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21st September 2023
07:21pm BST

Jean Kleyn played at the 2019 World Cup with Ireland. (Credit: Sportsfile)[/caption]
"They both have been through so much. Both were world-class but obviously had to prove themselves again when they arrived at Munster. What has made them the lads they are, and players they are, is that they were both probably in some dark places over the last three or four years. RG had those injuries and had to work very hard to get back. "Jean was probably in a dark spot, too. If you knew him well, you knew he was struggling. He was playing very well, I think, but he found himself where there was a lot of stock in his position and, he just couldn't break through. "He's a smart guy, you know. I'm talking intellectually. He's quite a smart guy and he knows what he wants to talk about. He asked tough questions. He had a lot of conversations with players and coaches, and the senior coaching staff [with Ireland], and he probably realised that was probably the end of it. "Without this [World Rugby] rule, he was probably thinking of going somewhere else, near the end of his career, and playing. I'm not saying that he wanted to leave Munster, bit I think he probably thought that his door was closed, you know. He's got that opportunity, though, and he's playing again. He's one of the best locks in that Springboks group and he is playing very well. "It's the same with RG. When you go to such a dark place, where your back is against the wall and there's nowhere else to go, all you can sometimes do is start climbing out of it and building slowly."[caption id="attachment_238058" align="aligncenter" width="640"]
RG Snyman of Munster and South Africa. (Photo by Brendan Moran/Sportsfile)[/caption]
"I've always said this, and I said it when RG arrived at Munster, that I don't want to play against that guy. He was the biggest human being. He looks dangerous. He is dangerous and he's so big. "Then he plays with Jean and they are probably, if you put it on paper, the most physical guys you'll ever meet in your life. I'm not even talking about rugby - just when you meet them. They have a presence."They certainly do, but they are just the tip of the iceberg for Stander's old Ireland team. First off, they need to get through Franco Mostert and Eben Etzebeth. Then, on come the Munster monsters. CJ Stander is an international ambassador for the British and Irish Trading Alliance. He is getting behind an initiative to build 1,000 homes and schools in some of South Africa’s poorest townships.
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