Ospreys boss Toby Booth thinks the South African sides are “raising the standard” of the competition as they enjoy solid starts to the season.

The Bulls, Lions, Sharks and Stormers have been in great form thus far, winning 10 of their 12 games between them against European rivals this campaign.

And that has led to half of the United Rugby Championship‘s top six places in the standings being occupied by South African outfits after the early rounds.

South African sides starting well

Last season’s champions the Stormers are setting the pace of their countrymen but have played one fixture fewer than current pace-setters, Leinster and Ulster.

The South African sides’ showings have certainly caught the eye of Booth, who admits their addition to the URC in 2021/22 has provided a new challenge.

“I think the involvement of the South African teams and the way they play means you can’t get away with certain things that you probably got away with, and you’ve got to be better at certain aspects,” said the Ospreys boss.

“They are raising the standard of, for example, attacking play and athleticism.

“So I think the challenge for us all is to try and meet and match that because they will have good set-piece, they will be defensively sound and the way they are set up lends itself more to an attacking game.

“I think the inclusion of the quality of those South African teams has certainly meant that everyone has got to embrace that sort of style and be better at it themselves.”

Plenty of high-scoring matches

The attacking mindset is something that Booth believes has been implemented across the board in Europe and feels that could only be good news for spectators.

“Speaking to coaches, I get a general sense that people want to be positive, so I think there is a mindset element to it,” he added.

“It’s not just in our competition. If I look across different competitions, there have been high-scoring games.

“I think people want the game to speed up, which is why the biggest animosity I hear in different circles is around length of time on TMO (television match official) decisions, stoppages and teams that want to slow the game down.

“We have to accept that we are trying to provide entertainment and enjoyment, not just play a game of rugby, and that means making the game quicker with less stoppages in it and keeping tempo.

“We have had a couple of first halves that have gone close to 55-60 minutes in actual duration.

Keen to quicken up the game

“Of course, some of that is injury and you can’t legislate for that, but there is still a lot of dead time in the game, and the more we can quicken it up the better.

“The attitude of the teams seems to be more edging towards that way, and I think we will get a better product, better games and as a result better entertainment.”

Ospreys will take on the unbeaten Stormers on Friday in one of two URC games taking place that night, with Connacht hosting Leinster the other meeting.

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