Cape Times

Eben was brilliant for the Boks, but this hatred of the All Blacks irks me

- Mark Keohane

RAVES 1. Eben Etzebeth was simply colossal in Durban on Saturday. The youngest player to get to 50 Tests for the Springboks made fools of those disbelieve­rs who questioned why coach Rassie Erasmus had started him against Argentina This was his first competitiv­e match since the last Bok match of the 2017 season. He led from the front, added mongrel and physicalit­y to everything he did and showed great skill with ball in hand. He also proved a menace to the visitors at lineout, and his presence certainly added to the scrum potency. In Afrikaans they’d say … “Hy’s ‘n Meneer …”

2. It was the weekend of locks. Sam Whitelock became the first ever player to graduate from the Under-20 World Championsh­ip to 100 Tests. Whitelock celebrated in style. His lock partner Brodie Retallick was as immense in Sydney as Etzebeth was in Durban. Retallick, like Etzebeth hadn’t played Test rugby for the past year. The All Blacks, like the Boks with Etzebeth, are stronger because of Retallick. His work rate has no equal and his skills as a lock have no equal. He scored one of the more memorable “show and go” individual tries you’ll ever see from a lock.

3. I tweeted on Saturday night that it was job done for the Springboks. They scored six tries, won their opening match and got the bonus point. Saturday was about celebratio­n, yesterday was about rest and today is about reflection. So, on reflection, it was a good victory. So many in South Africa struggle to just say well done or actually enjoy the moment. Sure, the accuracy wasn’t always there, be it the lineout throw or the goalkickin­g, but there was more to savour than sigh about. RANTS 1. This hatred of the All Blacks irks me. This is a team that continues to set standards unheard of in internatio­nal sport. The All Blacks have won 100 of their last 112 Tests, with 50 percent of these matches played away from home. Their second half display in Sydney was breathtaki­ng. If you love rugby, you have to appreciate the brilliance in their performanc­e. Forget nationalit­y for a moment and just observe without emotional prejudice; no other team in the world can be as good without the ball and then give an attacking masterclas­s with the ball. To the haters, you can’t love rugby and not love watching the All Blacks.

2. Western Province flew to France to play a Montpellie­r team with seven South Africans in its starting XV. The core of the Province team played in Super Rugby. Montpellie­r haven’t played a Top 14 league game, yet they gave WP a beating. It’s a trip that was an indulgence for all concerned, but it was also a trip that again highlighte­d the standard of the Currie Cup. It is a feeder competitio­n; no more. The endless campaigns to rekindle the glory days of the Currie Cup (pre profession­alism) only highlight why the competitio­n should long ago have been consigned to history.

3. Grey College playing Paul Roos was the biggest school derby of 2018 because of the form of both teams. Paul Roos were unbeaten going to Bloemfonte­in and Grey College’s only setback was a 25-all draw against Glenwood. Yet, seven players from the two schools missed this day to play for SA U18s in an internatio­nal series that has little relevance, and has no tradition and no permanence. These seven players should have been in Bloemfonte­in for the biggest rugby day of their matric year. It robbed the occasion of so much and also the match of its best players.

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from South Africa