Siya Kolisi leads the Springboks against the Barbarians at the Nelson Mandela Bay Stadium in Gqeberha on Saturday, with kick-off at 15h00 SAST. The full matchday 23 is as follows:
1 Ox Nche
2 Andre-Hugo Venter
3 Carlu Sadie
4 Riley Norton
5 Franco Mostert
6 Siya Kolisi (Captain)
7 Pieter-Steph du Toit
8 Jasper Wiese
9 Grant Williams
10 Quan Horn
11 Edwill van der Merwe
12 Andre Esterhuizen
13 Jesse Kriel
14 Cheslin Kolbe
15 Aphelele Fassi
Replacements: 16 JJ Kotze, 17 Ntuthuko Mchunu, 18 Zachary Porthen, 19 Ben-Jason Dixon, 20 Paul de Villiers, 21 Evan Roos, 22 Faf de Klerk, 23 Vusi Moyo
Riley Norton is 20 years old, plays lock for the DHL Stormers, and is the current captain of the Junior Springboks. On Saturday he starts at number 4 for the senior Springboks against a Barbarians side that includes Duhan van der Merwe, TJ Perenara and Andrew Kellaway. Not off the bench. Not in the SA ‘A’ side against Zimbabwe in the curtain-raiser. Starting, in green and gold, in the main event.
It is the kind of selection that signals intent.
Norton led the SA U20 side to the Junior World Championship title in Italy last year, a campaign that announced him as one of the most composed and physically dominant young forwards in the southern hemisphere. He was retained as captain for the U20 Rugby Championship in April, and he is named in Kevin Foote’s squad to defend the JWC title in Georgia when that tournament opens on 27 June. Saturday is the last thing he does before flying out to lead South Africa’s juniors on the world stage — and he is spending it in the senior starting lineup.
That overlap, where he is simultaneously good enough to start for the Springboks and still young enough to represent the U20 side, is extraordinarily rare. South African rugby has produced generational locks before, but the pathway from Junior World Champion captain to senior starting lock in the space of weeks is not something that happens by accident or by luck. It happens when the coaches have seen enough to be certain.
The selection also speaks to a genuine need. South Africa’s lock stocks are under pressure right now. Salmaan Moerat is injured, RG Snyman is unavailable, and several of the remaining options are experienced campaigners whose best years may be behind them. Erasmus has spoken openly about building lock depth with the 2027 Rugby World Cup in Australia already shaping every conversation. Norton is not a stopgap in that picture. He is the future, and Erasmus appears to have decided there is no reason to delay introducing him to it.

JAY | JPS SAYS: “The Springbok system does not hand out starting jerseys as rewards. If Norton is at number 4 on Saturday, it is because Erasmus and his coaches believe he can carry the load against senior international opposition right now. That is a statement about where this kid sits in the long-term plan.”
Alongside Norton in the engine room is Franco Mostert, one of the most experienced locks in world rugby. That pairing is not accidental either. Mostert gives Norton the senior anchor he needs on debut, someone who can shoulder the lineout complexity and the defensive demands while the 20-year-old finds his feet at this level. It is a considered introduction, not a reckless one.
Then there is Quan Horn at number 10, which warrants its own moment of attention.
Horn is a fullback. He has played fullback for the Lions throughout his professional career, captained the side from the 15 jersey, and just finished a URC season in which he played every single minute of the regular season — earning the competition’s Ironman Award for the second time and a place in the URC Elite XV. At fullback. His one senior Springbok cap, earned against Portugal in July 2024, came at fullback too.
On Saturday he starts at flyhalf for the Springboks.
With the Bulls contingent unavailable — tied up with the URC Grand Final against Leinster the day before — Erasmus finds himself short of specialist tens and has made the boldest possible call in response: hand the playmaking jersey to the most dynamic back in the squad and back him to figure it out. Aphelele Fassi slides into fullback, where he is entirely at home, and Horn inherits the role of orchestrating everything in front of him.
It is a gamble. Horn has the athleticism, the vision and the ball-carrying ability to cause problems in any position in the backline. Whether the specific demands of flyhalf — reading the defensive line, controlling the tempo, making the split-second decisions that determine whether South Africa attack or kick — translate naturally from 15 to 10 is the question Saturday will answer. The Barbarians are unpredictable and enthusiastic, and they will not make it easy.
What both selections confirm, taken together, is that Erasmus is using this double-header exactly as he said he would: as a genuine examination, not a showcase. The Gqeberha crowd will see two South African national teams in action on the same afternoon. The more compelling theatre, on current evidence, may well unfold in the 15h00 kick-off.
📸 Images via SA Rugby





































