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Ellis Park ecstasy: Springboks blitz All Blacks late in comeback victory

Aphelele Fassi with the ball. Photo by PHILL MAGAKOE / AFP) (Photo by PHILL MAGAKOE/AFP via Getty Images

Ellis Park made for a raucous setting for the first Test between the Springboks and All Blacks of 2024, and both sides lifted under the intense pressure.

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An all-time classic contest was witnessed by the Johannesburg faithful, but the Springboks would have to endure a deficit for the majority of the opening hour before a final quarter blitz brought home the win for the hosts.

A breakdown infringement from South Africa 30 seconds in handed the All Blacks a lineout on the 22, and the visitors launched a multi-phase attack, twice getting the ball wide to the right flank with space but twice the Springboks’ defence was up to the challenge, eventually showing Ardie Savea the touchline.

Play wouldn’t leave the hosts’ 22 though as another penalty was followed by a yellow card to Aphelele Fassi.

With the one-man advantage, the All Blacks went to the lineout drive and rumbled over for the first points of the game seven minutes in. Damian McKenzie added the extras.

South Africa’s kick-off went out on the full and New Zealand’s ensuing scrum saw TJ Perenara nail a 50-22, but South Africa’s defence defused the play once more.

Finally, in the 11th minute, the hosts had a chance to attack just outside the All Blacks’ half and a deceitful play saw Cheslin Kolbe go within a whisker of a line-break. A few phases later a clever grubber from Sacha Feinberg-Mngomezulu saw Kurt-Lee Arendse go within a whisker of scoring – were it not for Will Jordan recovering the kick ahead.

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The Springboks then set up camp in New Zealand’s half and forced multiple penalties, with the third lineout drive of the play seeing Bongi Mbonambi power over the line. The effort went unconverted.

The All Blacks looked to get the ball wide via both pass and kick but the Springboks scrambled well on each occasion, although surrendering some metres in the process.

Penalties

5
Penalties Conceded
14
1
Yellow Cards
1
0
Red Cards
0

The period of Kiwi attack was ended in the 24th minute by a kick that went out on the full from Beauden Barrett. After 25 minutes, Eben Etzebeth entered the contest.

A breakdown penalty won by South Africa saw Sacha Feinberg-Mngomezulu step up to the tee just shy of the 60-metre line. The kick sailed through the air and made it comfortably over the post, handing the hosts a one-point lead.

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It would be a short-lived lead, as a perfectly played draw and pass from Tyrel Lomax in midfield put his outsides in space, resulting in a try to Caleb Clarke down the left wing. McKenzie couldn’t find his target that time around.

The Springbok scrum started to find ascendency as the half wore on, getting the hosts on the front foot and helping Feinberg-Mngomezulu get another shot at three points – this time, from a much friendlier distance. The New Zealand lead was swiftly cut to one.

A missed drop-goal attempt from Feinberg-Mngomezulu looked to bring a rapid first half to a close, but Beauden Barrett found the touchline seconds too early, handing South Africa what would be an ultimately unsuccessful final shot at the lead. Halftime score: 11-12.

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Jordie Barrett offered the All Blacks a dream start to the second half with an intercept that sparked a foot-race to the line. With All of South Africa’s speedsters hot on his tail, the centre just made it to the line and McKenzie converted.

The Springboks responded immediately with pace and fury with the ball, pressing deep into All Blacks territory before winning the breakdown penalty and being rewarded with the three points via Feinberg-Mngomezulu’s boot.

The hosts then conceded a breakdown penalty directly off the kick-off, allowing Damian McKenzie to reinstate the eight-point lead.

The immense physicality of the game began to take a toll on the players as the 50th minute beckoned, and after some injury stoppage time, Feinberg-Mngomezulu got another crack at the posts and converted.

The Kiwis looked to have made an error with a long contestable kick landing in the waiting arms of Aphelele Fassi in the 22, allowing the fullback to take the mark. However, a poor clearance handed the visitors an attacking lineout from just outside the 22.

Again, the ball was put through the hands until Caleb Clarke got his hands on the ball in space on the wing and found his way to the try line once more.

Two errors from the All Blacks’ back three in quick succession meant the team struggled to exit their territory and the Springboks’ scrum had a chance to do some damage out in front of the posts. New Zealand’s reserve prop Ofa Tu’ungafasi was up to the challenge though.

The Springboks looked to double down on some territorial pressure as the game entered its final quarter but relieved any pressure built with ill-discipline. On the flip side, the hosts’ defence was again up to the task of defusing the ensuing attacking opportunity from New Zealand, making their way back into their opponents’ half through some Aphelele Fassi magic.

After a brutal battle of a lineout drive, Ofa Tu’ungafasi was yellow-carded and the Springboks went straight back to their forward game. Two phases after another drive, Kwagga Smith powered over the line under the posts. The hosts’ deficit was reduced to three with 10 minutes remaining.

The Springbok onslaught continued as the hosts earned gruelling metres into the All Blacks’ half the hard way, and a magnificent impact performance from Grant Williams was capped with a try that shifted the lead in the world champions’ favour. The conversion made it 31-27 with five minutes remaining.

Bone-crunching play followed as desperation doused the Ellis Park field, but with every heart-pounding moment, the Springboks looked more likely to cement their win. Wasting no time, on the stroke of full-time, Williams found the touchline and ended a famous contest. Full time score: 31-27.

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Comments

163 Comments
C
CK 219 days ago

I've definitely learned that one shouldn't read the first comments that are posted after a game like this. They tend to be emotional, poorly considered, and generally (it seems) from people who aren't hugely interested in rugby or thinking about the game.


Glad to see more balanced comments coming through after people have had some time to sleep on things!


It was a cracker. And Ellis Park was insane. The volume seemed unreal. Personally, I found the Haka impressive, partly because the crowd was making so much noise and the All Blacks challenge had a defiance to it. The DJ needs a bit of a chat! The plane was fantastic and added to the pageantry.


As for the game itself, I don't feel there was a mountain of controversy. Bongi's try was allowed because it was deemed a rip. Codie's try was allowed because he was deemed to have remained part of the original maul. The timed-out kick was a shame, given that SFM thought the ref was checking the try, but that is how the cookie crumbles.


I believe the best team won. And it's good to see that there are AB fans who can acknowledge getting beaten (rather than looking for untoward reasons for losing).


Big takeaways: Jordie Barrett is the first name on the sheet for me. Still battling to find a number 7. Caleb Clarke's second try was a thing of pristine, structured, simple beauty, and Clarke is the most improved All Black player over the last couple of years.

J
JW 218 days ago

It was a cracker. And Ellis Park was insane. The volume seemed unreal. Personally, I found the Haka impressive, partly because the crowd was making so much noise and the All Blacks challenge had a defiance to it. The DJ needs a bit of a chat! The plane was fantastic and added to the pageantry.

Definitely! I was surprised there is all this hoplah (I understand an apology for the aircraft, that would be regardless of a haka (it could have just been a team huddle etc), but I didn't even hear what the noise was, it was just so cool not to have the Haka as some act of performance (to be enjoyed by staring at it etc). It's always the most electric when there is a backdrop going on b ehind it.


And SA didn't go off and do something silly like half the team warmups afterwards, did they?

S
Skinny Pins 220 days ago

Idiotic writing. If you must put names in bold, a whole article not referencing Ethan Blackadder or Pieter Steph, the two best players on the park from either side, shows how redundant this author's analysis is. You missed the whole crux of the match. Don't give up your day job, Ned.

J
JW 218 days ago

Bold text is just hyperlinks. The site automatically links you to the relevant page, not sure why it doesnt work for some.

M
MQ 220 days ago

Well done Springboks-this was a lot more competitive from the ABs than anticipated although I expect rinse and repeat for the world champions next weekend too.

C
CO 220 days ago

Looks like the Boks ran a curious rugby league style interchange bench in the forwards with Ruan Nortje coming and going twice with a variety of players such as Kwagga, Jason-Dixon, Kolisi, Etzebeth all part of the regular cycle of players for blood/HIA.


When the Boks are already an extra forward on the bench this is a clear advantage to the Boks freshening up the engine room with the tiring Allblack pack having the ref send the fresh legs of Ofa to the sin bin giving the strategy even more impact.


The Allblacks need to closely study what's going on with Erasmus's bloodbin/HIA interchange of his engine room and the extra forward as it's proving absolutely decisive regardless of whether it's in the spirit of the game.


The Allblacks should move to a 6/2 bench with a halfback and ALB.

P
PB 220 days ago

Oh what a lot of poppycock! Nortje went off for blood, it wasn’t a tactical substitution, so he was able to come back when Kolisi went off injured. Maybe understand the rules before posting inflammatory rubbish

C
ColinK 220 days ago

Well done Boks you deserved your win in the end. There is not much between the teams but your consistent dominance in the breakdown was decisive. We gave away the ball, penalties and yellow card as a result of it.

For me I was pleased by the ABs getting out to 27 - 17 but disappointed we did not finish the job. I saw some good performances from players on both sides for the ABs Reiko, Blackadder, Taylor and Lomax had big games. Beauden did some amazing stuff but also some dumb stuff kicking the ball away when we needed to hold it. Dmac the same, superb a few times and dumb as a door nail others. Good to see the ABs despite the large changes to the squad this year are very close to the Boks still. We will get better.

B
B.J. Spratt 221 days ago

Great game. A few ifs and buts. Once again discipline cost us a Test Victory.

C
CO 220 days ago

It's not that simple

B
BM 221 days ago

How come Sascha got blown for the shot clock, while MacK went 5 seconds over on his first kick?

F
Forward pass 221 days ago

How does a TMO miss that blatent knock-on in a try? TMO can find something 4 phases back against ABs but cant even look at a ball placement? What else apart from deliberate decision could that be?

B
BM 221 days ago

Good win for Boks - left 2 tries out there for Kolbe/KLA with bounce of the ball. Ruan Nortje was a revelation, and Wiese also had a top game. Sasha was excellent, and Grant Williams needs a start. Just got a feeling this was the AB best game on this tour, and the Boks still have some left.

J
JW 221 days ago

Sacha sloppy with this kicks (he kicked it dead at the end there but was given the lineout anyway) again but boy does he show some class with them, going to be great in the future. Probably still won the battle with NZ having Beauden take, and not care about, a lot of NZs kicks.


Looks great with ball in hand as well. ABs will be a lot better with Jordan taking over from Beauden. He's just a finisher these days, even if Jordan is not yet at 100%

C
Chiefs Mana 221 days ago

Great game, disappointing result for the ABs. Discipline and exits continue to hurt us. My standouts - Blackadder, Vaai, Jordie, Dmac and Taylor. (I realise I usually bag Vaai and Blackadder but they were good).


Don’t know how much trust razor had in our bench as think they were used too late in the match when the momentum had totally shifted, still need to make an impact though.


Some great talent coming through for the Boks and our younguns will be much better for it after today in the lions den. I’d like to see Ratima start next week otherwise same team, need to figure out the bench impact though.

C
CK 219 days ago

Super close. I was most impressed by the set play that came off for the ABs with Caleb in the corner. That's is ruthless, simple, structured rugby that New Zealand need in their arsenal. Clearly they have it now, but must deploy it more regularly if the alternative is a half-chance of magic.


Still think Blackadder is not the solution (despite having his best test so far), especially for the future. I also believe Roigard is missed on the bench.

B
Bruiser 221 days ago

Vaii has potential unlike Blackadder, who is already at 100% of his ability. Can Vaii play 6 or 8 to give us some go forward

J
JW 221 days ago

Blackadder!?! Take that C word out of your name!


Can't say I recall a lot from Ethan other than flopping on the ground with his legs spread out backwards at every play.


Agree re the bench, though happy with the impact made by the really late ones. Still making the wrong subs in the backs.

B
BB 221 days ago

Please Ben tell us about the rogue ref, the arrogance of the Boks, the lucky decisions, the off the ball incidents, the one dimensional Bok play...it warms my heart you scheming on what else negative to say about the Boks...suppose the luck they obtained with the first knock on try will be manna from heaven...we love it!

E
Ed the Duck 221 days ago

Ahhhh Ben Smith, how’s that medicine going down now….??? 😂😂😂

H
Hellhound 221 days ago

His comments never age well😂

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Mzilikazi 2 hours ago
Matt Faessler: ‘To be involved in a home World Cup would be just next level’

Thanks for the article, Brett. I must say I am disappointed that the Reds have lost both games against the two top teams from NZ they have played so far this year. I feel they should be more advanced under Les Kiss and his coaching team in what is now the second year of tenure.


The lineout, which you highlight in the article, is an obvious standout. Matt Faessler is shaping as a standout finisher of mauls, but that ability is wasted if the throw/lift/catch element is a shambles.


Also very disappointing so often is the ability to spread the ball wide using the “out the back” type passes well. Just watch Scotland, even currently weak Wales, to see the level of sophistication in this area that can be achieved.


In the final analysis, the breakdown work is not as good as all the NZ sides achieve with apparent ease. Their scrum halves so often have an “armchair ride” compared to our 9’s, who deal with slow and often scrappy ball. And I would say this applies to all our Australian sides, not only the Reds.


Not being one eyed on Qld, I am also disappointed to see the Waratahs not performing as one would have hoped, given the strength of their roster now. Ofc, one must also look at the injury toll effect on all teams.


And there is no question, on the positive side of this years competition, how very competitive all teams can be on their day. Mona Pacifica are looking more than just competitive now, but the Highlanders are are much better team than last year, as are the Force.


I find the background bits on players great reading always. and your recounting of Matt Faessler’s grandfather’s exploits is just up my street. Keep writing for us, please !!

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