The Mail on Sunday

THE HISTORY BOKS

Pollard kicks South Africa to record fourth triumph to stun All Blacks

- Nik Simon RUGBY CORRESPOND­ENT IN PARIS

THE tension was so high that the Webb Ellis Cup could have been squeezed and compressed into gold bullion. A flawed but compelling final that Cheslin Kolbe watched through his finger tips as South Africa, remarkably, became the first nation to be crowned champions four times.

It is maximum intensity. Eviscerati­ng physicalit­y. A superheavy­weight fight that went right to the end of the 12th round. It was beautifull­y ugly. Painfully compelling. High-stakes rugby that ended with 14 against 14 after a red card for Sam Cane and a yellow card for Kolbe.

There were riotous scenes of joy and relief in the South African corner as they held on with a desperate defensive stand. Pieter-Steph du Toit put in an incredible 28 tackles — most of which were so strong that they would reverberat­e through Paris.

The pre-match show was full of glitz and glamour. Dan Carter and Sophie Turner presented the trophy in a Louis Vuitton casket, before the French singer Mika took to the stage in a sparkling suit, almost smashing the windows with his falsetto notes. The action on the pitch could not have been any more different. Grit and grunt. A total dogfight in the rain.

The last time these rugby teams met in a World Cup final was in 1995, when Nelson Mandela presented the trophy to Francois Pienaar wearing a Springboks jersey. For so long the shirt had been associated with white privilege but in 80 minutes it became a symbol of unity. It was even turned into a Hollywood movie.

Under Siya Kolisi, the national team has once again become a tool of togetherne­ss. They delve into their hardships and use it as a force for the greater good, reaching an emotional pinnacle the opposition can struggle to live with.

But this week’s racism allegation­s against Bongi Mbonambi have been damaging and the hooker was under the spotlight. He was his team’s only specialist hooker but after 90 seconds his night was over. All Blacks flanker Shannon Frizell rolled all 114kg of his weight on to the side of his knee at the ruck and his joint buckled. It was a dirty, ugly clearout that resulted in a yellow card for Frizell. Curiously, Mbonambi was only registered as a tactical substituti­on as he limped off.

Ill-discipline was the story of the game. Penalties gifted points and Handre Pollard took every threepoint­er that came his way. The Springboks buckled up defensivel­y. The All Blacks tried to find edges in attack but men in green flew up to prevent the ball from reaching

the wide channels. Every defensive read was like a special play, with Du Toit and Eben Etzebeth launching into tackles like human missiles.

The lineout malfunctio­ned on both sides. Codie Taylor missed his targets

and South African replacemen­t Deon Fourie — a flanker by trade — was found out. South Africa’s kicking from hand was more accurate and their chase was ferocious, pinning the Kiwis back in their own 22.

The physicalit­y was huge and Sam Cane lost control when he hit Jessie Kriel high in the 28th minute. It was a yellow card with a bunker review, eventually upgraded to red. Disaster for the Kiwis. Pollard and Richie Mo’unga exchanged penalties

and half-time the Boks were leading by four kicks to two.

They played Zombie by the Cranberrie­s in a brasserie in Place de la Republique on Saturday morning. The barista hummed along to the tune by herself and it was impossi

ble not to imagine how many people would have been joining in if Ireland or France had made this final.

The World Cup party fell flat after those nations crashed out in the quarter-finals, when these two rugby heavyweigh­ts of the southern hemisphere asserted their dominance, but the South African fans brought the noise. They even had their own rendition during the break.

The Springboks almost broke clear early in the second half. Damian de Allende was held up and he may well have scored had Siya Kolisi passed the ball a fraction earlier. Next up Kurt-Lee Arendse was hit into touch metres from the tryline and the All Blacks were on the ropes. They were under pressure from every angle but Kolisi got his timing wrong and was sinbinned for a high shot on Ardie Savea.

The momentum swung but the All Blacks were wasteful in the red zone. Aaron Smith, playing his final Test, had a score ruled out for a knock on by Savea at the maul. But they kept pushing for the try, opting for lineouts as the penalty count shot up. Ox Nche and RG Snyman, the first members of the Bomb Squad, came off the bench to repel a driving maul but the resistance eventually broke.

Jordie Barrett threw a huge looping pass to Mark Telea, who danced around the tackles with his footwork and flopped a questionab­le offload into the hands of Beauden Barrett to score the first try in the corner.

Fourie’s set-piece frailties were exposed. Veteran lock Sam Whitelock came off the bench and ordered his half-backs to kick for touch at every opportunit­y. They picked off his throws and also got the better of him at the scrum.

In the 73rd minute, Kolbe was sinbinned for a deliberate knock on as he stopped Anton Lienert Brown’s offload. He watched through his fingertips as Jordie Barrett’s longrange penalty attempt missed its target. His relief was felt all the way back to South Africa, as his team held on for the most remarkable victory.

Du Toit, South Africa’s back row and man of the match, said: ‘The last three games have been quite tough. Each one we’ve played as a final and each one was by one point, so it was tough for us and we’re happy with the win.

‘For all of South Africa, we’re honoured to be able to play for you guys and play for the Springboks. I know when we go back home it’s going to be a warm welcome for us.’

 ?? ?? YOU BOOTY: Pollard shows his prowess from the tee as the Boks march to victory
YOU BOOTY: Pollard shows his prowess from the tee as the Boks march to victory
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 ?? ?? WE’VE DONE IT: Jesse Kriel (right) and Eben Etzebeth celebrate at the final whistle
WE’VE DONE IT: Jesse Kriel (right) and Eben Etzebeth celebrate at the final whistle

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