FalseBayFC wrote: Thu Feb 17, 2022 8:16 pmNamibia drew against Canada in their 2018 RWC pool match.
The RWC was in 2019, but I'll forgive that one. You don't follow Nam rugby at all though, because there was no draw, the match was called off and never played.
Nam would've had a very strong chance of winning against that Canada team if it had been played, but it wasn't.
FalseBayFC wrote: Thu Feb 17, 2022 8:16 pmThe big issue with developing rugby in Namibia and Zim is investment. I could see them both sitting comfortably at Georgia or Canada level. Especially if they had a team each in the Currie Cup and had a few old hands return from abroad to provide a bit of backbone.
It's now totally obvious that Zim (as in the entire country) has been cratered for at least a generation. It's not going to come back in my lifetime. They could have a strong rugby team, but they could be a whole lot of things, yet they aren't. In rugby Nam have always had the wood on them head to head anyway.
Nam have been doing quite well but are approaching their maximum potential. Uruguay have a similar sized population and number of clubs and are in a similar situation. Throwing money at something doesn't give that much returns if there's not much to throw money at.
FalseBayFC wrote: Thu Feb 17, 2022 7:10 pmIn fact I think that Africa has a much bigger growth potential for the sport than Europe. I'd love to see SA take the lead in developing the Africa Cup Nations by including some of the stronger teams in a SA domestic comp. The interest in the sport in soccer-centric communities in SA is growing very fast as with cricket. Having Siya Kolisi, Lukhanyo Am, KG Rabada, Tendai Mtawarira around as positive role models. Thats a boon of social media.
Zimbabwe with some investment could overtake Italy quite quickly. Especially with the new laws on representing a second country. Dave Ewers, Don Armand, Mike Williams, Eli Snyman and heaps of talented youngsters playing in SA and abroad who were born in Zim, have parents or grandparents from the country. A tiny number of schools there produce cricket and rugby stars at a ridiculous rate.
Kenya and Uganda are probably the best picks if you were taking a longterm view. They're already playing rugby and that part of the continent is going to have increasing population density as the century progresses (with all the economic benefit that brings). That's decades away though and in a series of matches I wouldn't back them against a minnow like Nam.
Zimbabwe is a completely mad country, if you built a Sables team taking full advantage of the eligibility rules and picking the best players (as you propose). As soon as they reached any prominence/success, they would be cut down by their government for being too white. That's essentially what happened to them after they got close to qualifying for the 2015 RWC (went out in the repechage against Russia in Siberia).
So there's no African option for the Boks in the short and medium term. I would support something like the Boks playing an annual midweek match against the strongest looking team among them (Nam most years), it would lose money though and its worth would purely be in building Bok squad depth. The mismatch would be so great it would do little for whichever team plays the Boks.
It's a professional sport. This is about making money.