Coaches don’t usually last in South African rugby. The job chews through good men in three years or less, undone by one bad Rugby Championship, one refereeing controversy, one boardroom whisper campaign that turns into a headline. Rassie Erasmus has been in and around the Springbok setup for eight years now, and on Saturday at Loftus Versfeld, against Scotland, he takes charge of his 55th Test as head coach. Nobody has ever done that before him.
The record belonged to Jake White, the coach who delivered the 2007 World Cup and then, like almost everyone before and after him, was gone within a few years. White’s 54 Tests stood for nearly two decades as the benchmark for how long a Springbok coach could survive at the top. Rassie Erasmus has now gone past it, and he’s done it in a way nobody else has managed: by leaving the job, staying in the building, and coming back to finish what he started.

When Rassie Erasmus first took the head coach role in 2018, the Springboks were ranked sixth in the world. They’d been embarrassed home and away. Confidence in the national team, and in South African rugby’s ability to run itself, was about as low as it had been in the professional era. He inherited that mess, restructured it inside eighteen months, and won a World Cup with largely the same group of players who’d been getting beaten by Argentina.
Then he did something no successful Springbok coach had really done before. Instead of clinging to the head coach title, he stepped into the director of rugby role and handed the team to Jacques Nienaber for the 2020 to 2023 cycle. It looked, from the outside, like Rassie Erasmus had moved on.
He hadn’t. He was still shaping selection, still embedded in the environment, still carrying the weight of the job without wearing the title. Nienaber coached 39 Tests in that stretch and won a second World Cup in 2023. Erasmus was never far from either result.
“This is what staying power actually looks like in this sport. Not a coach who won’t leave, but a coach who was secure enough to step back, let someone else take the credit, and then come back and still be the best man for the job. South African rugby doesn’t produce that kind of patience very often.” – JustPlainJay
He returned to the head coach chair in 2024, and the numbers since have been absurd. Here’s the full picture from his 54 Tests in charge:
Played: 54
Won: 41
Drawn: 1
Lost: 12
Win rate: 75.93%
Points for: 1,823 | Points against: 945
Tries for: 234 | Tries against: 101
Jake White, the man he just passed, managed a 66.67% win rate across his 54 Tests by comparison.

His trophy cabinet backs it up just as clearly. As head coach across both spells, he’s delivered the 2019 Rugby World Cup, the 2019 Rugby Championship, and in his second stint since 2024, the Rugby Championship title, the Freedom Cup, the Prince William Cup, the Nelson Mandela Challenge Plate and the Qatar Airways Cup. The 2023 World Cup sits alongside those achievements too, won with Nienaber in the head coach’s chair and Rassie Erasmus running things as director of rugby throughout that campaign.
In the 93 Tests played under his broader guidance since 2018, including the Nienaber years, the win rate sits at 73.11 percent. Since he came back as head coach, it’s climbed to 85.7 percent, with just four defeats in 28 matches.
None of that happened quietly. Rassie Erasmus has weathered fallout that would have ended most coaching careers outright, including a lengthy suspension in 2021 after publicly criticising officiating following the Lions series. He’s absorbed criticism over rotation policies, over selection calls, over whether his methods were sustainable. He kept working. SA Rugby signed him to a contract extension in December 2025 that runs through to 2031, which tells you everything about how the people who could fire him actually feel about the job he’s done.
SA Rugby president Mark Alexander didn’t hold back this week. “There aren’t any superlatives left to describe the impact Rassie Erasmus has had not only on Springbok rugby but on the sport and the country over the past eight years,” he said, crediting Erasmus with reshaping how the country uses the team to bring people together across every divide that usually keeps South Africans apart. SA Rugby CEO Rian Oberholzer went further, calling him simply the greatest coach to ever lead the Springboks, and one who belongs in the conversation about the greatest international coach in any sport.

Rassie Erasmus, true to form, wanted none of the attention this week. “When players reach milestones we don’t talk about it in the build-up to matches and the same applies this week,” he said. “It’s a nice thing to know but the most important and only thing this week is performing against a very dangerous Scotland team.” It’s the same instinct that’s carried him through eight years in one of the hardest coaching jobs in world sport: put the team first, let the record take care of itself.
That record now includes back-to-back World Cup titles, a Springbok side sitting top of the world rankings after last weekend’s 45-21 dismantling of England, and a national honour in the Order of Ikhamanga in Gold for services to South African sport. Scotland arrive at Loftus Versfeld off their own strong start, having put 47 points on Argentina, and Finn Russell returns at flyhalf for a side that will fancy testing a heavily rotated Springbok XV at altitude.
Whatever happens on the scoreboard on Saturday, the number 55 is already permanent. Erasmus got there the hard way, by surviving a sport and a system that rarely lets anyone stick around long enough to matter this much.
Images via SA Rugby / Fox Sports / BBC
































