South Africa
Matfield speculation gathers momentum
January 19, 2014
Victor Matfield poses during the 2014 Pretoria Bulls Super Rugby headshots session, Loftus Versfeld Stadiu, January 7, 2014
Victor Matfield looks set to return to rugby for the Bulls this season © Getty Images
Enlarge

Victor Matfield will return to top-level rugby in this year's Super Rugby and make himself available again for the Springboks, according to reports in South Africa.

Numerous reports say the 2007 IRB World Cup-winning lock, who has played 110 Tests for South Africa, will end his two-year retirement to again represent the Pretoria-based Bulls in Super Rugby from next month. He will be 37 in May.

Matfield may also be considered for the Springboks, with national coach Heyneke Meyer a former coach of Matfield at domestic level with the Bulls and a big fan of the second-rower.

Neither the Bulls nor the South African Rugby Union are commenting on a possible return for Matfield but he has been photographed training with the Bulls playing squad at a preseason camp.

Matfield is a member of the Bulls coaching staff.

"If (Victor) can play as he has in the past, it will be good news for South African rugby, but at his age it just gets harder and harder to compete at the same level," former South Africa lock Mark Andrews, a 1995 World Cup winner, told Die Burger newspaper.

"And the 2015 Rugby World Cup is a long way away."

Matfield could surpass Johan Ackermann as the oldest Springbok in the modern era if he plays for South Africa in the southern hemisphere's Rugby Championship, which starts in August.

Ackermann, the coach of the Johannesburg-based Lions, was also 37 when he played his last Test in 2007.

Ackermann backed Matfield's return, even for the next World Cup in Britain, when Matfield would be 38.

"Matfield is fit, athletic and his experience will add great value to the Springboks," Ackermann told the Afrikaans-language Die Burger.

"I believe he is definitely still in Heyneke Meyer's Springbok plans. He offers Heyneke security going into next year's World Cup and is an ideal player to fall back on."

Yet there was also a warning from Ackermann that Matfield shouldn't hold up younger players, something that led to criticism of the national team and former coach Peter de Villiers when former captain John Smit was picked at hooker at the end of his career ahead of Bismarck du Plessis, who was widely considered to be a better player at the time.

Some argue that the Springboks should be developing a partnership between young locks Eben Etzebeth and Pieter-Steph du Toit for the World Cup rather than gambling on Matfield.

© AAP

Live Sports

Communication error please reload the page.