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Powell names unchanged side for Cape Town Sevens

Neil Powel kept his Dubai winning team unchanged to try to defeat England as defending champion at the Cape Town Sevens this weekend.

Springbok Sevens coach Neil Powell rewarded the 12 players who won the opening tournament of the HSBC World Rugby Sevens Series in Dubai when he named an unchanged squad for the highly anticipated HSBC Cape Town Sevens.

The tournament takes place in the Cape Town Stadium on Saturday and Sunday and tickets were sold out in a matter of hours after they went on sale a couple of months ago.

“All the players would love to play in their only home tournament on the circuit, so the result at the Emirates Airline Dubai Sevens made it easy for me to pick the team. Everyone returned fit from that tournament and will have the added motivation of playing in front of a very supportive home crowd. The only change to our squad is the official reserve. We have included Siviwe Soyizwapi in the place of Marco Labuschagne, which was part of our planning all along,” said Powell.

Soyizwapi travelled to Dubai as captain of the SA Rugby Sevens Academy squad, which gave him the opportunity to get some playing time. He performed very well there and Powel believes he will slot in easily, should one of their players pick up and injury which rules him out of the tournament.

Powell admitted that he was feeling slightly nervous as the tournament approached, but he is comfortable that his squad prepared well.

“We needed to fine-tune a couple of things that we did not execute well in Dubai. This we did that and still have two training sessions left this week, so we have to ensure the players are mentally ready for the big event,” he concluded.

South Africa will play Russia (12:49), France (16:10) and Kenya (19:56) in Pool A of the competition on Saturday.

The Springbok Sevens team for the HSBC Cape Town Sevens:

  1. Chris Dry (63 tournaments, 304 matches, 455 points, 91 tries)
  2. Philip Snyman (captain, 48 tournaments, 213 matches, 306 points, 55 tries)
  3. Tim Agaba (11 tournaments, 55 matches, 45 points, 9 tries)
  4. Kwagga Smith (28 tournaments, 141 matches, 290 points, 58 tries)
  5. Werner Kok (30 tournaments, 148 matches, 360 points, 72 tries)
  6. Kyle Brown (59 tournaments, 291 matches, 395 points, 79 tries)
  7. Branco du Preez (56 tournaments, 281 matches, 1079 points, 79 tries)
  8. Rosko Specman (22 tournaments, 117 matches, 278 points, 50 tries)
  9. Justin Geduld (31 tournaments, 158 matches, 684 points, 76 tries)
  10. Cecil Afrika (54 tournaments, 279 matches, 1322 points, 152 tries)
  11. Seabelo Senatla (34 tournaments, 173 matches, 980 points, 196 tries)
  12. Ruhan Nel (22 tournaments, 110 matches, 187 points, 37 tries)
  13. Siviwe Soyizwapi (Replacement Player, 12 tournament, 57 matches, 175 points, 35 tries)

 

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Koos Venter

Koos Venter is an experienced journalist who started his career 35 years ago, before the days of cellphones, modern computer systems, the internet and digital cameras, as a correspondent for Nexus, the former national magazine of the Department of Correctional Services. He has since worked for various other publications in all aspects of news coverage, as a columnist and in the production side of newspapers and online publications. Since 2007 he has specialized as a sports writer, while he is also regularly used as an analyst and commentator by several radio stations.
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