Springboks make a statement with dominant win over All Blacks
No two Tests are ever the same in international rugby. The All Blacks dominated the Boks in Auckland last month, but it was a very different story at Twickenham on Friday night.
Tries to Siya Kolisi and Kurt Lee-Arendse saw the Boks taking a commanding lead into the break, and this continued throughout the second term as they ran away with a 35-7 win.
The All Blacks’ impressive unbeaten run comes to an end at the hands of their rivals, while the Springboks can take plenty of confidence into the upcoming Rugby World Cup.
Walking into the legendary venue before the Test, it was clear who the majority of fans were here to see. There was plenty of green around the streets of Twickenham, and even a mix of braai and drinks.
If you closed your eyes, even for a moment, you were practically transported to the streets of Johannesburg before a Test at Ellis Park. This was a Springboks home Test, even if it wasn’t.
The anticipation for another instalment of this enthralling rivalry continued to build and build as the clock continued to tick ever closer to 7.30 pm. Thousands flocked the stands at Twickenham, and they couldn’t wait.
As the teams made their way out on the hallowed turf at Twickenham, the noise that echoed throughout the stadium was incredible. It gave this writer goosebumps.
After the anthems and a passionate rendition of Kapa O Pango from the All Blacks, the Test was finally here. The waiting was all but over.
All Blacks fullback Beauden Barrett kicked the ball high into the London sky as the Test got underway on Friday evening.
Things started slow, if only for a while, as both teams began to ease their way into the Test – but one of them, clearly, did that better than the other.
It was all the Springboks throughout the first half of the Test. The All Blacks were in survival mode, but did enough to hang on – for a while, at least.
Following a series of penalties from the New Zealanders, which saw Scott Barrett and Sam Cane sent to the sin bin, Springboks captain Siya Kolisi opened the scoring in the 18th minute.
Just as it was during their disastrous run of losses last year, poor discipline and errors were the All Blacks’ Achilles heel. Against a team like the Springboks, you’ll be made to pay.
Midfielder Jordie Barrett threw an intercept in the 34th minute, and Kurt Lee-Arendse reaped the rewards. The wing scored under the sticks to give the Boks a commanding 14-nil advantage.
But the worst was yet to come.
Lock Scott Barrett was sent to the sin bin for a needless high tackle on a defenceless Dane Vermeulen, and two yellows make a red. Barrett’s night was done, and the All Blacks were in trouble.
Wing Will Jordan gave the All Blacks a glimmer of hope though with a try on the stroke of half-time, only for the TMO to dismiss the score for a knock-on.
The All Blacks were held to zero, and were down to 14 men. As for the Boks, they were playing some of their best rugby since maybe the 2019 World Cup.
The good times continued to roll after the break for the Boks, with hooker Malcolm Marx scoring about a minute into the second term.
Beauden Barrett kicked a cross-field kick, inside his 22 too, directly into touch on the full. The Boks, and Marx, made the most of their opportunity to strike.
Another Beauden Barrett error, this time on the defensive side of the ball, almost saw Boks centre Canan Moodie score a brilliant solo try. Moodie danced around Barrett, with ease, and had the pace to beat covering defenders to the line
But the score was called back by the TMO. New Zealanders could breathe a sigh of relief, if only for a bit. The Springboks continued to launch waves of attacking pressure.
But the Springboks sacrificed their one-man advantage with flanker Pieter-Steph du Toit leaving the field after a high tackle on All Blacks captain Sam Cane. Du Toit’s yellow card went under review, though, but remained unchanged.
It didn’t trouble the Boks, though, with replacement Bongi Mbonambi scoring before du Toit returned to the field. The raced out to a 28-nil lead with 20 minutes to play.
Nobody saw that coming, and the attacking onslaught wasn’t over either.
Replacement Kwagga Smith scored with just over 10 minutes to play, and that sent the Boks fans into a frenzy. This was probably their best win over the All Blacks ever.
It was enough for some New Zealand fans as they began to make their way for the exit.
Replacement Cam Roigard scored a brilliant solo try which saw the All Blacks avoid ‘naught’ for the first time in quite some time.
In front of a crowd of more than 80,000 people, the Springboks made a statement ahead of the upcoming Rugby World Cup.
Latest Comments
I was at this match. Jordie Barrett earned his money with a massive hit to slow a connaught attack to win the math when Leinster had 14 in the last few mins. Mack Hansen had a real go at the refereeing after citing a serious head hits on Iaone and Aki.
connaught were up for this. Snyman tried a trademark dirty after, and the onnaught 4 and the onnaught pack absolutely laid into him.
Leinster hose to kick to the corner when only winning by 5 with 10 left and qith only 2 tries scored. onnaught should have punisihed them for that utter stupidity after they broke out and Leinster yellowed to stop the attack.
13 changes from last week. It seems teams are scoring about 10 points less against Leinster this year. With Neinaber in his second year, the new attack coah established, surely they will be a bigger threat in champions up? Or will the attack recgress further.
They must adopt the SA philosophy of take your 3 pointers and the bonus points will come.
connaught back line inluding Iaone, Murphy, Aki, Forde, cordero is the seond best in Ireland surely. Leinster were lucky here
Go to commentsShould have played more for England but he jumped ship just as he was breaking through.
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