World Cup winners South Africa withdraw from Rugby Championship

Springboks had a 48-hour window to confirm their participation, a timeframe that expired on Friday

Sports Staff
Friday 16 October 2020 12:40 BST
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South Africa won the 2019 Rugby World Cup in Japan
South Africa won the 2019 Rugby World Cup in Japan (Getty Images)

Last year’s World Cup winners South Africa have withdrawn from the Rugby Championship in Australia, leaving Argentina, Australia and New Zealand to contest a tournament much diminished by the Springboks’ absence.

The South Africans cited player welfare concerns because of the delayed start to their domestic competition and uncertainty over government travel restrictions during the Covid-19 pandemic affecting players based in South Africa, Europe and Japan.

“With time essentially having run out, it left us with no option,” SA Rugby chief executive Jurie Roux said in a statement on Friday, after a 48-hour window to declare their participation ran out. “This is a hugely disappointing outcome for our supporters and commercial partners, but the ongoing impacts of the pandemic... means we are unable to deliver a Springbok team without seriously compromising player welfare.”

Roux said SANZAAR, the tournament organizers, and hosts Australia “have bent over backwards to make the tournament happen and it would have been unfair on them, their partners and state government to delay a decision any longer.

“The impact on our planning was profound and took us to a bottom line that we could not in fairness commit to being able to compete.”

The South Africa-based Springboks players had been scheduled to leave for Australia on Sunday and play their first test against Argentina in Sydney on 7 November, more than a year since their previous test match. South Africa are due to host the British and Irish Lions next year and might be without test rugby for 20 months by the time that series starts, unless new tests can be scheduled.

South Africa’s provincial Curry Cup competition only began on 10 October because of the delays brought on by coronavirus, leaving Springboks players with little match play before the Championship.

At most, players would have had three domestic games before the team’s scheduled departure for Australia and, for most, two of those would have been informal or exhibition matches.

The Springboks’ withdrawal will cut the Rugby Championship from 12 to six matches, which will go ahead over a six-week period, with each team having at least two byes. The re-branded Tri-Nations tournament will also likely hit broadcasting revenue, which will be shared among the three competing teams.

New South Africa coach Jacques Nienaber (AFP via Getty Images)

The Argentina squad is already in Australia preparing for the tournament, their preparation at home set back by a Covid-19 outbreak that affected at least 10 players and the head coach. The Pumas will also be short of match play when they face their opening test and are attempting to arrange warm-up matches against local teams.

The All Blacks and Wallabies will meet in the opening matches of the tournament in Sydney on 31 October and 7 November following on from their two-match Bledisloe Cup series in New Zealand.

New Zealand was also considering withdrawing from the tournament, or at least forfeiting its final match against Australia, because of a scheduling dispute. The last match initially was scheduled to be played in Sydney on 12 December, meaning the All Blacks players — required to quarantine for 14 days on their return to New Zealand — would still be in managed isolation on Christmas Day.

In a rancorous dispute, New Zealand claimed to have an agreement to play the tournament over five weeks with the final match on 5 December. SANZAAR and Rugby Australia denied any such agreement had been reached and cited minutes of a meeting which suggested New Zealand had always been aware of the 12 December match.

The matter was resolved when the match was moved forward to follow on more naturally from the Bledisloe Cup matches in New Zealand.

AP

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