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Ken Borland



Can the Springboks use ProteaFire? 0

Posted on November 12, 2014 by Ken

The Springboks versus All Blacks rugby Test at Ellis Park last weekend counted as one of the greatest sports events I have been to and I felt immensely proud not just because our national rugby team won, but also because of the way they played and the way they carried themselves after the long-awaited triumph over their greatest rivals.

Even if one is not impressed by the way New Zealand and South Africa are steering rugby in a bright new direction of high-tempo play, the wonderful spirit shown between the two teams and the obviously high respect they hold each other in, must gladden the heart of all who love sport for the character-building effects it can have.

The wonderful gesture made by the All Blacks in Wellington when Richie McCaw handed over gifts to Bryan Habana and Jean de Villiers for playing their 100th Tests will live long in the memory. The fact that nothing of that sort happened in Australia probably says more about the special relationship between the Springboks and All Blacks rather than any deficiencies on the Wallabies’ part.

But if the Springboks are going to win over even more hearts and minds – it is clear that still not everyone in South Africa believes they represent them – then perhaps they should take a leaf out of the book of their cricket counterparts who launched their ProteaFire campaign this week to some fanfare.

A huge part of the Proteas’ success in recent years has been due to the calibre of people in the team – the likes of Graeme Smith, Hashim Amla, AB de Villiers, Faf du Plessis, JP Duminy, Dale Steyn, Ryan McLaren, Morne Morkel and Vernon Philander are all fantastic human beings – and the Springboks also have some fantastic leaders of men in their ranks, Jean de Villiers, Victor Matfield, Tendai Mtawarira, Adriaan Strauss, Duane Vermeulen, Francois Louw, Bryan Habana and JP Pietersen springing readily to mind.

Rugby will be facing their own World Cup challenge next year, but they will also be tested off the field with sponsors cutting back and transformation issues still bedevilling them.

Whether ProteaFire will help the cricketers finally win their World Cup remains to be seen but what is certain is that most of the population will be firmly behind them.

ProteaFire emphasises the importance of putting the team ahead of the individual and the concept of Ubuntu is a key part of Graeme Smith’s vision that started in 2007. Cricket is often, because of its tradition of statistics, a very individual game and one would have thought rugby, perhaps the greatest of team sports, would have been quicker to implement this sort of mission statement of what playing for the national side really means.

For the cricketers, their diversity will be their strength and rugby probably isn’t quite there yet.

Another important aspect of ProteaFire is that it is almost a contract the national team have signed with their supporters in terms of what is expected of them, on and off the field. As Hashim Amla pointed out, this does not mean treating players like babies.

“On the field, emotions can run high and nobody’s perfect. It’s not about having 15 saints, everybody’s different and it’s about getting the strengths of all 15 players together and dealing with any fallouts,” Amla said.

One cannot help but come to the conclusion that the current turmoil wreaking havoc in English cricket is born out of their failure to deal properly with issues of team culture and identity.

Kevin Pietersen can be a brat, but there have been difficult cricketers before who have been allowed to enjoy the middle of the spotlight while still contributing to the team success.

Last Saturday night at Ellis Park and Thursday night in the SuperSport studios were two proud evenings because it showed South African sports teams are getting it right.

All Blacks declare Springboks worthy winners 0

Posted on November 04, 2014 by Ken

The All Blacks declared the Springboks worthy winners of their epic Ellis Park Test and said the home side’s ability to put them under pressure had made it tough for them to get into the game.

“They put us under pressure and caught us on our heels a bit. That meant the momentum was against us, the core roles at the set-piece weren’t always there and the pressure led to us coughing up the ball, simple passes went down. So that made it a hard old day, giving back easy ball  to let guys like Duane Vermeulen run at us,” All Blacks captain Richie McCaw said after the 25-27 defeat.

“Firstly, my heart tells me the Springboks probably deserved to shade it,” coach Steve Hansen admitted. “We didn’t start well enough, they put us under a lot of pressure, and we just gave them too much of a head start.

“In the first half, the ball we got from the set-pieces was of no great quality so we weren’t able to build any pressure of our own at all, which is a key element of rugby. In the second half, we maintained the ball better and it came down to a 55m penalty under pressure, but the right team won and congratulations to them.”

Although the Springboks produced a phenomenal first half of dazzling attacking rugby to seize control of the Test, you can always count on the All Blacks finishing strongly and they turned the tables on the home side before Pat Lambie’s 55m penalty in the 79th minute finally sealed a nailbiting win.

“This team hates losing, it sucks, but I’m still bloody proud that we nearly snuck it at the end. They never gave up, you could see that by the way they attacked with 90 seconds to go, and at the last ruck the penalty could have gone either way then we’d be sitting here happy chappy,” Hansen said.

McCaw said the Test would go down as another classic in the annals of the great Springboks/All Blacks rivalry.

“There’s very little between these two sides as everybody could see today. As a youngster, dreaming of playing for the All Blacks, at Ellis Park against the Springboks would be it every time. It’s hard and tough and you have to be spot on to get the result.

“It’s a great place to play, I love it here, the atmosphere is brilliant and you generally get a dry ball. We just have to be a bit better,” McCaw said.

 

Boks narrow gap on All Blacks as World Cup looms 0

Posted on November 04, 2014 by Ken

Next year’s World Cup may only be in the corner of their minds, but all the players and coaches involved in the epic Ellis Park Test between South Africa and New Zealand on Saturday night agree that the Springboks have largely narrowed the gap between themselves and the world champions.
The Springboks squeaked home 27-25 to end a five-game losing streak against the All Blacks, but recent matches between the two sides have been desperately close with, as New Zealand coach Steve Hansen acknowledged, the scoreboard not always reflecting the toughness of the battle.

“There’s very little between the sides, as seen today. There’s still a wee way to go until the World Cup, but we’ll just have to get better. Playing the Springboks at Ellis Park is always hard and tough, and you have to be spot-on to get the result. But we didn’t start as well as we would have liked, and that made it a hard old day,” All Blacks captain Richie McCaw said after the defeat.

“It came down to a 55m penalty under pressure but my heart says the Springboks probably deserved to shade it,” Hansen said magnanimously. “Our team hates losing, but the right team won although I’m bloody proud of the way we nearly snuck it at the end. The last ruck penalty could have gone either way, and then we’d be sitting here happy chappy.”

“I always wanted to know what it feels like to beat the All Blacks!” satisfied Springbok coach Heyneke Meyer said.

“I’m very proud of the team, these are the sort of games you have to pull through, and I’m very relieved. The game could have gone either way, the All Blacks came back brilliantly and they really are a quality side. The last game between us was the same.

“I’m humbled to have been involved in such a great Test, I’ve seen a lot of great games, but this was against the best in the world. It was on a knife’s edge and the win showed the team has developed. I’m very proud of the depth because we’ve had a lot of injuries,” Meyer said.

“The last couple of games against the All Blacks have been colossal, the others could have gone our way and this one could have gone their way. But it was important for us to win tonight, the whole year I’ve believed we are good enough to beat them but it was a box we hadn’t ticked, the one thing we hadn’t done. I know it means a lot to the players and the coaches,” Springbok captain Jean de Villiers said.

Both Meyer and De Villiers were on the same page that Lambie had to kick for poles rather than set up a lineout when the crucial match-winning penalty was awarded to the Springboks in the 79th minute. That was despite there being real doubt that the replacement flyhalf had the length of boot to succeed.

“Pat has a very cool head but I wasn’t sure if he could kick that far. Handre was kicking them over from 65m in the warm-up so I asked Pat how far he could kick,” Meyer recounted. “He said he’d tell me after the warm-up, but he never came back to me! But it was a great kick under massive pressure.”

“There was no doubt, I asked Pat if it was in range and he said ‘definitely’. We have a saying in the squad, ‘Know your job, Do your job’ and Pat did exactly that. He had another 10m on the kick!” De Villiers said.

http://citizen.co.za/252618/world-cup-awaits-boks-kiwis-epic-clash/

Flyhalves Pollard & Lambie have Boks resting easy after victory over All Blacks 0

Posted on November 03, 2014 by Ken

The Springboks can rest easy in the knowledge that they can, after all, play some of the best rugby on the planet and that the All Blacks are beatable after snatching a dramatic 27-25 victory at Ellis Park on Saturday night to end a five-game losing streak against New Zealand.
 South Africans can also rest assured that they have two world-class, match-winning flyhalves in Handre Pollard and Pat Lambie.

Pollard set up victory in the epic test as he scored two brilliant tries to give the Springboks a 21-13 lead after a scintillating first half, and then Lambie, who can consider himself a finisher par excellence, slotted a 55m penalty in the 79th minute to save the game as a strong All Blacks comeback threatened to deny the home side once again.

Who knew that Lambie can even kick the ball that far? But the 23-year-old’s composure in big games should be undoubted.

The Test started at a typically furious pace, but this time it was the Springboks who set the blazing tempo.

A phenomenal first half will be remembered for a long, long time.

Pollard missed a penalty and the Springboks twice turned over possession on attack in the 22, and it was the New Zealanders who struck first, flyhalf Beauden Barrett kicking an eighth-minute penalty.

South Africa will surely never again be called one-dimensional after their opening try was an extraordinary effort that started in their own 22. Willie le Roux made the decision to spread the ball, and Pollard produced a hard, direct run that created some space on the outside. A grubber from Jean de Villiers was then picked up by right wing Cornal Hendricks, who burst clear. Jan Serfontein was up in support and when he was tackled, scrumhalf Francois Hougaard came roaring up and evaded the clutches of Richie McCaw to score under the poles.

Pollard converted but another Barrett penalty in the 17th minute closed the gap to 7-6.

The Springboks’ second try, in the 28th minute will easily go down as one of their greatest ever.

De Villiers, who made ball-handling in a congested, hugely physical midfield look like a Sunday picnic, made a superb pass a split-second before contact to Le Roux, who sent Bryan Habana hurtling away down the left. From the subsequent ruck when the flyer was caught, Teboho ‘Oupa’ Mohoje took the ball at pace and charged over the advantage line. With such good, quick ball, Pollard easily scythed through the remaining defence, finishing a superb team try with an intoxicating mixture of gliding, power and pace.

The All Blacks were 14-6 down and under the pump heading into the last five minutes of the first half, but despite a retreating scrum, Aaron Smith spotted space on the blindside and sent wing Julian Savea off on a powerful run.

He was caught by Pollard but the ball was recycled infield and, when centre Malikai Fekitoa noticed Eben Etzebeth making a lazy retreat, he made a beeline for him. The lock totally disrupted the defensive line and Fekitoa was able to break through and score, Barrett’s conversion making it a one-point game again.

It was all New Zealand for the last five minutes, but Bismarck du Plessis effected a crucial turnover deep in defence and Hougaard hacked the ball ahead. An enthralling foot-race ensued between Hendricks and Fekitoa, with the Sevens star forcing a five-metre scrum.

Solid frontfoot ball was all Pollard needed to once again show his sheer class with ball in hand, gliding through for his second try, dotting down through McCaw’s desperate tackle. The exclamation by the All Black captain said it all.

Marcel Coetzee (L) of South Africa leads the celebrations with team mate Willie le Roux after their victory during the Rugby Championship match between the South African Springboks and the New Zealand All Blacks at Ellis Park Stadium on October 4, 2014 in Johannesburg, South Africa. (Photo by David Rogers/Getty Images)

The Springboks took the attack again to the All Blacks in earnest from the start of the second half and an excellent rolling maul led to a penalty for a deliberate knock-on, Pollard extending the lead to 24-13.

It had been a memorable day for the Springboks thus far, but the All Blacks then mounted one of the famous, stirring comebacks. Today was not going to be the day they gave up their winning streak without a tremendous fight.

The home side were not only up against the world’s number one side playing with tremendous urgency, but also referee Wayne Barnes, who seemed determined to ensure there would be no All Blacks loss on his watch.

Malakai Fekitoa of the All Blacks is tackled by Eben Etzebeth (L) and Jan Serfontein during the Rugby Championship match between the South African Springboks and the New Zealand All Blacks at Ellis Park Stadium on October 4, 2014 in Johannesburg, South Africa. (Photo by David Rogers/Getty Images)

The All Blacks were given free rein at the breakdown and the Springboks were nailed. In the 67th minute, one such injustice led to outside centre Conrad Smith showing wonderful skill as he took a flat pass, half-shimmied and then burst through Jan Serfontein, before passing the ball out wide for Ben Smith to score and cut the deficit to 20-25.

Three minutes later and the Springboks were back under their poles. They had begun to fade, turning over possession, kicking more than they had and then losing a five-metre lineout. The All Blacks went right and then came back left, just passing the ball down the line and replacement hooker Dane Coles was the extra man to dive over in the corner.

Barrett’s conversion crucially did not go over though, and the Springboks had eight minutes to show their belief.

Lambie managed to get his monster over, sealing one of the more impressive Springbok triumphs.

The gap is not as wide as many believe and the Springboks are most certainly on the right track.

http://citizen.co.za/252444/pollard-lambie-boks/

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  • Thought of the Day

    Galatians 5:25 – “Since we live by the Spirit, let us keep walking in step with the Spirit.”

    There is only one Christ and all things that are preached in his name must conform to his character. We can only know Christ’s character through an intimate and personal relationship with him.

    How would Christ respond in situations in which you find yourself? Would he be underhanded? Would he be unforgiving and cause broken relationships?

    “The value of your faith and the depth of your spiritual experience can only be measured by their practical application in your daily life. You can spend hours at mass crusades; have the ability to pray in public; quote endlessly from the Word; but if you have not had a personal encounter with the living Christ your outward acts count for nothing.” – Solly Ozrovech, A Shelter From The Storm

     

     



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