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Meyer keeps faith in Steyn

Johannesburg - Springbok coach Heyneke Meyer is not writing off flyhalf Morné Steyn despite his dismal performance in a weekend loss to the All Blacks.

Once-deadly goal kicker Steyn missed four of five shots at the posts in Dunedin last Saturday as South Africa slumped 21-11 to New Zealand in a fourth-round Rugby Championship clash.

It was his worst return in seven Tests this season, during which he clicked only in a comfortable home victory over newcomers Argentina in the opening round of the revamped southern hemisphere championship.

Meyer admitted on Monday when the team arrived at OR Tambo airport that seven missed kicks at goal by Morné Steyn (1/5), replacement flyhalf Johan Goosen (1/2) and inside centre Francois Steyn (0/2) cost the Springboks a victory.

"I do not want to knock individuals but the missed kicks were crucial," the coach admitted. "Morné is mentally tough, though, and look at what happened to Bryan Habana.

"Bryan is now playing phenomenal rugby again," Meyer said of the wing who has scored three tries in the Championship after recovering spectacularly from a poor previous season that led many to predict his Test career was over.

"The mental break will do Morné good and we will look at the situation after the Currie Cup matches this weekend and decide who will play against Australia in Pretoria."

Morné Steyn is under pressure from second-choice Goosen, a 20-year-old who played Super Rugby for the first time this year, and Golden Lions flyhalf Elton Jantjies, another inventive young star with an excellent place kicking record.

South Africa host the Wallabies at Loftus Versfeld on September 29 and face world champions New Zealand at the 93 000-seater Soccer City Stadium in Soweto one week later.

The All Blacks will clinch the title if they win in Argentina next weekend, leaving Australia and South Africa to fight for second place.

Meyer heaped praise on the pack that held its own in Dunedin only to see hard won possession repeatedly squandered by poor field kicking, especially from Morné Steyn and scrumhalf Ruan Pienaar.

"We scrummed well and I was very happy with our front row. The loose forward combination we used was superb against the best back row in the world and we have four great locks.

"I have a special feeling about this team - we are on the right track and the results will come. There were a lot of positives from Dunedin and we did enough to win that game."

HAVE YOUR SAY: Springbok coach Heyneke Meyer is not writing off flyhalf Morné Steyn despite his dismal performance against the All Blacks. Do you think it's time for Steyn to get the boot? Send your thoughts to Sport24.
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