The Springboks departed from Britain and Ireland on Sunday with coach Peter de Villiers declaring the five-week tour with an injury-hit squad a qualified success.
The Springboks won three of their four Tests before an experimental and further injury-hit line-up pushed a star-studded Barbarians side to the final whistle in a 26-20 defeat at Twickenham on Saturday in the tour finale.
De Villiers said that he had thanked the players for their efforts on the tour and said that they had been able to take a number of positives from the trip.
“Losing to Scotland remains very disappointing, but it shouldn’t totally overshadow the progress we have made,” said De Villiers. “We left a large number of senior players at home and many commentators didn’t give us much chance.
“But we showed in our wins against Ireland, Wales and England that when we properly execute our game plan we make it very hard for the opposition.
“We dominated England and Ireland — for the first 60 minutes — and turned around our game against Wales with some great play in the second half. Those were hard games in sometimes difficult conditions against fresh and motivated teams.”
De Villiers said that there were other valuable outcomes of the tour.
“We have been able to blood some new players in Test match rugby as well as give some young players an exposure to the Springbok environment that’ll stand our rugby in good stead in 2011 and beyond,” he said.
“The pool of capped Springboks in serious contention for selection next year has been widened by this tour, while the hidden benefit is that we have more than a dozen senior players who weren’t on tour and who have had the advantage of an extended rest period.
“I think the senior players on this tour — such as Victor Matfield and Bakkies Botha — also ended the debate about whether it’s time to retire the over-30s, as some people wanted to: they led and performed in great style.
“Our scrum has continued to improve on this tour and we held our own and had periods of dominance in a region where they take scrumming very seriously. Overall I think our first phases were very good.
“We were also able to work on the way we want to play and we’re very clear on that within the group. We have South African strengths and we will play to them, and when we keep hold of the ball as we plan and execute our plans with accuracy, a Springbok team is very hard to beat.”
Bitterly disappointed
De Villiers added that the defeat by Scotland remained bitterly disappointing as it denied the team the opportunity to complete South Africa’s first Grand Slam in half a century.
“Our skills and application were tested in difficult conditions,” said De Villiers. “But it also taught us some valuable lessons and I’ll be discussing those with Super Rugby coaches in due course.”
De Villiers said that the performance of a new combination in the defeat by the Barbarians in the final match of the tour had been hampered by lack of preparation time in snow-bound England.
“Obviously losing any match in a Springbok jersey is very disappointing and frustrating but, in the circumstances, supporters can be proud of the character and application showed by the players,” said De Villiers.
“The Barbarian squad had several hundred more caps than our team, which had only five players with more than 10 caps to their name. We made a bad start with individual errors and by conceding several penalties.
“But once we got back to our structures and our first phases started working we put them under pressure and outscored them, 17-7, in the last hour of the match.” — www.planet-rugby.com