The Vodacom United Rugby Championship in the next month will be Jordan Hendrikse’s springboard to the Springboks.
Don’t be against Emirates Lions No 10
Hendrikse combining with his elder brother Jaden as the Springboks halfback
pairing before the end of the year
Jordan, just 21 years-old, is on the national
radar and his ascent to a Test start up north in November could be expedited
because of the current flyhalf injury crisis in South Africa.
The younger Hendrikse has always listed
making the Springboks Test squad as a long-term goal, but when it comes to both
Hendrikse brothers the long-term goals seem to be realised very quickly.
Jaden, who plays scrumhalf for the Cell C
Sharks in the Vodacom United Rugby Championship, established himself as the
starting Springboks No 9 during the back-end of this season’s Rugby
Championships.
Only one year separates the two brothers,
but already both have had to beat injury adversity in professional careers that
are still in their infancy.
Both have spoken about the mental strains
of fighting back from injury in the past 12 months, but both brothers
consistently echo positivity about what a privilege it is to call their passion
their job.
Jordan, in media interviews, always talks
about his thirst for on-field knowledge and learning from more experienced
players. He knows he has the natural qualities to play for his country, but he
is also modest in detailing that natural ability isn’t the only requirement.
His coaches, at national age group level
and at the Emirates Lions, speak of the maturity of a young man who played
against the British & Irish Lions when he was just 19 years-old.
If you go further back, to his schooling,
which started in the Eastern Cape and culminated at Glenwood High in
Kwazulu-Natal, you get a similar theme. Both brothers have always been
exceptional in their performances, but equally grounded with humility and a
work ethic that speaks to excellence.
The Springboks, since Rassie Erasmus and
Jacques Nienaber took charge in 2018, have relied mostly on Handre Pollard as
the first choice No 10. In Pollard’s absence, Elton Jantjies has played at No
10, and in the most recent two Test wins Damian Willemse, used at No 15 and No
12, started at No 10.
Pollard is currently injured, Jantjies is
out of the national mix because of off-field issues and Willemse missed the
Rugby Championship’s final match because of concussion.
The national coaching leadership, because
of circumstance, picked 35 year-old Test utility back Frans Steyn to start at
flyhalf. Steyn, who in his early international years, played wing, fullback and
flyhalf before settling at inside centre. He will play at No 10 for the
Springboks for the first time in 14 years.
There is a flyhalf crisis at national
level and also one tier down, with both Cell C Sharks options, Curwin Bosch and
Lionel Cronje, injured in pre-season matches. The Vodacom Bulls veteran flyhalf
Morne Steyn is no longer an international consideration, having retired from
Test rugby a year ago.
The DHL Stormers Manie Libbok and Vodacom
Bulls Chris Smith complete the flyhalf pool in South Africa, but it is
Hendrikse who the national selectors singled out for praise earlier in the
year.
Now, in the next month, (Jordan) Hendrikse
could fast-track his international ambitions through transforming the Emirates
Lions fortunes in the Vodacom United Rugby Championship, starting with the
Ospreys in Wales and finishing four weeks later against Ulster in Johannesburg.
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