in Scotland. Those are the kinds of events that will allow us to plan for the 2016 Olympics.’

Treu sees a clear difference between the World Series and multisport events. He also believes that the belated admission of sevens to the Olympics will change the sport forever.

‘The venues in Delhi might have been a bit empty, but the experience of the village for my guys was amazing; just to be around so many athletes from other codes, especially our South African medallists like Cameron van der Burgh and Chris Harmse. Chatting to those guys about what inspired them to become the best in the world and what drives them is what a multisport event is all about.

‘Now that there will be Olympic funding for sevens, the landscape of the game is going to change and a lot of countries will become much more competitive. From our perspective, in December I’ve got four schoolboys joining the group. The long-term plan is that those guys will be 24 or 25 in 2016 and we will put a lot of energy into developing their games before then.’

Before the long-term vision comes the short-term need for positive results and Treu is targeting the first two legs of the World Series.

‘Delhi came at the perfect time for us ahead of the new season and we’ll have momentum going into Dubai and George. We’d like to do well in those two. Dubai has been good to us, so much so that we used it as our camp to prepare for the Commonwealth Games.

‘We always get big support there because there are lots of South African expats, and now the boys know what to expect because they’ve used the facilities, stayed in the hotels and they should be relaxed. But we’d really like to focus on George. We won there in 2008, but last year was disappointing. We lost a number of players to Super 14 contracts, but really, that’s no excuse in your home leg.’

By the time the Blitzboks run out at Outeniqua Park in the first week of December, rugby fans in this country should know whether Peter de Villiers will be taking the Springboks to the 2011 World Cup. Before his promotion to the national side, De Villiers had been here and there in South African rugby, but it would be hard to argue that he had anything like the background that Treu has built up. Which leads on to the key question: is Treu ready to make the transition from sevens to 15s?

There will be some who will claim that 10 seasons of sevens, first as a player and then coach, has painted Treu into a corner. Like the long-serving Gordon Tietjens of New Zealand, he is now only good for one thing, with the positive spin-off being that he is producing talented players for 15-a-side. But look deeper and you’ll see the possibility that Treu could be a major force at the highest level in years to come.

He’s spent a decade under the radar honing a scientific approach to the game. He has become used to having his best players taken away from him from under his nose at crucial times. He has put a system in place that allows newcomers to slot in and perform
at short notice.

‘As a coach you are constantly wondering whether you are doing the right thing and whether it’s time to move on, because sometimes it can be quite frustrating. I’ve just come out of a meeting with Rassie Erasmus where I asked if he could release one or two Western Province players to us. They are part of the U21 squad and they may be part of the Super Rugby squad next year and so the answer was no.

‘I really enjoy sevens and there’s a great feeling right now, because there’s bigger buy-in from Saru and the sponsors than ever before. So I’d like to be involved going forward, but I take it on a day-to-day basis and as long as the team is happy then I’m happy too.

‘Having said that, though, I feel I’m ready to step into 15-a-side and if there happened to be an opportunity at franchise level for me to get involved then I would definitely consider that.’

Is anyone out there listening?

– This article first appeared in the December issue of SA Rugby magazine.


19 Comments

  • 1.Staal: Reply to this comment

    What’s the plan now Dragons? Winning? :lol:

  • 2.PissAnt: Reply to this comment

    Does anyone take Sevens that seriously though?

  • 3.Porra the Fat and Clever Speedster: Reply to this comment

    @PissAnt(PissAnt) :

    i don’t

  • 4.PissAnt: Reply to this comment

    @Porra the Fat and Clever Speedster(Porra) :

    Sort of like women’s rugby.

  • 5.iori Yagami: Reply to this comment

    @PissAnt(PissAnt) : LOL Thats a bit harsh Mr Ant. Sevens is a good stepping stone to 15 man rugby.

  • 6.logie_Jumpbuck: Reply to this comment

    @iori Yagami(iori Yagami) : stepping stone? yip, most of the 7′s boys need a step to meet the size requirement in the 15 player game. ;-)

  • 7.gunther: Reply to this comment

    Blitzboks

    that reminds me.

    nice weather for a barbie.

  • 8.iori Yagami: Reply to this comment

    @logie_Jumpbuck(logie_Jumpbuck) : LOL touche. But seriously it helps with one on one tackling, vision and decision making.

  • 9.iori Yagami: Reply to this comment

    @gunther(gunther) : Yip yip. Throw some steaks on the barbie. When is the George leg? The 10th?

  • 10.willievz: Reply to this comment

    @logie_Jumpbuck(logie_Jumpbuck) : 6

    Talking about stepping stones.

    Perhaps the 15-man game can also learn a step from the 7-man game.

    A side-step.

  • 11.gunther: Reply to this comment

    @iori Yagami(iori Yagami) :

    around then.

    I went once.

    It was a fuckshow.

    Never again.

  • 12.logie_Jumpbuck: Reply to this comment

    @iori Yagami(iori Yagami) : @willievz(willievz) : Brent Russel can tell you all about it.

  • 13.dWeePer: Reply to this comment

    Gio Aplon worked his way via sevens to the national 15 side.

  • 14.OCO: Reply to this comment

    @dWeePer(dWeePer) :
    Hopefully he can work his way back down there.

  • 15.Alucard: Reply to this comment

    I feel sorry for Paul, he is a great coach, but has no consistency in personnel. Give him that and the Blitzbokke will be right up there.

  • 16.kevin w: Reply to this comment

    Well its entertaining and i’ll be heading to Dubai on Thursday.

    Many great players played here first and developed skills.

    But its not that crash bash intelligent 15 man rugby the BOYS play.

  • 17.SjamBok: Reply to this comment

    “New boy Sibusiso Sithole scored a hat-trick on debut against India”. Oooh. What a pearl. Keep him….

    Seriously what **** reporting. Give us something to really smile about. India doesn’t even have a professional sevens team. The question is: why didn’t half a dozen other players also score hat tricks against India?

    Seriously though, before Paul does go to 15′s he needs to plan for his succession, have a successoror appoiointed (on a 5 year contract), who spends a year or two with him learning the ropes and then takles over seamlessly. Not chaos and woe and excuses that there are “teething problems” for a new coach. Ditto for when PdV and co leaves. We just lose all of our intellectual capital whenever we change coaches. Which is why Alistair should have been coach, or why Jake should have been appointed to a Bok technical consutancy panel to help advise the next coach on all aspects of Bok coaching and tours. Why re-learn all the **** stuff the hard way? the new coach need not be forced to do what tehy say, but at least it wll not be the first time he knows about potential issues.

  • 18.TheTackler: Reply to this comment

    A Commonwealth bronze, but only because Fiji is suspended from the Commonwealth because of the military junta who seized power in a coup d’etat there.

  • 19.Alucard: Reply to this comment

    @SjamBok(SjamBok) :

    It’s funny you mention that. The supposedly arrogant Jake wanted to groom Coetzee in his first year as coach. He backed Coetzee from the start and was, yet again, heavily criticised. He knew Meyer was never going to be coach, and he knew, as did Krige who warned us all, that de Villiers would be a failure. At least he offered to give Coetzee, the first none-white Bok coach, the best possible chance of success. And lest we not forget Smal who wanted to work in SA to develop young black talent, but was given the cold shoulder and eventually nabbed by Ireland. Like I say, the new South Africa is on a shortcut to nowhere. They never learn, and never will. Round and round we go. Stubborn stupidity.

Keo.co.za has always promoted uncensored views, but has never tolerated racist or crass outbursts. Come on guys and girls. If you can't moderate yourselves or each other then I am going to be forced to regulate the posts and enforce a registration process for comments. The choice is yours.

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