South Africa declared themselves happy with the physical condition of the contracted players at the end of a month-long training phase.
The contracted Springboks attended two days of testing at the Sports Science Institute in Cape Town on Monday and Tuesday. Not taking part in the full range of tests were the rehabilitating John Smit, Fourie du Preez, Andries Bekker, Heinrich Brüssow, JP Pietersen and Pierre Spies.
The tests measured speed, strength, agility and the players' likely susceptibility to injury as well as their heights and weights.
"This conditioning phase has worked as well as we could ever have hoped," said Springbok coach Peter de Villiers.
"The guys have come back refreshed and hungry for rugby and have given us food for thought for our selection process now."
Neels Liebel, conditioning coach, said: "The players are in great shape and a number of personal bests have been set by them. Considering the stage of the season it has been very pleasing and a lot of the credit must go to the players and particularly the conditioning coaches at the provincial unions who have really helped make this happen.
"CJ van der Linde, Bismarck du Plessis, Bakkies Botha and Danie Rossouw all set personal bests in strength tests while Bryan Habana and Jaque Fourie were the quickest we have ever tested at sea level and someone like Adi Jacobs tested really well in all aspects."
Individual programmes were tailored to each player to assist in injury prevention. Springbok physiotherapist Rene Naylor uses an injury assessment protocol that identifies areas of injury risk in individual players.
"The work the players have done with their conditioning coaches has been very encouraging and the average injury risk profile of the squad has dropped by 21 per cent," she said.
Team doctor Craig Roberts said the testing had also allowed the medical staff to assess players with long-term injuries and that their rehabilitation remained firmly on course.
The Springbok squad for the end-of-year tour will be announced following the Currie Cup final on October 30.
The Springboks play the first of four tests against Ireland in Dublin on November 6. They also play Wales (November 13), Scotland (November 20) and England (November 27) before concluding with a match against the Barbarians at Twickenham on December 4.
Comments
Clinton says...
@Munster - Mate, the Boks need new coaching staff. Full stop! The guy (PDV) can't implement a proper game plan, can't keep the players in good condition, can't do proper PR, can't even get any worse then he already is! Good on the Boks for being able to retain some sort of physical conditioning. But watch closely now how it all becomes undone again once PDV has them firmly in his grasp.
Posted 11:24 06th October 2010
Munster_mad says...
i dunno... confused... so the Boks looked sluggish throughout the Tri-Nations but now they're setting "personal bests"!?! Is this not proof then that PDV's tactics are way off!?! "Injury risk profile has dropped 21%", yet look how many Boks are out! The article lists 6 & let's not forget their best player of the Tri-nations, Steenkamp, is now out too. A huge oversight that he wasn't contracted & attending this camp. Fair play to the SARU for running the camp, especially IF the boys are actually "refreshed and hungry for rugby." Too little, too late? Sounds like they need a tactical & team-building camp, not strength & speed tests.
Posted 00:43 06th October 2010