Jaque Fourie made an immediate impression
as a 19-year-old debuting for the Emirates Lions in 2003. Fast forward to 2022
and his impact as the defensive coach has taken a bit longer, but the Fourie
fire is finally starting to show in the generation of kids he wants to turn
into Vodacom United Rugby Championship winners.
Fourie, a 2007 World Cup winner, veteran
of 72 Tests as a midfielder and among the most celebrated Springbok backs of
the past two decades, scored the most sensational of tries in the Springboks’
breathtaking second Test and series win against the British & Irish Lions
at Loftus Versfeld in 2009. The try was voted the International Rugby Players
Association Try of the Year for 2009.
Fourie’s attacking strength was always on show as a player, but
the part of his game most respected within the Springboks set-up was his
management of the defensive system.
Fourie could tackle and he was a master of
organising a defence.
Fourie felt the players were not showing
the necessary desire to want to tackle, to think about tackling or to
understand the necessity of being strong defensively.
It couldn’t be about an all-out attack,
and in February 2022, Fourie called the players out for their indifference to
tackling.
He told the media: ‘It is about getting
these guys to play for each other every game. It is about respect for the
player inside and outside of you. If you are willing to work for the guy next to
you, he will do the same for you. There are things you can coach and there are
things we can tweak, but you can’t coach a player's heart.’
Significantly, given it is nine months
later, he talks of the birth of a different type of player.
‘The players are 100% better than last
year,’ he said after the Emirates Lions fought dramatically to win all three
matches on their overseas tour.
‘The guys are understanding it properly.
The way we as coaches want them to understand it,’ he said after the 22-19 win
against Edinburgh Rugby.
He was beaming because of the tackles
being made, at how each player was defensively there for his mate, how no
player was giving up in scrambling on defence, and how players were finally
getting the impact of a big hit and how it can change the dynamic and momentum
of a match.
The kids, in 19-year-old loose-forward
Ruan Venter and 21-year-old outside centre Henco van Wyk, were terrifying the
opposition with their defence, and it was inspiring every one of their
teammates to show a similar desire.
Venter, who was colossal defensively and
made one of the most memorable tackles on Scottish international Hamish Watson,
lauded Fourie in the post-match interviews.
Player of the Match against Edinburgh,
Emirates Lions No 8 Francke Horn also praised the impact of Fourie.
‘Coach Jaque,’ said Horn before
elaborating about the defence of the Emirates Lions. These youngsters were not
talking about their natural ball skills and attacking ability. They were
insistent that they won because of their respect for the mechanics of defence
and their appreciation of defending.
Which doesn’t mean they don’t want to
attack and score tries. To the contrary, they have scored some spectacular
tries this season in winning three of their first four matches and seven of
their last 11 in the Vodacom United Rugby Championship.
The Emirates Lions, even in their early
defeats, always played some wonderful attacking rugby. It was never a case of the
players not being talented enough or lacking in attacking skill.
Ivan van Rooyen, the head coach, is from
that school of attack. He loves to play on the edge and to take risks, but in
Fourie he has found the perfect ally in finding the balance between attack and
defence – and the results have largely been winning ones.
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