Daily News

Mbonambi must inspire Bok pack

- ASHFAK MOHAMED ashfak.mohamed@inl.co.za

BEFORE the Springboks’ last Test against France in 2018, Bongi Mbonambi already had 23 caps to his name.

But don’t be fooled by that – he had been given only four starts since making his debut against Ireland in Gqeberha in June 2016.

While he was renowned for his energetic displays – where he was a robust character who never took a step backwards as a powerful ball-carrier and defender – there were some question marks about his line-out throwing skills.

The same doubts were swirling around his great rival for the Bok No 2 jersey, Malcolm Marx, but the then-lions man had been handed 18 starts out of 21 Tests in a similar time period to Mbonambi’s internatio­nal career.

But exactly to the day four years ago, Mbonambi planted the seed that would lead to him becoming the first-choice at the 2019 Rugby

World Cup ahead of Marx with a remarkable late cameo against the French at the Stade de France in Paris.

With the South Africans trailing 26-22, Mbonambi was sent on by Rassie Erasmus after 72 minutes, and he produced unerring accuracy under tremendous pressure in feeding four consecutiv­e line-outs in the French 22 as the Boks hunted a maul try.

The five-pointer eventually came, with the replacemen­t hooker breaking away from a drive to score the winning touchdown.

The rest, as they say, is history, as the Boks went on to clinch the Webb Ellis Cup in Japan.

Marx, though, has enjoyed a resurgence in form in 2022, and coupled with a few injury issues that have affected Mbonambi, the former loose forward has become the establishe­d hooker.

Jacques Nienaber’s team, though, saw their driving maul stopped in its tracks by Ireland in last weekend’s 19-16 defeat in Dublin. Even though it didn’t always appear to be legal, the home side managed to ‘swim around’ and get in among the Bok forwards to halt their drives.

To make matters worse, Ireland scored their

own maul try through flank Josh van der Flier, which would have hurt the Boks’ ego.

Nienaber responded by making three changes to the tight-five for tomorrow’s clash against the French in Marseille (10pm kick-off), with Mbonambi, Ox Nche and Franco Mostert coming in for Marx, Steven Kitshoff and the injured Lood de Jager.

The Bok mentor will hope that Mbonambi can rediscover that punch that he added to the forwards against France a few years ago at the Stade Velodrome tomorrow, as they will be up against a massive home pack.

Mbonambi is just 1.75m tall and weighs in at around 108kg, although his abrasive style belies those stats. French hooker Julien Marchand is bigger at 1.81m and 108kg, and the considerab­le presence of New Zealand-born tighthead prop Uini Atonio (1.97m, 152kg) makes their pack a force to be reckoned with.

Locks Thibaud Flament (116kg, 2.03m) and Cameron Woki (109kg, 1.96m) offer different skills in the line-outs and tight-loose, while loosehead Cyril Baille (1.82m, 115kg) will get stuck in as well.

But can the 31-year-old Mbonambi – who now has 53 Test caps – inspire the Boks once more against the French? If he does, it won’t only benefit the team, but also enhance his chances of reclaiming the No 2 jersey on a more permanent basis …

 ?? | SHAUN ROY Backpagepi­x ?? BONGI Mbonambi scored a try off a maul in the Springboks’ last Test against France, and will hope to do so again in Marseille tomorrow.
| SHAUN ROY Backpagepi­x BONGI Mbonambi scored a try off a maul in the Springboks’ last Test against France, and will hope to do so again in Marseille tomorrow.

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