Saturday Star

Mercedes’ Bottas sets the pace as Ferrari fizzles

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ASHFAK MOHAMED

DURING Siya Kolisi’s inspiratio­nal acceptance speech at the Laureus Sports Awards on Monday night, he said that each Springbok on the stage had their own unique journey to becoming world champions.

On Cheslin Kolbe, who scored a sensationa­l try in the final against England, he said: “Cheslin Kolbe has a beautiful story as well – he’s been told that he can’t make it so many times, and he fought against that. And now he is one of the best players in the world.”

A big part of Kolbe’s fight to the top has been his size – 1.70m and 80kg – which many coaches felt was not enough to excel on the internatio­nal stage.

But Rassie Erasmus had seen enough of the hot-stepper from Kraaifonte­in in his renaissanc­e at Toulouse in France, and Kolbe recalled the moment that the Bok coach told him he would be making his Test debut against Australia in 2018.

“The first time I met coach Rassie was in a lobby in Australia. He asked me, ‘How are you feeling?’, and I said ‘I’m good, Coach. No injuries, I’m happy to go’. And he told me ‘Okay listen, you are on the bench for the weekend’,” Kolbe told Independen­t Media with a beaming smile in Berlin this week.

“I was like, ‘Okay, thank you so much’. And then I had a one-on-one, and he said I don’t know much of the structures, so he doesn’t expect me to know everything. He told me to just go out on the field and play my rugby, because they know I can play rugby.

“I just went on to the field and made sure I did my best. The freedom has been there for me and I really appreciate that, because you can easily get boxed into a system.”

Kolbe has certainly been let out of that box at French club Toulouse. He left the Stormers and Cape Town in 2016 probably a bit disillusio­ned, having been ignored by his franchise coach of several years, Allister Coetzee, for the Boks, and being limited and shifted around in Super Rugby as well.

He is too nice a guy to ever admit that in public – even going so far as to say that he “always had the freedom” at the Stormers, and that he was told by coaches to be himself and “play what’s in front of you”.

But the change since his move to France has been visible. Cape rugby fans always knew he possessed the dynamic skill that saw him score that stunning try in the World Cup final – it’s in his blood, being a cousin of Olympic 400m champion Wayde van Niekerk – and he is now finally able to display it for his club and country.

Kolbe is enjoying life in France with his wife Layla and daughter Kylah (aged two), and things have been going well on the pitch too. He said that club coach Ugo Mola has backed him since his debut, and that his game has grown significan­tly at the club as he is exposed to so many players from different countries.

He added that while French and European rugby is not as fast as Super Rugby, it is quite physical and “you have to stand your ground”.

Kolbe certainly had to do just that last Sunday, when he was asked to start at flyhalf against Racing Metro 92.

“The first carry was straight at me (clapping his hands together to indicate a collision), and I had to make the tackle!” he laughed.

“It definitely comes with playing 10: they are probably going to target you, but that’s the challenge for me, that I always get excited for – to prove people wrong not to just look down on small guys, but to also respect them in certain areas.

“Whether you are big or small, if that guy can weigh up and stick into the defence, and have the right attitude, he can achieve what he wants to and cause a lot of havoc and doubt in other things.”

Kolbe kicked superbly at goal as well, with one from near the halfway line and another from the touchline seriously impressive. He played at flyhalf for most of his school career, and a few games for Western Province and the Stormers. So, could he stake a claim for the Springbok No10 jersey in 2020?

“As I said, wherever the coach chooses me, I will play! But with Handré, Elton, Damian Willemse, there’s a lot of talent there and a lot of back-up – I’m sure that’s the last thing on my radar, to play 10. But wherever I’ll be needed ... and I have to play, I will play and just do my best.”

VALTTERI Bottas lapped close to record pace as he put Formula One champions Mercedes back on top of the testing timesheets yesterday, but Ferrari suffered an engine problem.

The Finn, whose teammate Lewis Hamilton is aiming to equal Michael Schumacher’s record seven titles, produced the quickest lap of Barcelona’s Circuit de Catalunya so far in the first pre-season test of 2020.

Bottas’s time of one minute 15.732 in the morning session was three tenths slower than the outright circuit lap record of 1:15.406 he set in qualifying for last year’s Spanish Grand Prix.

Bottas had also completed 65 laps, one short of a full race distance, by lunchtime. Renault’s Esteban Ocon was second fastest, 1.370 slower but with 76 laps on the board. Max Verstappen, who did 168 laps on Wednesday,

again pounded out more than any other driver in the morning with a total of 86.

Ferrari’s Sebastian Vettel was the ninth of the 10 drivers on track, although lap times are of little significan­ce at this stage of the season with teams running on different fuel levels, but stopped two and a half hours into the session with 40 laps done.

The session was suspended for 20 minutes while the car was recovered.

Ferrari said the engine problem would be investigat­ed back at the Maranello factory. A new engine was being fitted for the afternoon session.

Mercedes-powered Williams also brought out the red flags when Canadianni­cholas Latifi stopped on the pit straight. He was last on the timesheets.

The season starts in Australia on March 15. | Reuters

 ??  ?? CHESLIN Kolbe and his wife Layla at the Laureus Sports Awards in Berlin earlier this past week when the world champion Springboks were named 2019 Team of the Year.
CHESLIN Kolbe and his wife Layla at the Laureus Sports Awards in Berlin earlier this past week when the world champion Springboks were named 2019 Team of the Year.

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