Posted on
August 15, 2022 by
Ken
At 22-years-old, Elrigh Louw was the baby of the Springbok team at the weekend, making his Test debut off the bench in the city of his birth, but the loose forward was certainly not over-awed as he produced a powerful display in the second-half comeback by the home side against Wales at Loftus Versfeld.
Whether carrying powerfully, making crunching tackles or standing up to the gibberish of Dan Biggar, Louw was influential in the half-hour he spent on the field.
Captain Siya Kolisi praised the Bulls talent afterwards saying, “Elrigh was special, it’s amazing how chilled he was.”
Louw himself exuded the air of someone with a very mature, focused head on his shoulders.
“We were under pressure when I came on, but I knew exactly what I had to do. I was able to enjoy it. I was actually more emotional when I heard I was in the 23 than running on the field,” Louw said after the 32-29 win.
“When I ran on, I knew my goal and I did not think about my emotions. I knew my Pa and Ma would be very emotional though.
“It’s an honour to hear my name mentioned as a Bomb Squad member, but the important thing was I knew exactly what the coaches expected of me,” Louw said.
The superb attack that resulted in Cheslin Kolbe’s crucial 65th-minute try that closed Wales’ lead to just two points would see Louw go perilously close to scoring himself under the poles after a storming run.
“I just had one thing in mind and that was to dot the ball down on my debut, but Wales tied my shoelaces together quite well in the end,” Louw laughed.
He was more serious when taking co-responsibility for the rolling maul try the Springbok forwards conceded in the 77th minute as Wales levelled the score at 29-29 with two forwards in the sin-bin.
“We will definitely go and have another look at that and what went wrong. For our pack that was not acceptable at all,” Louw said with a face that must have resembled the one he had whenever he was caught being naughty at Hoerskool Transvalia not that long ago.
But one of the nicest features of the weekend thriller in Pretoria was the birth of another new Springbok career that is sure to go a long way.
Tags: 22-years-old, as he, baby, bench, birth, certainly not, city, comeback, display, Elrigh Louw, home side, Loftus Versfeld, loose forward, making, off, over-awed, powerful, produced, second half, Springboks, Test debut, Wales
Category
Rugby, Sport
Posted on
August 15, 2022 by
Ken
Having gambled and lost with his selection of Elton Jantjies at flyhalf, Springbok coach Jacques Nienaber bravely tried to limit the damage to his player’s confidence after the first Test against Wales at Loftus Versfeld.
Jantjies endured a miserable first half of skewed kicks out-of-hand, missed shots at goal and a dropped ball that led to a try, and was substituted before the start of the second half with the Springboks 18-3 down. Barring a few exceptions, the whole team had been sub-par in the first half, but with the help of pugnacious input from the bench, they staged a stirring comeback to win 32-29.
It is only right, though, that Nienaber stand up for Jantjies because the player was put in an invidious position by being selected for the first Test with, as the coach himself said after the game, “less than 30 minutes of game-time this year”.
I can understand why the risk was taken with Jantjies, who has only just recovered from a shoulder injury and whose club did not make the playoffs of Japan’s Rugby League One. The 31-year-old has also had the mental stress of being charged with malicious damage to property and contravention of the Aviation Act to deal with, before those charges were withdrawn after he agreed to pay for the damage he caused to an aeroplane flying back from Turkey.
Flyhalf is one of the few areas where the Springboks are lacking depth and the management were obviously planning ahead in case first-choice Handre Pollard suddenly gets injured. If Jantjies then had to come in and play with so little rugby under his belt, it could have been even worse.
The World Cup winner does now at least have 40 minutes of game-time, and hopefully the trauma of it has not dented his confidence too much.
Nienaber tried to sugarcoat his replacement as being because “he had given everything”, but when he said “he hasn’t played any rugby” he was closer to the reason why.
Despite the fan furore, Jantjies is still a player who has much to offer the Springboks. What he is capable of when in form definitely adds some attacking spark to a team which, for long periods of the first half against Wales, looked desperately in need of some offensive verve.
How he bounces back from this calamitous showing is what matters now.
Tags: bravely, coach, confidence, damage, Elton Jantjies, first Test, flyhalf, gambled, having, Jacques Nienaber, limit, Loftus Versfeld, lost, player’s, selection, Springboks, to his, tried, Wales
Category
Rugby, Sport
Posted on
August 15, 2022 by
Ken
PRETORIA, South Africa, 2/7/2022 – Wales captain Dan Biggar praised his team for a top-class effort but lamented a crucial lack of discipline that saw them suffer a heartbreaking 32-29 loss to South Africa at Loftus Versfeld in Pretoria on Saturday.
Wales had led 18-3 at halftime after a clinical first-half display, but the world champions mounted a stirring comeback after the break, in front of 51 762 spectators, on the first occasion the Springboks have had to play at home in front of an unrestricted crowd since winning the World Cup in 2019.
South Africa led 29-24 thanks to a penalty try in the 75th minute, but Wales levelled the scores at 29-29 with a rolling maul try despite having only 12 men on the field, due to three yellow cards, including two to forwards Alun-Wyn Jones and Rhys Carre.
Captain Dan Biggar, who was a culprit himself, being yellow-carded late in the first half, then missed the conversion, and then conceded a penalty at the other end of the field due to a deliberate knock-on. Springbok fullback Damian Willemse slotted the 83rd-minute penalty to spare the favourites’ blushes.
“I’m incredibly proud of the team, it was a huge effort from minute one. Just a couple of key moments in the second half cost us, we put ourselves under pressure,” Biggar said.
“We conceded a lot of penalties in the second half which gave territory and invited their driving maul inside the 22, which is very difficult to stop.
“I’m really proud of the effort, but obviously it was a missed opportunity, definitely. We need to look at ourselves first, we gave some easy penalties, although some we felt were a little harsh,” Biggar said.
Springbok captain Siya Kolisi said his team had gone into the match knowing that they were in for a long haul against a Wales team they had described as desperate during the build-up to the Test. They made life even harder for themselves after a lacklustre first half.
“It was tough in the first half because they stopped our mauls and we did not kick according to how we wanted. Wales controlled the game,” Kolisi said.
“But then the guys who came off the bench brought the energy we needed and we started going forward. I didn’t stress too much being 3-18 down because I knew we had not got our game right, and I knew that once we did, then the momentum would change.
And it did, we started playing, we had to chase the game and we took our opportunities very well. There was no panic, we never felt there was no way we were going to come back,” Kolisi said.
Category
Rugby, Sport
Posted on
August 15, 2022 by
Ken
First-half frustrations
The Springboks put on a wretched first-half display as they returned to playing in front of a capacity crowd at home. And they only grew more frustrated as the Wales pack, splendidly cohesive and determined, stymied their rolling mauls and stood up in the collisions. The home side barely fired a shot despite enjoying enough territory and possession. The maul – largely nullified by Wales – and speculative kicks seemed to be their only attacking weapons.
Elton Jantjies had a particularly poor time. His kicks out of hand were often miscued, including one penalty that went touch-in-goal. He also missed a couple of shots at goal and spilled the ball that led to Rees-Zammit’s second try.
Wales, on the other hand, were clinical in punishing whatever mistakes the Springboks made in their own half, with rampant wing Louis Rees-Zammit scoring twice.
Back from the dead, impetus from the bench
Trailing 3-18 at halftime and wondering where their next points would come from, the Springboks certainly came out with fire in their bellies, no doubt after a roasting from coach Jacques Nienaber.
Their maul was revitalised thanks to greater purpose, but especially because they introduced some variation with peels off the side to split the Welsh defence.
Willie le Roux had replaced Elton Jantjies from the start of the second half and brought some direction to the backline. But the real difference came up front where the bomb squad forwards came on and smashed. The lift in intensity was palpable and debutant Elrigh Louw made a storming run into the shadow of the poles to help set up Cheslin Kolbe’s crucial try.
Dependable Damian, desperate Dan
With Jantjies off, South Africa did not really have an ace goalkicker on the field for the second half, but Damian Willemse stepped up admirably. Solid in general play at fullback and then rotating well with Le Roux at flyhalf, as well as providing some slick attacking touches, Willemse kicked two conversions, including one from the touchline, which was crucial in a tight game.
Never mind his moment of glory, stepping up to take the angled penalty after the final hooter that won the game and spared the Springboks’ blushes after they conceded a maul try to a pack that had two forwards in the sin-bin.
This year has seen the talented Willemse blossom as a highly dependable performer.
Wales captain Dan Biggar, by comparison, had an evening that rivalled Jantjies’ for awfulness. He seemed to be having a running battle through the match with the Springboks and the referee, was yellow-carded in the second half, and then it was his deliberate knock-on which gave South Africa their matchwinning penalty.
Wiese: Prim and powerful
Eighthman Jasper Wiese was a deserved man of the match. One of the few Springboks to shine in their disjointed first half, he was a phenomenal ball-carrier, averaging four metres per carry, and made some crunching tackles. It was also most pleasing that all his ferocity did not come at the cost of his discipline. Wiese has conceded several penalties in the past, but on Saturday night he was prim and proper and kept his nose clean.
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Rugby, Sport