Houston Chronicle

Springboks, All Blacks get a rare showdown in final

- By Jerome Pugmire

PARIS — South Africa. New Zealand.

New Zealand. South Africa. That’s how the last four champions line up on the Webb Ellis Cup.

One of the Springboks or All Blacks will take it again in Paris on Saturday when they collide in the Rugby World Cup final for the only the second time.

The first time was so iconic that a movie was made about it. Jonah Lomu was corralled, Joel Stransky hit the winning drop goal in extra time and Nelson Mandela wore a Springboks jersey and cap. It could only be 1995.

The fates have prevented rugby's legendary rivalry from featuring in another final until now, and even this was unexpected.

It’s the first final in which both teams have lost a pool match. The All Blacks lost to France. The Springboks lost to Ireland. Stade de France rocked for both unsurprisi­ng results. But the old stadium was literally shaking on consecutiv­e nights in the quarterfin­als when the All Blacks stunned Ireland and the Springboks knocked out host France.

The Springboks have surprised nobody. They were big favorites before the tournament and have possibly ploughed the toughest path to the final in tournament history. Beside Ireland, they had to shake off Scotland and Tonga in the pool stage, then win one-pointers against host France and England in the knockout stage.

The final will be their fifth bone-rattling match in five weeks, perhaps one reason why they have gone for the unconventi­onal 7-1 split of forwards and backs on the bench. Perhaps fatigue has forced the Boks to require two forward packs to grind down the All Blacks and hope no backs are injured.

Or perhaps because 7-1 worked when they first

tried it, against the All Blacks just before the tournament, and gave their great rival their worst ever defeat by 35-7.

The 7-1 didn't work against Ireland but rolling the dice is a trait of the Boks brains trust of Jacques Nienaber and Rassie Erasmus. When they took over a broken team five years ago, they planned to win this World Cup. Winning the 2019 World Cup in Japan was a bonus.

The starting XV has 10 from that 2019 final, including halves Handre Pollard and Faf de Klerk, who have been reunited as starters for the first time in more than a year. Hooker Bongi Mbonambi was another from 2019, selected after he was cleared by World Rugby of allegedly making a racial slur against England's Tom Curry last weekend because there was insufficie­nt evidence.

"The 23 we selected for a reason, and the reason is we think they can deliver and win us a back-to-back World Cup,” Nienaber said.

The All Blacks have gone with their usual 5-3 split, answering South Africa by only replacing

backup prop Fletcher Newell with the more experience­d Nepo Laulala. Coach Ian Foster was nonplussed about South Africa's 7-1.

The All Blacks were written off after consecutiv­e losses to South Africa and France. But they got their mojo back a month ago when their injury list cleared and captain Sam Cane, forwards Tyler Lomax and Shannon Frizell and back Jordie Barrett returned.

The stakes are much, much higher, not just a first World Cup title for most on the field, but a possible second title for quite a few, and a possible third title for one, All Blacks lock Sam Whitelock. The winner between the three-time champions will also become the first four-time champ.

But its motivation enough for both teams that it's All Blacks vs. Springboks, Springboks vs. All Blacks.

Their 102 years of history — most of them for mythical world domination — and deep respect for each other's love of the game have nourished a rivalry that will be elevated to new heights in Paris.

 ?? Lewis Joly/Associated Press ?? South Africa players celebrate after defeating England 16-15 in the Rugby World Cup semifinal match.
Lewis Joly/Associated Press South Africa players celebrate after defeating England 16-15 in the Rugby World Cup semifinal match.

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