Sunday Tribune

Lomu was ‘the new cool’

- Lungani Zama

MY INTRODUCTI­ON to rugby superheroe­s came in the form of a hulking Tongan, who was still a teenager, but trampling over men old enough for him to say ‘Sir’ to when passing by.

I can clearly remember the 1995 Rugby World Cup. There are many, significan­t reasons for this. The opening ceremony meant that we didn’t bother with school much, because the teachers invited us to cram into the Clarendon Primary School staff-room to watch the Springboks get off to a fairy-tale start.

None of their names were especially significan­t to us then, but they grew much over the course of a month.

In the townships of Imbali, where we used to live, soccer balls became make-believe oval things for a month, and though the tune to the tournament anthem was whistled with ease, the words were made up as we went along. Darkies; we innovate. “It’s the world, and the univeeeeee­rse... Umhlaba, uqoqene! Umhlaba uqoqene!” You know the rest. They were weird times, but exciting too, because suddenly South Africa had another team worth supporting, outside of Chiefs, Pirates and Bafana, when duty called.

And so, we watched in fascinatio­n before adulation, as the Boks lived out the perfect script.

But, long before the final, this Tongan badass, bedecked in black, with a funny wisp of hair at the top of his head, had turned our collective eye.

It was all to do with his sheer block-bustabilit­y.

Sure, there were quick guys, there were kickers – always respected ekasi – and there were tackling machines, like Ruben Kruger, who looked like they could scythe humans in half.

But, this was The Incredible Hulk, with a ball in his hands.

And so, every day after school, after our ‘Universe’ rendition, and the craziest version of a township haka (more, bizarre adaptation­s of an original), we would play mini World Cup games.

Forward passes and illegal tackles aside, they were epic, and always ended in a dropgoal that would never register on normal fields.

And, in every game, someone drew the lucky straw and played as Jomo Lomu.

Who knew that one of South Africa’s greatest No 10s would have a world rugby star named after him, we wondered? He must be as big as Pele, we surmised.

It took us a good few games – and one smart arse – to get the name right, but eventually we learnt that the sporting world didn’t revolve around Mr Sono.

Armed with this tonic, we appreciate­d Lomu for what he actually was – a sheer freak of nature, born at the right time to take rugby to a far wider audience.

And, boy, he did it in the most devastatin­g manner possible. Will Carling first, then Tony Underwood’s enquiry was shut down before poor Mike Catt was reduced to a mere speed bump on the way to the tryline.

At that moment, for my mates and I, anyway, rugby was cool. Francois Pienaar and the Boks made it more than a sport a few weeks later, but Lomu and his savage combinatio­n of skill, power and pace made the whole thing cool. Maybe, after that game, Jonah Lomu did say ‘Sir’ as he went to ask one of the Englishmen he bulldozed over to swap match jerseys.

Everything that we have learnt about the gigantical­ly great, sadly late, Jonah Lomu, is that his power and size was used only for the purposes of advancing the black jersey on the field.

Off it, he was every bit the gentle giant, as many rugby powerhouse­s so often are.

Go well, Jonah. You and your flavour of cool will never, ever be forgotten.

 ?? Picture: EPA ?? RAMPAGING: Jonah Lomu of New Zealand makes light work of the Italian defence in their 1999 Rugby World Cup match at Huddersfie­ld.
Picture: EPA RAMPAGING: Jonah Lomu of New Zealand makes light work of the Italian defence in their 1999 Rugby World Cup match at Huddersfie­ld.
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