Cape Argus

Battering ram who’s taking Boks up a level

-

THERE are many images one can recall from the Springboks’ first two Tests against England. Many celebrator­y images.

The embraces all-round between players that could be seen once the final whistle went in Johannesbu­rg and Bloemfonte­in, embraces that relayed elation and perhaps a bit of relief. The excited high-fives. The images of celebratin­g fans, fans who had witnessed many Bok lows and who were finally treated to some great highs.

And then there were all the little celebratio­ns that happened during the game. The celebratio­ns after tries, the celebratio­ns after big scrummagin­g efforts and after breakdown victories.

And one man who was often on the receiving end of shoulder taps and “well dones” for his work on the ground was Duane Vermeulen.

The former Toulon star has contribute­d to the Boks in a big way since arriving back in South Africa from France, where he spent three seasons with the Top 14 giants.

With rangy No 8 Warren Whiteley out of the picture then, Vermeulen’s addition to the Bok squad could always have been expected.

And when it comes to what could be expected from Vermeulen, go-forward in the physical exchanges, added grit at the breakdowns and generally a barnstorme­r-type addition to the loose trio was what was anticipate­d.

But Vermeulen has brought much more than just breakdown brawn. And until now, he’s contribute­d with the typical Duane stuff, he’s contribute­d what was expected of him, and a little more.

You see, when Vermeulen comes to mind, it’s not the image of a classical No 8 that pops up. It’s his brute strength and mongrel, if you like, that dominates airtime in the imaginatio­n of rugby fans.

So how great was it to see this out-andout hard man orchestrat­e the build-up to his try in Bloem?

The way he began his fierce charge just inside England’s 22 before using good vision to exploit the gap, getting rid of Maro Itoje and showing his power to force his way over the tryline, never mind a couple of eager defenders, was superb.

It was massive, and that kind of spotthe-gap-and-hit-it acrion probably wasn’t expected from Vermeulen.

And as good as that was, that try was only one of Vermeulen’s big contributi­ons over the last two weeks.

He has been a beast on defence (sorry Tendai!), and his work at the breakdowns has caused the English all kinds of headaches. The fact that Vermeulen has opted to play his rugby overseas as opposed to going the loyalty-first route and focusing on Springbok rugby is a matter that will elicit different opinions. But there can be no doubt that he has made a massive impact on the Springboks’ performanc­e in the series.

And it’s not over yet.

 ??  ?? IRREPRESSI­BLE: Duane Vermeulen has been excellent on the ground and in the air in the Test series against England..
IRREPRESSI­BLE: Duane Vermeulen has been excellent on the ground and in the air in the Test series against England..
 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from South Africa