Exciting EP Kings loose forward Tim Agaba may have a shot at Olympic glory after being included in the Springbok sevens rugby training squad announced by the SA Rugby Union on Wednesday (4 November). Former St Andrew’s pupil, Ryan Kankowski has already signed a contract to play for the Springbok sevens team this season. 

Exciting EP Kings loose forward Tim Agaba may have a shot at Olympic glory after being included in the Springbok sevens rugby training squad announced by the SA Rugby Union on Wednesday (4 November). Former St Andrew’s pupil, Ryan Kankowski has already signed a contract to play for the Springbok sevens team this season. 

Playing eighth man, Agaba produced some storming displays for the Kings this season and now gets a chance to show his ability in the game's fast lane when he attends a three-week training camp in Stellenbosch, starting on Sunday 8 November.

The camp is part of SARU's new sevens strategy, with the game making its debut in the sevens format at the Rio de Janeiro Olympics in 2016. The last time rugby (15-a-side) was played at the Olympics was in Paris in 1924 when the United States took the gold medal.

The Blitz Boks training camp will provide a host of players with a chance to make their mark in the game ahead of the Rio Games. Rugby World Cup Springboks Bryan Habana, Damian de Allende and Lwazi Mvovo are among several 15-a-side stars who will be in contention for places in South Africa’s Olympic Sevens squad.

They will be joined by Springbok team mates Juan de Jongh, Warren Whiteley, Cornal Hendricks and Oupa Mohoje at the three-week training camp, announced Jurie Roux, CEO of SARU.

Habana has returned to his French club side Toulon and will join the training camp towards the end of the month.

SARU also confirmed that Springboks Francois Hougaard and Ryan Kankowski had already signed contracts to play for the Springbok sevens team this season.

In addition, provincial 15-a-side stars Cheslin Kolbe, Ryno Benjamin, Warrick Gelant and Jaco Kriel have also been invited to join the camp alongside SARU’s powerful, existing sevens squad.

“The announcement of this group is a significant achievement for us and it is the culmination of a lot of hard work behind the scenes by Neil Powell (Springbok sevens coach) and Rassie Erasmus (SARU GM: Rugby Department),” said Roux.

“I’d like to thank our various provincial unions for their willingness to assist the Springbok sevens coach and management team in planning this new approach.

“Both parties worked very hard to make this arrangement possible. The forthcoming season is the most important in the history of sevens rugby. The new, expanded World Series and the Olympic Games are two huge challenges and we at SARU want to make sure we give our Springbok sevens team the best possible chance of success.”

Roux said that following the conclusion of the Rugby World Cup, the focus for the coming season would shift to sevens, starting with the three-week training camp which gets underway in Stellenbosch on Sunday.

“The signing of players such as Francois Hougaard and Ryan Kankowski is a real coup for us,” said Roux. “It means they will focus solely on the seven-a-side game in the coming season, bringing with them unique skill sets that our sevens department has identified as being ideal for the code.

“A number of other, highly talented 15-a-side players have also been identified as having great potential in sevens rugby and, working in conjunction with their provinces, we plan to expose them to tournament play during the course of the HSBC World Series.”

Roux said that the squad was planned in line with SARU’s Strategic Transformation Plan (STP) and was comfortably ahead of the sevens target for 2016.  

Hougaard, the Vodacom Blue Bulls utility back, has played 35 Tests for the Springboks and his contract will run from 1 November until after the 2016 Rio Olympic Games. Former Cell C Sharks No 8 Kankowski, meanwhile, is set to join the Blitz Bokke at the beginning of February and will remain with the team until August 2016, when the Olympic Games will be staged in Brazil.

Kankowski has already made four HSBC World Sevens Series appearances and he has earned 20 Test caps for the Springboks.

Powell was delighted with the new additions and said he and his management team were looking forward to the exciting prospects of working with the reinforced training squad. “We have a lot of talent in our existing group and there are some very talented players coming through our SARU Sevens Academy,” explained Powell.

“The addition of the group of Springbok and provincial players will raise our game significantly and present us with an opportunity to build an even stronger Springbok sevens team. It is also fantastic for the brand of sevens in South Africa that players of the calibre of Hougaard and Kankowski have signed to play for us for a season,” Powell said.

Since taking over the coaching reins in 2014, Powell, has steered the Springbok sevens to second place on the World Series log, the gold medal at the 2014 Commonwealth Games and automatic qualification for the Olympic Games.

Springbok Sevens training squad for 2015/2016 season (SARU Sevens contracted unless stipulated):

Cecil Afrika – 38 HSBC WSS tournaments

Tim Agaba (Uncapped, EP Kings)

Ryno Benjamin – 29 HSBC WSS tournaments (Toyota Free State Cheetahs)

Kyle Brown – 48 HSBC WSS tournaments

Branco du Preez – 41 HSBC WSS tournaments

Carel du Preez – 3 HSBC WSS tournaments

Damian de Allende – 0 HSBC WSS tournaments, 13 Tests (DHL Western Province)

Stephan Dippenaar – 25 HSBC WSS tournaments

Chris Dry – 44 HSBC WSS tournaments

Juan de Jongh – 1 HSBC WSS tournaments, 14 Tests (DHL Western Province)

Justin Geduld – 18 HSBC WSS tournaments

Warrick Gelant – 4 HSBC WSS tournaments (Vodacom Blue Bulls)

Lungelo Gosa – Uncapped, SARU Sevens Academy

Bryan Habana – 2 HSBC WSS tournaments, 117 Tests (Toulon, France)

Cornal Hendricks – 17 HSBC WSS tournaments, 12 Tests (Toyota Free State Cheetahs)

Francois Hougaard – 0 HSBC WSS tournaments, 35 Tests (newly contracted to Springbok Sevens)

Frankie Horne – 68 HSBC WSS tournaments

Dewald Human – Uncapped, SARU Sevens Academy

Ryan Kankowski – 4 HSBC WSS tournaments, 20 Tests (newly contracted to Springbok Sevens from Feb 2016)

Werner Kok – 18 HSBC WSS tournaments

Cheslin Kolbe – 8 HSBC WSS tournaments (DHL Western Province)

Jaco Kriel – Uncapped (Xerox Golden Lions)

Oupa Mohoje – 0 HSBC WSS tournaments, 8 Tests (Toyota Free State Cheetahs)

Lwazi Mvovo – 0 HSBC WSS tournaments, 15 Tests (Cell C Sharks)

Sibahle Maxwane – Uncapped, SARU Sevens Academy

Ruhan Nel – 6 HSBC WSS tournaments

Sandile Ngcobo – Uncapped, SARU Sevens Academy

Sphamandla Ngcobo – Uncapped, SARU Sevens Academy

Seabelo Senatla – 19 HSBC WSS tournaments

Philip Snyman – 30 HSBC WSS tournaments

Kwagga Smith – 15 HSBC WSS tournaments

Rosko Specman – 6 HSBC WSS tournaments

Warren Whiteley – 6 HSBC WSS tournaments, 3 Tests (Xerox Golden Lions)

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