Scottish Daily Mail

Krige regrets Springboks’ Twickenham shame game

- By ALEX BYWATER

IT REMAINS England’s record victory over South Africa and one of — if not the most — brutal games ever to have taken place on the hallowed Twickenham turf. For everyone connected with the Springboks, their 53-3 defeat at the home of English rugby in 2002 will always be remembered as a day of shame, not just for the result but for the reprehensi­ble approach taken by their team. Thuggery, cheap shots and overthe-top physicalit­y were the order of the day. Led by their captain Corne Krige, South Africa set out to unsettle England with brute force. It failed. For Krige, it remains a huge source of regret. ‘There are lots of memories from that day I’d like to forget,’ Krige told Sportsmail. ‘They still stick with me. A lot went down that day. A lot of the actions I’m not proud of as a Springbok captain. What happens in the heat of battle sometimes makes people lose their head and I did that day. I’m not proud of it.’ Krige played the role of lead villain and hitman for South Africa. His reckless swinging arm on Matt Dawson nearly took the England scrum-half’s head from his shoulders. Krige also stamped recklessly on prop Phil Vickery in the same play after the whistle had gone. Analysing the game on Sky Sports’ Rugby Club, Stuart Barnes and Dewi Morris described Krige’s recklessne­ss as ‘five seconds of madness’. The reality was 80 minutes of lunacy. Morris called South Africa’s approach ‘absolute thuggery’. In a pitiful attempt to beat Sir Clive Woodward’s England, who became world champions the following year, Krige and South Africa lost control. ‘South Africa were just intent on maiming somebody,’ said former England back Jason Robinson, who wore the No 15 shirt in 2002. ‘That’s why it was such a big score. Their focus was on hurting us, not on playing the game. There was all sorts going on — headbutts, elbows, booting, the lot.’ South Africa arrived at Twickenham two decades ago beset by injuries and on the back of defeats by France and Scotland. England, under Woodward, were flying high. The contrast couldn’t have been bigger. To try to bridge the gap, South Africa attempted to unsettle England physically, but not within the laws of the game. Referee Paddy O’Brien sent off Springbok second-row Jannes Labuschagn­e for a reckless, late tackle on Jonny Wilkinson. Frankly, Krige should have followed him in seeing red. ‘I wish we’d done things differentl­y,’ said Krige. ‘It wasn’t the plan from the beginning. As we got further and further into the game, the plan changed in my mind. I’ve apologised many times. It’s 20 years ago now which is quite a long time. Over time you learn to forgive yourself and also that other people forgive. ‘Luckily, time is a healer and you begin to accept it. A red card didn’t help us and it went from there. There aren’t great memories of Twickenham for me.’ Krige landed punches on Robinson, Wilkinson and Lawrence Dallaglio plus a flying headbutt on Dawson. His team-mates were also at it. England paid the price physically for South Africa’s assault. Star fly-half Wilkinson was forced off after being battered into submission. Wilkinson, Robinson, Dawson and Phil Christophe­rs all suffered head knocks. Despite that, Woodward’s side still played some brilliant rugby and scored seven tries. After the reckless display from his team, then Springbok head coach Rudolf Straeuli somehow tried to defend his side’s approach. ‘We are a physical side and so are they,’ Straeuli said. ‘Two of our players came off concussed. Do you think we gave ourselves concussion?’ The irony is that is exactly what had happened. As Krige attempted to wipe out Dawson, he made contact with team-mate Andre Pretorius — who was forced off. It summed up a shameful day for South African rugby, one which still haunts those involved.

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