Rassie Erasmus did not stumble upon six uncapped players on Saturday night. He built toward them, methodically, across months of alignment camps, warm-up fixtures, and careful observation.
When he named his 46-man Nations Championship 2026 Squad following the Springboks’ 80-31 demolition of the Barbarians in Gqeberha, the six new faces in that list were not surprises. They were the point.
Paul de Villiers. Riley Norton. Ruben van Heerden. Carlu Sadie. Vusi Moyo. Jaco Williams. Six players who, a year ago, had no senior Test caps between them. Now they are part of the world champions’ official Nations Championship 2026 squad, with England arriving at Ellis Park on 4 July.
The Nations Championship 2026 also brings Scotland to Pretoria on 11 July, Wales to Durban on 18 July, and a trip to Buenos Aires to face Argentina on 8 August. It is a full programme, and Erasmus has built a Nations Championship 2026 squad designed to handle all of it — experienced enough to win, young enough to grow.
THE SIX UNCAPPED PLAYERS ARE NOT WINDOW DRESSING! “They are the proof that the pipeline is working” – JPS
Paul de Villiers arrived in the Springbok camp carrying a statistic that turned heads: 19 turnovers for the DHL Stormers across the URC season. Erasmus later revealed that the 23-year-old flanker had topped the squad’s fitness testing during the pre-season camp. That combination — breakdown menace and physical outlier — is exactly the profile South Africa needs at openside flank as the Kolisi era begins its final chapter.

De Villiers, who hails from George, has spoken about the adjustment to Springbok training with a maturity that belies his age. “You are competing against guys that also play for the Springboks, and all the players want to be here, so I think the intensity of the training sessions is one of the main differences,” he said.
He models his game on Heinrich Brüssow — relentless, disruptive, built to win collisions that never make the highlight reel. The Barbarians match gave him his first taste. The Nations Championship 2026 will tell the fuller story.
Riley Norton is, in a different way, an equally remarkable prospect. The Stellenbosch-born lock captained South Africa to the 2025 Under-20 World Cup title, and Erasmus has been public in his praise:
“He’s definitely a guy who’s got maturity about him, coming into the Springbok set-up as a young guy. He’s definitely not at all windgat, he’s confident, and there’s an aura around him.”
Norton also played eight matches for the South Africa Under-19 cricket team, taking 11 wickets at the 2024 Under-19 World Cup, before choosing rugby. His loss is cricket’s problem.
His promotion to the senior Bok squad has cost the Junior Boks their captain ahead of the Junior World Championship in Georgia — a sacrifice that tells you everything about how far and how fast he has risen.
✍️ JAY | JPS SAYS: “Rassie has been talking about the 2027 World Cup cycle since before the ink dried on the 2023 trophy. These six players are not experiments. They are investments. And the Nations Championship 2026 is where the return starts.”
Vusi Moyo is, arguably, the most accelerated story of the six. The 20-year-old flyhalf matriculated from King Edward VII School in Johannesburg in 2024, was part of the South Africa U20 side in both 2025 and 2026, and made his senior Springbok debut against the Barbarians in Gqeberha in June 2026.
That is a breathtaking timeline. The Sharks moved quickly to tie him down, securing him on a contract extension until 2029. Erasmus has described him as calm, physical, and effortless with the boot — three things that are non-negotiable at Test flyhalf.
Carlu Sadie’s path to this squad is the most extraordinary of all six, and JPS has told that story in full previously. What matters here is that the Bordeaux tighthead started all seven of their Investec Champions Cup matches this season, earned his alignment camp call-up on merit, and has now been confirmed in the Nations Championship 2026 squad.
He was one of a select few uncapped players involved in the Springbok alignment camps from the very beginning of the year. The process has been thorough. The reward is deserved.

Ruben van Heerden has been one of the Stormers’ standout performers across the URC campaign, offering the kind of lock depth that becomes critical when a squad is navigating a four-Test domestic block followed by Argentina and then a four-match series against New Zealand. His inclusion in the Nations Championship 2026 Squad alongside Lood de Jager, Eben Etzebeth, and Ruan Nortje gives Erasmus real options in a position that was flagged as a concern heading into 2026.
Jaco Williams rounds out the six, a Sharks wing who has caught the eye with consistent URC performances. The outside back stocks in this squad are deep — Cheslin Kolbe, Kurt-Lee Arendse, Aphelele Fassi, Edwill van der Merwe, Canan Moodie — but Erasmus has made the call that Williams has done enough to be in the conversation.
The story of the returnees sits alongside the new arrivals and deserves its own acknowledgement. Embrose Papier, who was named URC Player of the Season, played the last of his seven Test matches in 2018 — making this his first appearance in the Springbok squad in eight years.
That is a comeback built on extraordinary consistency, and Erasmus has been clear that Papier and Herschel Jantjies — back in the fold after his last Bok appearance against Argentina in August 2023 — made their cases through performance, not sentiment.
The 12 returning Bulls players, unavailable for the Barbarians fixture due to their URC final commitments, slot back in as expected. Johan Grobbelaar, Ruan Nortje, Handré Pollard, Cameron Hanekom, Kurt-Lee Arendse, Canan Moodie and company bring the Nations Championship 2026 squad up to the full weight of its experience.
With them back in the mix, the 46-man Nations Championship 2026 Squad has both the proven core to win Tests and the developing layer beneath it that gives the 2027 World Cup cycle genuine reason for optimism.
England on 4 July will be the first real examination of how these pieces fit. Six players will run out carrying no caps and everything to prove. Rassie Erasmus has been planning this moment for the better part of a year.
He tends to plan well! Here’s the Squad at a glance:
THE SIX UNCAPPED PLAYERS:
- Paul de Villiers — flanker, DHL Stormers
- Riley Norton — lock/loose forward, DHL Stormers
- Ruben van Heerden — lock, DHL Stormers
- Carlu Sadie — prop, Bordeaux Bègles
- Vusi Moyo — flyhalf, Hollywoodbets Sharks
- Jaco Williams — wing, Hollywoodbets Sharks
NOTABLE RETURNEES:
- Herschel Jantjies — scrumhalf, Bayonne (last capped August 2023)
- Embrose Papier — scrumhalf, Vodacom Bulls (last capped 2018, named URC Player of the Season)
- Thomas du Toit — prop, Bath (returning after club season)
THE 12 BULLS PLAYERS RETURNING TO THE SQUAD:
- Johan Grobbelaar — hooker
- Wilco Louw — prop
- Gerhard Steenekamp — prop
- Ruan Nortje — lock
- Marco van Staden — utility forward
- Jan-Hendrik Wessels — utility forward
- Cobus Wiese — utility forward
- Cameron Hanekom — No 8
- Handré Pollard — flyhalf
- Kurt-Lee Arendse — wing
- Canan Moodie — utility back
THE EXPERIENCED CORE:
Props: Ntuthuko Mchunu, Ox Nche, Zachary Porthen, Boan Venter
Hookers: Malcolm Marx, Andre-Hugo Venter
Locks: Lood de Jager, Eben Etzebeth
Loose forwards: Ben-Jason Dixon, Siya Kolisi, Evan Roos, Vincent Tshituka, Jasper Wiese
Utility forwards: Pieter-Steph du Toit, Franco Mostert
Scrumhalves: Cobus Reinach, Grant Williams
Flyhalves: Manie Libbok
Centres: Damian de Allende, Andre Esterhuizen, Jesse Kriel
Outside/utility backs: Aphelele Fassi, Quan Horn, Cheslin Kolbe, Edwill van der Merwe, Damian Willemse
📸 Images via Gallo Images / SA Rugby / AFP







































