Sunday Tribune

FAMOUS WIN FOR NEW ERA BOKS

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outstandin­g in giving their team direction, pace and the X-factor.

In a quite extraordin­ary first half England raced into a 24-3 lead after scoring three tries to a sole penalty by the Boks and looked to be on their way to spoiling one of South African rugby’s biggest days.

But a late first-half rally by the home team saw them do the near unthinkabl­e and not only catch the visitors but soar past them with some outstandin­g tries of their own.

England’s Mike Brown, Elliot Daly and Owen Farrell crossed the try-line in an opening spell that would have had the most optimistic Bok fan worried and wondering how much England were going to score on the day.

They dominated the collisions, spread the ball wide and found acres of space at the back; the home team’s defence nowhere to be seen.

But it wasn’t only the rushing up and in from the wings that allowed England’s backs to have a field-day, individual­s also missed one on one tackles; and flyhalf Handre Pollard won’t want to see his missed effort when Brown scored early on.

But just when it seemed as if the only fireworks the Bok fans would see where those that were shot into the night sky before kick-off, they hit back – and in some fashion.

On the 20-minute mark, De Klerk showed great strength to stretch out his arm to dot the ball over the tryline after Nkosi had been stopped short to give the Boks hope, and 10 minutes later it was Nkosi’s turn to get a first Test try.

After his forwards had taken the ball through phases, he kicked it ahead and dotted down after Daly had missed the rolling ball.

The conversion got the Boks to within nine points and that gap closed to two minutes later when Nkosi got his second, after the ball had again been spread wide quickly and Dyantyi has done excellentl­y to flip the ball inside for his wing partner.

The fightback was completed two minutes from half-time when Willie le Roux showed pace to finish off another quickly spread ball by the players on his inside.

It was a remarkable few minutes by the Boks, who turned around a 21-point deficit in 20 minutes to lead by two at the break.

The second 40 was hardly as spectacula­r as the first, but the Boks, with momentum behind them and their confidence growing by the minute, powered on.

With bench-men Steven Kitshoff, Thomas du Toit, Akker van der Merwe and Pieter-steph du Toit on, the home team continued to pile on the pressure up front and ask questions at the back.

The Boks were rewarded for their efforts, but Pollard missed two shots at goal, converting one other, but Dyantyi’s welltaken converted try on 65 minutes saw the Boks into a 12-point lead.

And while England did manage to cross the try-line again, through Maro Itoje and Jonny May in the final 10 minutes, a Pollard penalty sandwiched in between ensured the Boks hung on for the win – and a famous, famous victory.

A new dawn in Springbok rugby has begun..

As much as the day belonged to Kolisi coincident­ally at the very same stadium and in the same number jersey worn by the late Nelson Mandela on that memorable day 23 years ago when the Boks won the World Cup, this was a victory for the ages.

It was the new faces like wing and two try hero Sibusiso Nkosi along with his fellow debutants lock RG Snyman, Aphiwe Dyantyi, who also scored a try, and live wire scrumhalf Faf de Klerk that will give the Springboks hope in the two remaining matches of the series. THE Blitzboks yesterday advanced to the quarter-finals of the Paris Sevens but made heavy weather of their first two pool games before playing far better in the third, and they will want to take the latter form into today.

The South Africans are still in the running to win the event and thus defend the title they won here in Paris last year, but they came within a whisker of missing the quarters when they first lost to Scotland and then had to rely on a score on the final hooter to sneak past Russia.

The Boks saved their best for last to outplay a Canada side that had earlier thrashed Scotland, who had comprehens­ively beaten the Boks in their opening game in the morning.

The Scots won that game 14-12 with a last-second conversion. They had scored first through Robbie Ferguson, which was cancelled out by a fine individual try by Justin Geduld. And the Boks went ahead after a strong finish by Seabelo Senatla only for Scotland’s Harvey Elms to equalise on full-time. The conversion was good and the Boks had deservedly lost.

The Boks had been asleep in that game and nothing changed in their game against Russia. Shortly after kick-off, captain Vladimir Ostroushko scored after handling off a number of defenders. It was poor defence indeed, and that was again the case when the stocky skipper scored his second try.

Werner Kok, a former World Series Player of the Year, scored with South Africa’s first touch of the ball, two minutes before half-time and then came the Boks’ best moment of the day when Siviwe Soyizwapi weaved his way through a host of defenders. It was 14-14 at half-time and the Russians went ahead again when Yurt Gostyuzhev scored. With 30 seconds remaining, Seabelo Senatla scored to make it 19-19, and the last second conversion spared the South Africans’ blushes.

The Blitzboks burst into life against the unbeaten Canadians, overwhelmi­ng them 28-0, with converted tries going

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