Grant Williams and Faf de Klerk â the two scrumhalves in the Springbok squad against the Barbarians in Gqeberha â could reprise these roles several times in 2026.
Injury to Cobus Reinach, who looks set to miss the Greatest Rivalry series against the All Blacks in late August and September, means that De Klerkâs Test career might be rekindled.
De Klerk, one of the heroes of two successful World Cup campaigns in 2019 and 2023, has increasingly been marginalised with the emergence of Williams and Morné van den Berg.
But Van den Berg is also out injured for a lengthy period, and Jaden Hendrikse is another on the casualty list.
The injury toll has also brought in-form Bulls scrumhalf Embrose Papier back into the Bok conversation.
Grant Williams has emerged as the Springboksâ first-choice scrumhalf. (Photo: Hannah Peters / Getty Images) Papier has scored 12 tries in the United Rugby Championship this season and will be a key player in the URC final between the Bulls and Leinster at Croke Park.
But Papier has been in good form for several seasons now, not just in 2026. That fact that he has been overlooked since playing seven Tests in 2018 â Rassie Erasmusâs first year as Bok mentor â indicates that for some reason, he has never quite convinced the man who matters most of his Test credentials.
Sheer weight of strong performances in a team that has made it to the URC final, saw Papier recalled to a Bok alignment camp earlier this year. But it doesnât mean heâs going to be leapfrogging Williams and others in the Bok pecking order.
Faf insurance
Which is why De Klerkâs outing against the Barbarians, however long it might be, will be interesting.
Since starting the 2023 World Cup final in Paris , De Klerk has featured in only five of the Boksâ 27 Tests since then. And most of the time he has been fit and available, just not wanted.
De Klerk came off the bench twice in 2025, against Italy and Georgia respectively, and didnât feature again for the rest of the year.
Faf de Klerk last represented the Springboks against Georgia in 2025. (Photo: Dirk Kotze/Gallo Images/Getty Images) At the same time Reinach was playing the best rugby of his career and Williams emerged as the future. Sometimes timing in sport is everything.
By last November, it really did feel like De Klerkâs Test career was over as the Springboks marched through Europeâs northern fields undefeated, with Williams, Reinach and Van den Berg all playing significant parts in that tourâs success.
Yet here we are on the brink of a massive season and one year out from a World Cup title defence.
Reinach and Van den Berg are out of the picture for the foreseeable future while Papierâs brand of rugby has never convinced Erasmus of his Test credentials.
Suddenly Fafâs experience and sheer competitive nature are needed. Now itâs just a case of seeing if the veteran 34-year-old has the legs to play at the level weâve become accustomed to seeing over the years.
With two weeks to the first competitive Test of the year, against England in the new Nations Championship at Ellis Park on 4 July, this could be a dress-rehearsal for the scrumhalf situation in short-term.
Young guns
But this weekend is also about celebrating the youth and talent coming through the South African rugby system, with a callow SA âAâ team selected for the dayâs earlier match against Zimbabwe.
Many current and recent Junior Springboks are in both teams, and it gives Erasmus a chance to gauge progress and potential in a competitive environment as he also plans for life after Rugby World Cup 2027, when many veterans will retire.
âWe work in tandem in South Africa. Since we started the elite player development pathway way back in 2013, we started getting the rewards in 2019 and 2020, and then we got Covid,â Erasmus said this week.
Rassie Erasmus has many decisions to make this season. (Photo: Richard Huggard / Gallo Images) âI think we missed a lot of players in that Covid era, who didnât play Craven Week, SA Schools, didnât go to the SA academy, didnât play Junior Springboks.
âThat is why I think you will see a gap in the age bracket between 22 and 26 in the Springbok set-up because those guys didnât play rugby. A lot of them stopped and didnât get contracts.
âWe work very closely with Dave [director of rugby, Dave Wessels] and Kevin [Junior Bok coach, Kevin Foote], and then we do our depth chart and then we try and get guys as quickly as possible into the set-up, just to see the guy eye-to-eye.
âDoes he feel comfortable with what weâre doing? Does he understand what weâre saying and how should we approach those guys?
âDave is great at that and Kevin is great at that.â
Erasmus used examples this system is starting to produce players for the Test set-up
Lock Riley Norton is starting for the Springboks even though he is still the Junior Bok captain. Flyhalf Vusi Moyo is on the bench for the Boks, and is also still in the Junior Bok set-up.
âAt lock, everybody thought we were a bit thin. Of course, we had aâŠ
Read the full article at Daily Maverick âđSource document: Grant Williams has emerged as the Springboksâ first-choice scrumhalf.â5 reports
Daily MaverickIndependentCenter2 days ago SCRUMHALF REBOOT: Faf could rekindle his flagging Test career with strong performance against BarbariansThe article discusses the potential return of Faf de Klerk to the South African national rugby team (Springboks) due to injuries affecting other scrumhalves. It highlights the competition among players like Grant Williams, Morné van den Berg, and Embrose Papier for the starting position. The piece notes that while Papier has performed well in recent seasons, he has not yet secured a consistent place in the Test team.
Bias read (Center): The article provides factual information about player injuries, team dynamics, and performance without taking a clear stance or using biased language. It reports on the situation objectively, focusing on the sports context rather than any political or ideological angle.
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Bias read (Center): The article focuses on a sports-related event with no political content or framing. It highlights a community engagement effort by athletes without taking a stance or using biased language.
Official sources cited
- organisation Springboks players' statements
- organisation World Rugby's global training and development programme
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Bias read (Center): The article focuses on sports strategy and player selection without taking a political stance or showing bias toward any political ideology. It provides an analytical overview of the coach's decisions based on player readiness and contingency planning, maintaining neutrality throughout.
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Bias read (Center): The article focuses on sports commentary and player development without any political framing, bias, or controversy. It provides straightforward quotes from the athlete and does not take a stance or present biased information.