SA player welfare under spotlight as brutal never-ending season ...
The starkest illustration of the only downside of South African rugby’s alignment with the northern hemisphere is the never-ending season loop players, especially Test players, are stuck in.
Sharks coach John Plumtree named 10 players who were on the recent Bok tour in his 23 to face the Stormers at Kings Park in their United Rugby Championship (URC) round seven clash this weekend.
Siya Kolisi will lead the Sharks, fresh off steering the Boks to a clean sweep over Scotland, England and Wales on their recent tour.
Plumtree, of course, has his own mandate, and needs and knows that rest blocks for Bok players will vary.
The Sharks are in the business of wanting to win the URC and Champions Cup, which starts in December, and they will select teams to meet their own targets.
It’s important to emphasise that this isn’t a criticism of the Sharks and no one is at fault. It is a lament about the lack of the global season.
Bok players are stuck in a 12-month rugby cycle and while they will have periods of rest and active rest within the URC and Champions Cup campaigns, it’s not an ideal situation.
Read more: Aligned global rugby calendar is essential for players – especially those in the national squad – to catch their breath
Rest periodsThere have been concerted efforts by both the clubs and MyPlayers, the South African player’s trade union, to manage the workloads of Bok players.
In 2022 an agreement was reached, limiting players to 32 games in a 12-month period. While that has been adhered to, it’s still an imperfect system because there is no obvious off-season window anymore.
“The SA players who represent the franchises – and don’t play Test rugby – are okay. We can manage them, and the northern hemisphere has been doing that [in the European tournaments] for decades,” MyPlayers CEO Eugene Henning told Daily Maverick in an interview exactly a year ago.
“The challenge comes in with our national players. They need time to mentally and physically switch off.”
In 2023, Bok players involved in the triumphant Rugby World Cup campaign, were given three weeks off following the tournament.
They were then given another five weeks off in February and March to achieve their mandatory eight weeks rest in a 12-month period.
Players not involved in Test rugby were given a mandated eight weeks rest period following the URC.
That changed in 2024 when the South African Rugby Union (Saru) shoehorned the Currie Cup into the rest window, as it was the only timeslot available in an increasingly congested calendar.
It led to a dispute though, because it was in contractual violation of the agreement between MyPlayers and Saru.
MyPlayers and the South African Rugby Employers’ Organisation (Sareo) declared a dispute with Saru, which was resolved through arbitration.
The 2024 Currie Cup went ahead as scheduled from 5 July through to 21 September, but only after a new deal was agreed between the MyPlayers and Sareo to accommodate individual rest periods for players.
It was a welcome outcome to a tricky situation because SA rugby players are inextricably tied to 12-month seasons since aligning with the northern hemisphere.
A non-stop season could not continue indefinitely.
The agreement came with conditions that are important to protect players from being bullied or coerced by rugby unions to play when they shouldn’t, or being denied their rest period.
One of the major concessions is that all South African players in the URC and European Professional Club Rugby (EPCR) tournaments will fly in business class or premium economy.
This has been a major factor in player unhappiness and also in their physiological welfare. The new concession will kick in on 1 July 2025 when Saru becomes a full shareholder in the URC and EPCR.
That step means Saru no longer has to pay R330-million for the Bulls, Lions, Sharks, Stormers and Cheetahs to play in those European competitions. The obvious benefit is that the full shareholding frees up more budget for aspects such as travel.
Kolisi and others are going to have to be rested at some stage in the coming weeks, which will impact the URC campaigns of all the South African clubs. The Sharks, with the most current Boks on their payroll, will obviously be impacted the most.
Right now though, Plumtree has obviously taken the decision to load his team and try to bank as many points as possible while they are available.
Plumtree underlined the challenges, using lock Eben Etzebeth as an example of the toll on players.
Etzebeth, who played in 12 of the Boks’ 13 Tests since June, and amassed more than 720 minutes of playing time in international rugby this year. That’s excluding his outings for the Sharks throughout the season.
Etzebeth was replaced after 31 minutes during the Boks’ 45-12 win over Wales last week, and hasn’t been included in the Sharks team this weekend.
“Eben’s body is just a little bit broken,” Plumtree said this week. “He has lots of little niggles. I wasn’t happy with him playing [against the Stormers]. He looks a bit dented, to be honest. We need to freshen him up.”
It probably won’t be the last time we hear a coach saying something similar about a Bok player in the coming weeks and months.
On a more positive note, Bok flyhalf Sacha Feinberg-Mngomezulu has recovered from a knee injury and will start for the Stormers against the Sharks.
That leaves Manie Libbok, who is the only recent Bok tourist included in the Stormers squad, on the bench. DM
FixturesHollywoodbets Sharks vs DHL StormersDate: Saturday, 30 November
Venue: Kings Park, Durban
SA Time: 5pm
Referee: Marius van der Westhuizen
TV: SuperSport
Connacht vs Vodacom BullsDate: Saturday, 30 November
Venue: Dexcom Stadium, Galway
SA Time: 7.30pm
Referee: Mike Adamson
TV: SuperSport
Munster vs Emirates LionsDate: Saturday, 30 November
Venue: Thomond Park, Limerick
SA Time: 9.35pm
Referee: Adam Jones
TV: SuperSport