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Published 14:45 2 Nov 2019 GMT
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"This is Week 19, in our planning" he said. "Week 20 was the trophy tour back in South Africa."
Back in November 2017, Ireland thrashed South Africa 38-3 at the Aviva Stadium in one of the final games of a shambolic Allister Coetzee reign. 12 of their match-day 23 from that game featured in the World Cup final.
Erasmus arrived as SARU director of rugby at the start of 2018 and Coetzee had moved on within two months. Erasmus took over as head coach but vowed he would lead his country to the World Cup, in that role, and no further.
Asked about the pressure of getting South Africa back to the top of the world game after they had, not so long ago, slipped to 8th in the rankings, Erasmus gave a powerful and poignant response.
"We talked about what pressure is.https://twitter.com/SportsJOEdotie/status/1190591598666625025 Siya Kolisi, South Africa's inspirational captain, sat by his coach's side and also spoke superbly about what the World Cup win men for him, his team and his country. Erasmus paid tribute to his captain, the first black man to ever captain the Springboks, by saying: "It's easy to talk about going through hard times and struggling to get opportunities. "But then you think about it clearly. At one stage Siya didn't have food or shoes to go to school, and now he's led South Africa to the World Cup. That should sum up what Siya is." An incredible day for Erasmus, Kolisi and all involved with the Springboks. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=uHbIljNf_UA"In South Africa, pressure is not having a job. Pressure is one of your close relatives being murdered.
"There are a lot of problems in South Africa -- which are real pressure. Rugby shouldn't be something that creates pressure, rugby should be something that creates hope.
"We started talking about how we have that privilege of giving people hope. Not a burden, of giving hope. Hope is not talking about it, saying you've got hope of tweeting a beautiful tweet, and things like that. Hope is when people watch the game on a Saturday and they have a nice braai (BBQ) and watch the game, and feel good afterwards, no matter your political differences, or your religious differences.
"The moment you see it that way, it becomes a hell of a privilege. And that's how we tackled this whole World Cup campaign."
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