Springbok Sevens coach, Neil Powell, afterwards said the inconsistency in performances in Sydney was frustrating.
“It was a frustrating weekend yes. At times we played really good sevens, but too often we failed in some basics. We would have a good half and then follow that up by a poor one. If we can't get the basics right, we can't expect to play in finals and semifinals.”
The coach said the usual spark seemed missing at times. “We were a bit quiet in the warm-up this morning before England and that is not the normal culture in the team. We need to be mentally and physically ready for knock-out matches and that is something we will have a look at as we get back home and start preparing for the Las Vegas event.”
Powell refused to blame the lack of experience amongst the ranks for some of the errors made, but admits that lessons learned must be implemented.
"Look, you are going to make mistakes. We had JC (Pretorius) on debut and Impi (Visser) in only his fourth tournament, so we must realise there is a transition taking place. We still need to cut out mistakes though. We conceded a yellow card again and you cannot play with six men against the likes of England, Fiji and New Zealand."
Powell said some honesty and frank discussions will follow when the team has its de-brief.
"We need to be tough on ourselves in what is going wrong. Also in team selection, I think the players in form need to start, despite the number of tournaments or experience they have. We had too many slow starts in the tournament and that resulted in having to play catch-up rugby. Against the big teams that is fatal."
The team remained on the top four in the standings, but are now 19 points behind the log leaders, New Zealand and USA. “The main focus still remains Olympic qualification with a top four finish, so we have to improve all the time,” Powell said.
Powell, the current World Rugby Sevens coach of the Year, did take some positives from the win over Australia.
"We had to tough that one out and that was good. We defended much better and it felt a bit like the old days where teams really had to work hard to get a try against us. "From a wider perspective, there were no serious injuries and players such as JC and Impi got good tournament time under the belt."
The team were outplayed by England 26-5 in the Cup quarterfinals in a match where they could not get going. The England side scored two converted tries in quick succession to lead 14-0 at the break.v The Blitzboks started the second half on a positive note, with Zain Davids thundering down the touchline to score in the corner, but two late tries by England sealed the deal.
Kyle Brown, who replaced the injured Philip Snyman in the match day squad, also took to the field to become the most capped Blitzbok of all time, passing the 68 tournament mark he shared with Frankie Horne.
The South Africans showed much more clinical execution in their fifth place semifinal against Spain, who earlier lost to USA in their Cup quarters.
Selvyn Davids scored in the first minute to show the Blitzbok intent and added another six minutes Sorry. He converted both for a 14-0 lead at the break.
A brace by Siviwe Soyizwapi and a last gasp try by Dewald Human confirmed the South African dominance in the match.
Against Australia, Selvyn Davids scored early to give the Blitzboks a 7-0 lead. Australia scored either side of the break to take the lead, but Brown had the final say in the match, dotting down in the corner in the final play of the match.
The top five teams on the World Series log are:
1. New Zealand 76
2. USA 76
3. Fiji 72
4. South Africa 57
5. England 55