Business Day

Warrior Joost fought to the end

• Springbok star was as brave on the field as he was tackling his illness

- Craig Ray Cape Town /TMG Digital

The lingering image of Joost van der Westhuizen is of him throwing himself at the feet of a rampaging Jonah Lomu in the 1995 World Cup final at Ellis Park to fell the behemoth at a time when others had not.

He faced up to the physical threat Lomu posed with courage and single-mindedness.

It was the same way he approached life after he was diagnosed with motor neuron disease (MND) in 2011.

Van der Westhuizen did not shy away from his condition and instead embraced the challenge of trying to find a solution while also raising awareness for other sufferers of the disease through his J9 Foundation.

Both players are now gone‚ but neither will be forgotten as much for their rugby exploits as for their courage and humility in the face of terminal illness.

Ultimately Van der Westhuizen lost the war against MND when he died on Monday surrounded by family and friends‚ but he won many battles along the way.

He was 45 and leaves two children‚ Jordan, 13, and Kylie, 10‚ as well as his father Gustav‚ mother Mariana and brothers Pieter and Gustav.

He was rushed to a Johannesbu­rg hospital on Saturday and placed on life support.

Van der Westhuizen is the second player from the 1995 World Cup-winning Bok team to die‚ following flank Ruben Kruger who succumbed to brain cancer in 2010.

In 2008‚ five years after retirement‚ Van der Westhuizen noticed he was losing strength in his right arm.

By 2011, he was diagnosed with MND, an irreversib­le degenerati­on of the nerve cells that control muscles.

As he physically withered‚ losing the ability to speak and walk‚ Van der Westhuizen never lost his sense of humour or his willingnes­s to fight the disease.

“If we don’t have hope‚ we have nothing. And if you mean that to anyone then we are successful‚” Van der Westhuizen told ESPN in 2015.

“What we are doing is only living our lives‚ and if we mean anything to anyone‚ it’s awesome. We don’t need to know what we mean to people; we are doing it because we love it. We don’t mean anything in life if you’re only talking and not doing anything about it.

“I know now for the first time how to invest our ideas to care for other people. When I was playing‚ everyone cared about me‚ including myself.”

As a player he redefined the scrumhalf role with his willingnes­s to take on defenders in narrow and wide channels and became the benchmark for halfback excellence.

“There are so many things you can say about Joost‚ but the one thing that I keep coming back to is that, both as a player and person, he was a warrior and a fighter‚” former Bulls and Bok coach Heyneke Meyer said.

“Joost was a great defender — he was like an extra flank in that position, and in that sense he was well ahead of his time.

“It was great to coach him. People didn’t want to run in his channel because he was massively physical.”

Van der Westhuizen made his name as a high school scrumhalf in Pretoria with the unfashiona­ble FH Odendaal team that went to the Administra­tor’s Cup final in 1987.

The school lost the final 18-14 to Hugenote‚ a side which contained Van der Westhuizen’s future 1995 Springbok World Cup-winning teammates Japie Mulder and Chris Rossouw.

In 1988 he was selected for the Northern Transvaal Craven Week team and after three years at Tukkies‚ where he made his mark‚ his rise to Test stardom began.

He was invited to Northern Transvaal trials in early 1992 and attended‚ secretly hiding a broken small finger on his left hand‚ which he injured in a “koshuis” game. The trial was not a success, with Van der Westhuizen losing out to future Bok teammate Johan Roux for a place in the initial squad.

But two months later he starred for Tukkies as they beat traditiona­l rivals Maties in front of 40,000 people at Loftus.

His performanc­e earned praise from no lesser rugby luminary than Danie Craven and the following week Van der Westhuizen was included on the Northern Transvaal bench for a “night series” game against Transvaal.

He came on as a wing late in the match, with Northern Transvaal winning 22-14.

His progress was rapid that season and he eventually ousted Roux as the first-choice scrumhalf at Loftus. Roux would move 50km south to Johannesbu­rg the following season to play for Transvaal.

Later that season, Van der Westhuizen was chosen as the Junior Springboks’ starting scrumhalf against the touring All Blacks. The following year he sat patiently on the bench for five Tests against France and Australia before his chance came.

His dazzling‚ unorthodox‚ attacking halfback play and rock-solid defence marked him as someone special and by October 1993 he was selected for the Springboks to play against Argentina.

It was the first of 89 Tests and, naturally, he scored a try on debut and added another a week later in the second Test.

Van der Westhuizen had earlier made his Bok debut against Western Australia at the Waca stadium in Perth in July‚ scoring four tries in the process.

It was the start of a decadelong‚ highlight-filled associatio­n with the Bok jersey that saw him play 111 matches for SA and score 56 tries.

After his Test debut Van der Westhuizen lost his starting place to Roux for the tour to New Zealand in 1994 after his part in a humiliatin­g 32-15 home loss to England earlier in the year.

Van der Westhuizen did not feature once in the 1994 threeTest series against the All Blacks in New Zealand‚ but was reinstated when Kitch Christie became Springbok coach at the end of that year.

A year after making that Test debut against Argentina‚ he was back in the starting XV after Roux suffered a knee injury during the first Test in Port Elizabeth. Van der Westhuizen grabbed the chance at Ellis Park and never looked back. Roux would be consigned to second choice for the remainder of their overlappin­g careers.

Of course‚ 1995 was to be the greatest year in Bok rugby and Van der Westhuizen was a central figure in the success.

His performanc­es at the World Cup were busy and laced with that searing drive to win and to compete.

Nowhere were those traits better epitomised than in the final against the All Blacks.

At 1.95m and 118kg‚ All Black wing Lomu had changed the rugby world and seemed unstoppabl­e. Inside the first 10 minutes of the final, he broke the Bok defensive line‚ but Joost stopped him in full flight with a head-on tackle.

Ellis Park erupted and Bok chests swelled. Lomu even looked stunned.

It was probably the moment that turned the final the way of the Boks. And it was the moment that bound the two players together.

There were many rugby highlights after that, such as being part of the 1997-98 team that won the Tri-Nations and 17 Tests in a row‚ or captaining the Boks at the 1999 World Cup.

Van der Westhuizen also led the Bulls to the 1998 Currie Cup title‚ ending a seven-year wait for the trophy to return to Loftus. He captained them again to the Currie Cup crown in the twilight of his career in 2002‚ leading a young team that contained Victor Matfield‚ Bakkies Botha and Derick Hougaard.

Ever the warrior, Van der Westhuizen still held the Bok starting berth at the 2003 World Cup‚ despite several injuryridd­en seasons.

His competitiv­e streak saw off challenges from many pretenders, even at the age of 33. His final Test appearance was against the All Blacks in the quarterfin­al in Melbourne‚ marking the end of his career.

Joost earned 89 Test caps and scored 38 Test tries‚ a record that wing Bryan Habana broke at Rugby World Cup 2011 when he scored against Namibia. He also captained the Springboks 10 times‚ which included the 1999 World Cup where SA finished third.

He was nominated for the South African Player of the Year award six times‚ but never won.

‘I KNOW NOW FOR THE FIRST TIME HOW TO INVEST OUR IDEAS TO CARE FOR OTHER PEOPLE. WHEN I WAS PLAYING‚ EVERYONE CARED ABOUT ME‚ INCLUDING MYSELF’ LOMU BROKE THE BOK DEFENSIVE LINE‚ BUT JOOST STOPPED HIM IN FULL FLIGHT WITH A HEAD-ON TACKLE. ELLIS PARK ERUPTED. LOMU EVEN LOOKED STUNNED

 ?? /AFP ?? Brave and bold: Joost van der Westhuizen holds on to the ball despite a couple of Wallabies hanging on his back during the World Cup semifinal at Twickenham in 1999. It is a moment that sums up the way he played rugby and confronted the disease that...
/AFP Brave and bold: Joost van der Westhuizen holds on to the ball despite a couple of Wallabies hanging on his back during the World Cup semifinal at Twickenham in 1999. It is a moment that sums up the way he played rugby and confronted the disease that...

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from South Africa