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Big Jim goes Big on the Springboks

Massive praise for Rassie Erasmus, squad depth and the Boks Bomb Squad revolution.

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JOHANNESBURG, SOUTH AFRICA - JULY 04: End of the match moments during the Nations Championship match between South Africa and England at 10bet Ellis Park on July 04, 2026 in Johannesburg, South Africa. (Photo by Sydney Seshibedi/Gallo Images)

Scotland captain turned rugby podcaster Jim Hamilton insisted the world champion Springboks remain the bench mark in international rugby a year out from the 2027 World Cup.

Speaking on The Big Jim Show, Hamilton argued that the Springboks’ greatest strength is no longer simply their world-class starting XV, but the extraordinary depth that allows Erasmus to rotate players without compromising standards.

Jim Hamilton: The Springboks have changed Test rugby

Hamilton says the Bomb Squad has evolved from an idea many questioned into one that the rest of the rugby world is now desperately trying to replicate.

Rather than simply replacing tired forwards, South Africa have weaponised the bench, allowing them to raise their intensity when opponents begin to fade.

He believes that innovation, coupled with unmatched player depth, has fundamentally altered how elite Test rugby is coached.

The Boks dismantled England 45-21 at Ellis Park in the opening round of the inaugural Nations Championship.

The world rugby media view echoed Hamilton’s sentiments.

Rassie Erasmus’ biggest triumph

Hamilton argues that Erasmus’ greatest achievement isn’t winning back-to-back Rugby World Cups.

Instead, it is creating genuine competition across every position.

According to Hamilton, virtually every Springbok knows there is another Test-quality player waiting for an opportunity, ensuring standards never slip.

It has created a culture where performance, rather than reputation, determines selection.

Bigger than individual stars

Hamilton also praises the way Erasmus has built a system that is bigger than any one player.

Whether experienced World Cup winners or newcomers are selected, the Springboks continue to deliver the same physicality, discipline and tactical accuracy.

He points to the seamless integration of new talent as one of the defining features of the Erasmus era.

Physical dominance remains unmatched

Hamilton says every nation speaks about matching the Springboks physically but very few actually achieve it, not for an 80 minute sustained period.

His view is that South Africa’s ability to sustain relentless intensity across the full 80 minutes separates them from every other Test side.

That edge, he says, is amplified by the quality of the replacements entering the contest during the second half.

Damian Willemse’s importance

Hamilton singles out utility back Damian Willemse as one of the Springboks’ most valuable assets.

His versatility across the backline gives Erasmus enormous tactical flexibility and allows South Africa to configure their match-day squad in ways few international teams can match. Willemse, at 15, or at 12, ranks among the best in Test rugby.

The world is still chasing South Africa

Hamilton’s strongest statement is that the Springboks have avoided the complacency that often follows World Cup success.

Instead, they continue to evolve. From constant squad rotation and player development to tactical innovation and selection depth, Hamilton believes South Africa are setting the standard while the rest of the rugby world attempts to catch up.

Big Jim’s Key Takeaways

Jim Hamilton’s View Why it Matters
Springboks are rugby’s benchmark World champions continue to set global standards
Bomb Squad changed Test rugby Other nations are trying to copy South Africa’s blueprint
Squad depth is unmatched Rotation no longer weakens the team
Rassie Erasmus’ greatest strength Building two Test-quality teams
Physicality remains unrivalled South Africa dominate collisions over 80 minutes
Damian Willemse is invaluable His versatility gives Erasmus unique selection flexibility


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