Snyman will have his strategies tested against three very different opponents with a squad that is low on experience or recent happy memories at this event, the third in the 2026 world series.
The Blitzboks will have some momentum from a satisfying tournament win in Cape Town just under two months ago, but the squad depth will be tested with a number of stalwarts not travelling due to injuries.
Snyman has always stated his intentions of broadening depth and experience across the squad and this will be put to the test with five players under the 10 cap mark for the trip, but for the SA coach, that is par for the course.
One is the uncapped Luan Giliomee, with the former Charlie Hofmeyr High School product becoming the second new face on the Blitzbok roster this season, following Nabo Sokoyi’s debut in Cape Town.
“Luan slotted in very well and he certainly has an aptitude for sevens – his learning curve is huge and we are excited to see how he goes,” Snyman said.
“We brought some new and less experienced players on this trip for a reason, so it will be important from my side to get the balance right with the mixture between them and the established core of the side.
“You want to give them as much experience as you can and they need to learn what the series is all about, but we are still going to need the established guys to bring their best game too.
“This trip is as much about building more depth in our squad as it is about results. This format forces you to win every match if you want to make it to the final, so you have to be at your best in every match. But there is always a longer plan too, and ours is to have the best possible squad for the 2028 Olympics.”
Luan Giliomee in training in Singapore earlier this week.
Snyman insisted the Blitzboks have prepared well: “We had a good build-up since arriving here and the guys are in a good space. It is always nice to have a debutant or two in your group as they bring some fresh energy and that again proved the case on this trip.
“So there is much to look forward to. The biggest challenge will be to make sure we are all aligned from the start and on the same page when it comes to our game plan and the detail and execution thereof.”
New Zealand and South Africa – winners of the opening tournaments in Dubai and Cape Town – top the standings on 32 points, along with Fiji, the Blitzboks’ final pool opponent on Saturday.
However, Snyman said the focus for now is with Spain, and not the four-time Singapore champions from the South Pacific.
“Spain is our main focus – they did really well last season and already beat some very good teams this season, so they will be a huge challenge first up,” he said.
“The management of our players will be very important. The starting team will have to lay a foundation, so when we introduce the less experienced players, they will be under a less pressure. If we manage that interchange well, the result should look after itself.”
The second match against Great Britain will test the Blitzboks’ temperament. Although they outplayed the Britons in Cape Town last month, they suffered a bad 38-10 result in last year’s tournament in Singapore, their biggest defeat ever against the team from the UK.
Blitzbok squad for Singapore:
#1 Christie Grobbelaar – 24 tournaments, 200 points (40 tries)
#2 Ryan Oosthuizen – 58 tournaments, 245 points (49 tries)
#4 Zain Davids – 55 tournaments, 240 points (48 tries)
#5 Ricardo Duarttee – 21 tournaments, 325 points (24 tries, 100 conversions, 1 penalty goal)
#9 Nabo Sokoyi – 1 tournament, 10 points (2 tries)
#11 Siviwe Soyizwapi (captain) – 60 tournaments, 795 points (159 tries)
#12 Shilton van Wyk – 29 tournaments, 310 points (62 tries)
#15 Donavan Don – 11 tournaments, 89 points (17 tries, 2 conversions)
#16 Sebastiaan Jobb – 4 tournaments, 15 points (3 tries)
#19 David Brits – 11 tournaments, 50 points (10 tries)
#21 Zander Reynders – 8 tournaments, 20 points (4 tries)
#24 Tristan Leyds – 13 tournaments, 149 points (19 tries, 27 conversions)
#27 Luan Giliomee – uncapped
Blitzboks’ pool fixtures (SA times, all matches live on SuperSport)
Saturday 31 January:
06h54: Spain
10h20: Great Britain
13h46: Fiji
Pools:
A: South Africa, Spain, Great Britain, Fiji
B: New Zealand, Australia, France, Argentina
Head to Head:
Spain: Played 31, won 29 – average score: 30-8
Great Britain: Played 14, won 9 – average score: 29-11
Fiji: Played 107, won 44, drawn 2 – average score: 16-17