Ten changes on paper. Barely a ripple in reality. That is the trick Rassie Erasmus has pulled off again, naming a heavily rotated Springbok team to face Scotland at Loftus Versfeld on Saturday without actually gambling on the result.
Look past the number and the story is stability, not upheaval. The vast majority of this starting XV have worn the green and gold before, many of them repeatedly, in high pressure Tests under this same coaching group. This is less a second string and more a second wave of a squad Erasmus has spent years building to depth, not just to fifteen.
Pieter-Steph du Toit captains the side, stepping back into his more natural home at openside flank after covering lock duties in recent seasons. Handre Pollard starts at flyhalf, Jesse Kriel holds his centre spot, and Damian Willemse shifts inside to inside centre to make room for Aphelele Fassi at fullback. These are not fringe players finding their feet. These are proven Springboks who know exactly what a Test match at altitude in Pretoria demands.
The uncapped and lightly capped faces in the group are there, but they are the exception, not the rule. Ruan Nortje earns his place in the second row off the back of a strong domestic season, and Embrose Papier starts at scrumhalf in what is genuinely a rare selection story, a player back in Bok colours eight years after his last Test appearance, following a URC campaign that made him impossible to ignore.
1 Boan Venter
2 Johan Grobbelaar
3 Wilco Louw
4 Cobus Wiese
5 Ruan Nortje
6 Paul de Villiers
7 Pieter-Steph du Toit (c)
8 Evan Roos
9 Embrose Papier
10 Handre Pollard
11 Canan Moodie
12 Damian Willemse
13 Jesse Kriel
14 Edwill van der Merwe
15 Aphelele Fassi
16 Jan-Hendrik Wessels
17 Ntuthuko Mchunu
18 Zach Porthen
19 Ben-Jason Dixon
20 Vincent Tshituka
21 Elrigh Louw
22 Grant Williams
23 Quan Horn
Coach: Rassie Erasmus
JAY | JPS SAYS: “This is horses for courses, plain and simple. Rassie doesn’t panic after a 45-21 win, he plans three matches ahead and picks the team that suits Scotland specifically. That’s not a risk, that’s the system working exactly how it’s meant to.”
Scotland arrive in South Africa with real form behind them. Gregor Townsend’s side put four tries past Argentina in Cordoba last weekend, a 47-38 win that has them sitting second in the Northern Hemisphere standings. Erasmus will have clocked the pace and ambition in that Scottish performance, and the back three of Fassi, Moodie and van der Merwe looks built specifically to match it.
Up front, the changes read the same way. Wilco Louw, Cobus Wiese and Johan Grobbelaar bring genuine Test experience to the front row, while Paul de Villiers joins Nortje and Evan Roos in a loose trio that gives Erasmus a different kind of physicality and work rate to throw at Scotland’s pack. None of this is experimental for experimentation’s sake. Every selection has a clear job to do against this specific opponent.
That is the part of Erasmus’s coaching that continues to separate him from most of his peers. He does not simply protect his best XV and hope the depth chart holds up when needed. He actively uses matches like this one to keep thirty, forty players sharp, connected to the system, and ready to be trusted the moment they are needed. Players and rival coaches alike are left trying to predict what a settled Bok team even looks like, because there increasingly isn’t one fixed answer.
The bench tells the same story of considered management rather than wholesale reinvention. Siya Kolisi drops down after captaining the win over England, joined by several other England starters given a breather three matches into a long month. Grant Williams and Quan Horn offer proven bench impact, while Vincent Tshituka and Elrigh Louw add loose forward depth if the physical battle needs shifting late.
Saturday’s Test also continues a rich history between these two nations, one stretching back to 1906, and gives Erasmus another data point in his long term project of building a squad that can win with any twenty three he chooses. Win or lose on the scoreboard, the bigger picture here is a coach entrenching a culture where reputation never guarantees selection, and form and fit for the opponent always will.
Kickoff at Loftus Versfeld is set for 17:40 South African time, with the Springboks looking to maintain their unbeaten start to the Nations Championship and stay top of the World Rugby rankings heading into the following week’s clash with Wales in Durban.
📸 Images via SA Rugby






































