Description
Springbok Rugby Uncovered by Mark Keohane is a nonfiction book in the sports and memoir genre.
The book focuses on South African Springbok rugby between 2000 and 2003, a period marked by coaching changes, match losses, administrative disputes, and controversies within the national rugby system.
The content includes accounts of coaching decisions, player selection processes, training environments, contractual issues, administrative structures, and reported incidents involving racism allegations, the Kamp Staaldraad training camp, and the 2003 Rugby World Cup campaign. It draws on the author’s experience as communications manager for SARFU during this period.
The text is structured as a chronological and thematic account, organised around key events and operational aspects of Springbok rugby, including management, team dynamics, and administrative processes.
Readers interested in South African rugby history, sports administration, and nonfiction accounts of professional sports environments will find this book relevant.












