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Springboks head coach Jacques Nienaber more worried about 'butchered' chances than kicking woes

The South African bench looks on as Ireland close out the game
The South African bench looks on as Ireland close out the game

Much of the focus in the wake of South Africa's tense 13-8 World Cup loss to Ireland was centred around the Springboks’ kicking woes, but coach Jacques Nienaber is more concerned with his side’s botched opportunities in the opposition 22.

South Africa wasted 11 points from missed kicks and have drafted experienced out-half Handre Pollard into their side for Sunday's must-win Pool B clash with Tonga in Marseille, with one eye on the knockout rounds should they get there.

"We had four opportunities within one metre of their goal-line, which we butchered," Nienaber told reporters. "That, for me, is a much bigger issue [than kicking] that we have to sort out."

Pollard (above) returns to the team for the first time since August 2022, but Nienaber insists they have performed well without him and criticism of the fly-half options in his absence, Manie Libbok and Damian Willemse, is unfair.

"In those 13 months that Handre wasn’t available, there were 16 Test matches and we won 75% of those. Only three of those matches were played at home.

"Of the four losses, two were against Ireland, who are the number one team in the world, one to New Zealand in Auckland and then France in Marseille, where we got a red card.

"Yes, we are not consistent off the tee, but the guys that stepped in, I don’t think they did a bad job."

Manie Libbok kicked three points against Ireland

Nienaber, who will join the Leinster coaching staff after the World Cup, says he is realistic about what Pollard will offer this weekend following his long lay-off for a calf injury as the Boks seek a bonus-point win to put them in the driving seat for a quarter-final place, likely against France in Paris.

"He hasn’t played top-level rugby since the first week in May, which is 19 weeks ago. In saying that, he’s a quality rugby player and we all know that. He has won a World Cup and a British & Irish Lions series before.

"He understands what top international rugby is about, but I think we must stay realistic and give him time to settle in and get used to the pace of it."

South Africa made 12 changes to their starting XV for the Tonga game and reverted to a 5:3 split on the bench with Libbok set to replace Pollard in the second half.

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Watch live coverage of Japan v Samoa (28 September), Argentina v Chile and Fiji v Georgia (30 September) and South Africa v Tonga (1 October) on RTÉ2 and RTÉ Player.