Sunday Tribune

There’s magic in SA’S rugby future

- Clinton van der Berg On Twitter: Clintonv

AS A committed rugby tragic, I wasn’t in a happy place six months ago.

The Springboks were a mess and England were on the up. Things could hardly have been worse.

It wasn’t just that the Boks were losing to teams like Italy. They were aimless, clueless and hopeless. Some claimed they were the worst Bok team to ever tour. Perhaps they were.

Yet if we thought the Springboks were a portend of things to come, we couldn’t have been more wrong. There’s a vibrant, passionate attitude among our Super Rugby teams, even as the axe hovers over two of them. There’s invention and conviction in how they’re going about their business.

We even saw two outrageous acts of legerdemai­n that may yet prove to be a watershed in both attitude and style. Dillyn Leyds’ famous no-look reverse spin pass has already been hailed as one of Super Rugby’s most sublime moments – and it’s known a few.

Do yourself a favour, though, and dig out the clip on Youtube of Lionel Cronjé’s extravagan­t circus trick against the Western Force. I had to watch twice to make sure my eyes weren’t deceiving me. national picture with schools from all provinces in action.

Durban High School took on Grey PE in the final game of the St Stithians Festival and it was encouragin­g to see 11 black boys in the starting XV. If these are the buds on the Springbok tree, just imagine how the game might thrive in a few years.

Down the road, Parktown trotted out with 10 black boys, seven in the pack alone. These things ought not to matter, but this is South Africa, so they do. The point is that they played with steel and swagger and all we saw was a team that wanted to win. There was nothing lightweigh­t about them either, one of the boys weighing in at 116kg and standing 2,01m tall.

So to Monday night and the final of the Varsity Cup, played at the University of Pretoria. There must have been a fair amount of beer served up for the mood among the massive crowd was buoyant and they responded with good cheer to an entertaini­ng final that the hosts won.

Unencumber­ed by contracts or the pressures of being profession­als, the students played with a rare freedom that contribute­d to a marvellous atmosphere. Duitser Bosman and Francois Pienaar, the architects of the tournament, have created something very special.

Meanwhile, yesterday, in Kwazakhele in the Eastern Cape, the first match of the allnew Supersport Rugby Challenge took place. For many in the township, this will have been the first time they slapped eyes on elite-level players in the flesh. If this interest can be nourished in a tournament designed to stretch into the far reaches of SA, imagine the possibilit­ies. There may be another Solly Tyibilika or Siya Kolisi among them.

Of course, this isn’t to say the Boks won’t be whitewashe­d by France or smashed in the Rugby Championsh­ip, but it gives insight into a world beyond the pampered pros; a world that is thriving and virtuous.

The Springboks might sit atop the totem pole, but it’s in communitie­s and at schools and varsities where passions first take hold and where dreams are given sustenance.

We mustn’t ever forget this.

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