Jake White (Steve Haag/Gallo Images)
Rugby World Cup-winning coach Jake White has embarked on the biggest modern-era South African spending splurge as he seeks to make the Bulls a powerhouse again.
The Pretoria team were the dominant southern hemisphere franchise between 2007 and 2010, winning three of the four Super Rugby competitions during that period.
Loftus Versfeld, the 50,000-seat fortress of the Bulls in a leafy suburb, was the scene of the many great triumphs, notably a 61-17 thrashing of the Chiefs in the 2009 final.
The ground was regularly packed as adoring supporters turned up to watch stars like flyhalf Derick Hougaard, scrumhalf Fourie du Preez and locks Victor Matfield and Bakkies Botha.
It was a very different story this year in Super Rugby, however, before the coronavirus pandemic brought the five-nation competition to a close after just seven rounds.
A Bulls side shorn of stars like playmaker Handre Pollard, who moved abroad after helping South Africa win the World Cup a third time last November, lost five of six matches.
The packed stands at Loftus were a distant memory with only a few thousand hard-core supporters turning up to witness one inept display after another.
It left the three-time champions 12th in the overall standings and hopes of a top-eight finish and a quarter-finals slot already gone less than halfway through the regular season.
Something had to give and coach Pote Human was fired, paving the way for the ‘Mr Fixit’ of rugby, White, to take control last March and immediately embark on a signing spree.
“We need to rebuild a winning culture at Loftus,” White, 56, told AFP. “Winning matches will bring thousands of supporters back.
“It will not be an easy task as the team has been struggling for some time, but we are up for it.”
White has hired a flood of experienced players, many of them former Springboks who opted to return home from Europe and Japan and spend the twilight of their careers in Pretoria.
The backs who were bought include Gio Aplon and Travis Ismaeil, both past 30 but with a lot to still offer, according to White, who coached the 2007 World Cup-winning Springboks.
To bolster the pack he wooed World Cup winner Duane Vermeulen back to South Africa after the forward spent a year cashing in on the riches of Japanese club rugby.
Arno Botha, Nizaam Carr, Sintu Manjezi, Marcel van der Merwe and Walt Steenkamp have also been signed to create a virtual new Bulls pack for the post-coronavirus pandemic era.
It was not one-way traffic toward the Loftus changing rooms though with backs Warrick Gelant, Johnny Kotze, Manie Libbok, Divan Rossouw and Rosko Specman leaving.
South Africa-born former Scotland loose forward Josh Strauss was the latest departee after failing to make an impact in Super Rugby this season.
There were also coaching changes, notably the hiring of Russell Winter and the recall of former Bulls Super Rugby handler Nollis Marais.
Once dismissed by a rival coach as nothing more than a “video operator at training sessions”, White has succeeded wherever he has worked.
Assisted by wily Australian Eddie Jones, he guided the Springboks to 2007 World Cup glory with a 15-6 final triumph over England in Paris.
Told to reapply for his national team post by officials he did not click with, White refused and Peter de Villiers became the first black coach of the Springboks.
He later dramatically improved the Super Rugby fortunes of the Brumbies in Australia and the Sharks in his homeland, taking both to the knockout stages.
White won the second-tier European Rugby Challenge Cup with French outfit Montpellier and later coached Toyota Verblitz in Japan.
When Verblitz hired outgoing New Zealand coach Steve Hansen this year, White came home and after talks with PRO14 strugglers the Southern Kings, agreed to join the Bulls.
Forwards coach Winter is convinced White can make the Bulls a force to reckon with again in Super Rugby.
“We should never be shy of touting the South African style of play. When I coach forwards, I want them to play to their strengths — a brutal, confrontational type of game.
“South African forwards are naturally attuned to that way of playing and it can work so well for us.”
No rugby has been played in South Africa since mid March because of the Covid-19 crisis and the most optimistic date for a resumption of matches is August.
SA Rugby hope to stage a domestic Super Rugby competition, similar to the one already under way in New Zealand, with Australia set to follow suit in July.