‘The most incredible half-time team talk I have ever heard’
Springbok centre Damian de Allende has revealed the surprise source of inspiration for South Africa’s Rugby World Cup win in 2019 on RPTV show, Walk the Talk.
De Allende, a key – but often under-rated – figure in the Springboks team, started at centre in the 32-12 win in Yokohama City and was then in the thick of the action again as the Springboks went back-to-back in 2023 with victory over the All Blacks.
Against England five years ago, neither team had managed to score a try in a tentative first half dominated by the kicking of Handrè Pollard and Owen Farrell.
Needing inspiration, up stepped one of the quiet men of the team, Pieter-Steph du Toit. Normally someone to let his actions speak for him rather than words, the tough-as-teak flanker let rip into his team-mates.
Often under-stated himself, de Allende opens up like you have never seen before in conversation with former Scotland international Jim Hamilton, revealing what went on in the Springboks’ inner sanctum.
“My wife, she says to me, sometimes I expect things to happen and I am very placid, and that’s what it felt like against England at half-time, it was dead, there was no atmosphere. It felt like everyone was waiting for someone else to do something first.
“So it was f****** nice to have Pieter-Steph, the quiet guy who doesn’t say much but who always pitches up in games throws his body around week in week out, to stand up and say something.
“I have always had a lot of respect for Pieter-Steph. Not just from rugby but from the person he is as well as the family man that he is.
“It felt like he had a go at everyone, he just said it feels like we are all scared of making a mistake. It came at the perfect time and luckily it worked. You could see the belief kicking in, in the last 20 minutes.
It is probably the best half-time team talk that I had ever heard.”
As is well known, Pollard’s boot stretched the Springboks’ lead into double figures from the half-time score of 12-6, before late tries from Makazole Mapimpi and Cheslin Kolbe secured the victory.
Whilst de Allende was all for the noise that du Toit delivered during that half-time team talk, he has been enjoying the relative quiet life as a player in recent times, in Japan with League One runners-up, Saitama Wild Knights.
“I love it. The general thing for me life in Japan is a bit more relaxed. After training you can go out and be yourself more and be a normal human being," he says.
Even when de Allende is with the Springboks, as he is now, the focus very rarely falls on the often underrated 32-year-old.
But having been benched for the first time since RWC 2019 in the 41-13 win against Wales last weekend, the 79-cap midfielder is being tipped by former Springbok centre Jean de Villiers in the latest episode of RPTV’s Boks Office, to come into the starting line-up for next Saturday’s seismic first Test against Ireland in place of Andre Esterhuizen.
Either way, team player is a role he has been happy to fulfil in his decade-long service for the Springboks.
“I know there is sacrifice within a team sport, which I love, and I think that’s why I appreciate team sports so much," he says.
“You’ll always get individuals who’ll get more of the limelight than everyone else, and that’s just how it works out.
“But, for me, I always put the team first. I know I can do a lot more on the field but I know sometimes doing the basics f***** well is more important than doing the flash things, especially in Test rugby.”
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Fair credit to the guy really he did represent NZ in a RWC an well in the knockouts. You're right though I have seen a lot of really enjoyable to watch 9's this year, quite a few youngsters.
Gee you're lucky if that's it for you, me its Dmac getting benched at the end and not getting much of a chance to see players he's selected on the bench. I have the same sentiment with all the young hookers coming north from Canterbury, what's with them and the lower south bringing though so many atm. Surely one of them simply has look a little like Kevin, I'd just be happy with that!
Go to commentsI understand where you're coming from but I really don't think Marcus Smith is the main issue. Neither Farrell or Ford have managed to get the England backline looking dangerous for the last decade. It's a coaching problem, not a flyhalf problem. We haven't looked to have any consistent attacking strategy in the backs since Lancaster and Catt.
At the moment Marcus Smith is the only creative spark this team has going for it. There is 0 chance he's being dropped, save injury. If you want our backs to get into the game more it's Wigglesworth (and possibly Borthwick) who need to go, not Smith. If you drop Ford or Fin into this current system, you won't see them play how you're hoping they will play. The rest of the backline just isn't setup for it.
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