Springboks aim to have âtwo best teams in the worldâ
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Autumn Nations Series: England v South Africa
Venue: Allianz Stadium, Twickenham Date: Saturday, 16 November Kick-off: 17:40 GMT
Coverage: Commentary on BBC Radio 5 Live and BBC Sounds; live text commentary on the BBC Sport website & app
World champions South Africa are aiming to have âthe two best teams in the worldâ, says centre Andre Esterhuizen.
Head coach Rassie Erasmus opted to rotate some key starting positions in the Springboksâ victory over Scotland on Sunday, benching captain Siya Kolisi and flanker Pieter-Steph du Toit, which has been a common theme under his management of the team since taking charge in 2017.
Their opening Autumn Nations Series victory also put them back on top of the world rankings after Irelandâs defeat by New Zealand on Friday.
âOne of the good things is that everyone is getting game time now,â Esterhuizen, who played instead of regular centre Damian de Allende on Sunday, told the BBCâs Rugby Union Weekly podcast.
âIt it also about looking forward, youâve got to be able to spare all the guys for the next World Cup and build experience into it.
âThe aim is to have the two best teams in the world, all in one squad.
âWe want to make it second nature for people slotting in, so if someone steps in, they can just slot in and play the same if not better than the other player.â
South Africa won this yearâs Rugby Championship for the first time since 2019, losing one match away to Argentina when Erasmus left the majority of his starting XV at home.
Erasmus previously said he would ârather win the World Cup than sit at an 85% win rateâ, external after criticism of his sideâs record between successful World Cups.
âIt is very much a team first environment,â South Africa defence coach Jerry Flannery told BBC Sport.
âThe players coach each other, the âteam firstâ mentality is stronger here than I have come across.
âPlayers have come in this year and couldnât believe it was all about making sure the team wins.â
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âIt will be great to be running at Smithâ
Erasmusâ side next face England, who are yet to pick up a win this autumn, at Twickenham on Saturday.
Steve Borthwickâs side suffered a narrow two-point defeat by New Zealand, before conceding an injury-time winning try to Australia on Saturday.
Despite losing out in the final play two weeks in a row, fly-half and Esterhuizenâs former Harlequins team-mate Marcus Smith has been Englandâs standout performer in both matches.
âItâs a great space, I obviously love to play there,â Esterhuizen added.
âIt will be great to be running at Marcus, not run off him.
âItâs going to be a great match, England have played well in the last few games, itâs unfortunate that it hasnât been the results that they want.
âI think itâs going to be a big one.â