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Ken Borland



Namibia’s tears of sadness turn into tears of joy 0

Posted on November 08, 2014 by Ken

 

At 3pm on June 28 in the Madagascan capital of Antananarivo, Namibia looked set to cry tears of sadness as a shock 29-22 defeat at the hands of Kenya left their hopes of qualifying for the 2015 World Cup hanging by the slimmest of threads.

By 5pm on July 6, at the same Mahamasina Stadium, the Namibian rugby team were crying tears of joy as an extraordinary 89-10 victory over the hosts had booked their spot in England 2015 on points difference over Zimbabwe and Kenya.

Following that opening-day loss, just their second against the East Africans since 2006, results had fallen Namibia’s way to keep their hopes alive. The Welwitschias beat Zimbabwe 24-20 to stay in contention, while their fellow Southern Africans did them a favour by overcoming Kenya 28-10 on the final day.

Crucially, neither Zimbabwe nor Kenya managed to get a bonus point in that match, which left Namibia needing to beat Madagascar by 53 points to qualify for the finals of the global showpiece.

“We were down in the dumps up to the last day, but we just believed until the very end. We had the will to keep on fighting until our last breath, until all 15 of us had to be carried off the field if necessary,” flank Tinus du Plessis said after the triumph.

“We had a massive points difference to work on, so we just planned to take it 10 minutes at a time. It’s amazing to think that we’ll now be playing our first match against the All Blacks!” the London Wasps player said after Namibia had earned a berth in Pool C of the World Cup with New Zealand, Argentina, Tonga and Georgia.

The CAR Division 1A doubled up as the Africa Cup and Namibia’s three games there more than doubled the number of Tests they had played since November 2013. One of the biggest problems facing developing African rugby nations is the lack of internationals they play and coach Danie Vermeulen used matches against the Blue Bulls and Western Province in Windhoek to prepare for Namibia’s most important games in four years.

An after-the-hooter penalty by Theuns Kotze – one of six he kicked to go with a conversion – gave Namibia a 30-28 victory over a youthful Western Province side, who had outscored the Welwitschias by three tries to two.

The following week, Namibia were beaten 34-13 by a powerful Bulls outfit. It was a highly physical encounter, in which the Bulls only pulled away in the second half, and Namibia Rugby Union CEO Sybrand de Beer believes his team were perhaps still affected by it when they played Kenya in Madagascar seven days later.

“We didn’t play the way we should of against Kenya and I think the Blue Bulls game took a lot out of the team. They were just not in the moment and we beat ourselves really. It meant World Cup qualification was no longer in our own control, which makes it difficult, we had to rely on other results,” De Beer said.

Two tries in the first 10 minutes by wing Heinrich Smit gave Namibia a great start, and they led 22-19 going into the final quarter, but in trying to keep the strong-finishing Kenyans out, they conceded a raft of penalties and a fourth try and crucial bonus point to start their campaign on a poor note.

Zimbabwe were trying to qualify for their first World Cup since 1991, as well as ending a six-game losing streak against the Welwitschias, who were forced to overturn a 10-17 half-time deficit.

The Sables, boosted by the presence of former Natal Sharks and Gauteng Lions SuperRugby flyhalf Guy Cronje, used their dangerous backs to score the opening try, but Namibia relied on their dominant forwards to rumble their way to a penalty try.

But Zimbabwe’s backs conjured another try just before half-time and a second Cronje penalty stretched their lead to 20-10, forcing Namibia to make a determined comeback in the second half.

Flank Renaldo Bothma, after a great break by replacement hooker Dian Wiese, and fellow loose forward Rohan Kitshoff, from a rolling maul, scored tries converted by Kotze to keep their World Cup hopes alive.

Namibia had to defend stoutly for the last 10 minutes as PJ van Lill was sent to the sin-bin, but they did so to give them a faint chance of progressing.

Against Madagascar, it was the chance for Namibia’s attacking play to shine and, although their forwards dominated from the outset, it took the Welwitschias 12 minutes to stamp their mark on proceedings with centre Johan Deysel’s opening try.

Two more tries, superb long-range efforts by wing David Philander and Exeter Chiefs bound fullback Chrysander Botha, were scored before the end of the first quarter and an outstanding first half saw Namibia go into the break 63-0 up and firmly back in World Cup contention.

Experienced props Johnny Redelinghuys and Jaco Engels both scored tries, while the explosive Bothma scored twice, Philander completed his brace and there was a penalty try as well.

Further tries by Kotze, left wing Johan Tromp, a third by Bothma and another penalty try were the knockout blow for Zimbabwe and Kenya.

It was a moment of great joy for Namibia and a sign that they are past the dissent which plagued rugby in their country around the time of the previous World Cup.

“Rugby in Namibia was quite badly hit in 2011 when the exco resigned and technically we were insolvent. But the latest financial statements have been declared clean and passed without any qualifications and there is good governance and the basic foundation in place. We are now back to concentrating on rugby,” De Beer said.

Namibia’s U20s finished sixth in the Junior World Trophy in Hong Kong, beating 2013 finalists Canada and suffering narrow defeats to eventual winners Japan and Uruguay.

For a country with a small playing base, development is crucial and the IRB’s Get Into Rugby program is reaching tens of thousands of schoolchildren all over the vast south-west African country.

The continuation of the Windhoek Lager Tri-Nations Series is a major benefit for the national team and in November 2013 they saw off two of their major rivals for World Cup qualification, Zimbabwe, 35-26, and Kenya, 55-35.

Looking ahead to World Cup year, the inclusion of Namibia in South Africa’s Vodacom Cup competition (the level below SuperRugby) will obviously benefit preparations, while De Beer and Vermeulen have their eyes set on the acquisition of more players, such as Free State Cheetahs captain Torsten van Jaarsveld and Sharks star Anton Bresler, the lock who has moved to Scotland but was in the peripheral vision of the Springbok selectors.

Bothma, one of the stars of the Mpumalanga Pumas’ Currie Cup Premier Division campaign, is one of the newly-qualified Namibian players and he excelled in Madagascar.

Three matches in Europe in November 2014, against Canada, French Barbarians and Portugal, should ensure the further growth of this resurgent Namibian team.

 

Phangiso confident he has important part to play 0

Posted on November 05, 2014 by Ken

Left-arm spinner Aaron Phangiso will be heading Down Under next week with the South African team confident that he now has an important part to play in their World Cup plans and that he can perform against the best in the world.

Tours to our Southern African neighbours Zimbabwe seldom produce much of huge significance for the Proteas, but this year it was different because they managed to freeze out great rivals Australia in the final of a hard-fought triangular series. That can only mean the ODI outfit is heading in the right direction and Phangiso got stuck in in the final and was South Africa’s most economical bowler in the tournament.

“It was a very important confidence-booster for me because I hadn’t got a lot of opportunity before that, although I did travel a lot. To do well against Australia, to play a role in beating them in the final was superb,” Phangiso said at the Wanderers yesterday, where he was attending the breakfast announcement of Rolux as new suppliers for Cricket South Africa.

The Garankuwa-born, Soshanguve-raised cricketer has toured Australia twice before, with the SA Emerging Players and SA A teams, but on both occasions it was in winter. Conditions could well be tougher for a spinner at the height of summer.

“Australia is the country of pace bowling, but watching previous games there on TV, there’s always bounce, which will be important for me as a spinner if there’s not much turn. I will try and contain as much as possible and give the other bowlers the chance to take wickets,” Phangiso said.

The Highveld Lions star is looking forward to the possibility of bowling in tandem with his former team-mate Imran Tahir, the attacking leg-spinner.

“It will depend on conditions, but I would like to see us bowl in tandem, one of us can attack and the other contain. You never know who will take the wickets in that situation. I like to think we will all get lots of opportunity before the World Cup, some game time before the tournament in pressure situations,” Phangiso said.

If the 30-year-old can produce the goods again against two of the favourites to win the World Cup (playing on their home turf) then the confidence levels will rise even higher. Which is what Dale Steyn, the leader of the South African attack, said was probably the most important thing the team want to gain from the tour.

 

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/

Sharks part ways with Jake after no more than a year 0

Posted on October 15, 2014 by Ken

The Sharks have parted ways with their director of rugby, Jake White, after the former World Cup-winning Springbok coach spent no more than a year at the Durban franchise.
Although Sharks CEO John Smit’s statement released on Monday suggested the departure was amicable, it is believed White had lost the confidence of the board due to unhappiness over the unpopular style of play introduced for Super Rugby and deteriorating relationships with players, both seniors and juniors.

While the Sharks are now shorn of a director of rugby just as the Currie Cup reaches a critical stage, White has not been involved on a coaching level anyway, handing over the reins of that team to Brad Macleod-Henderson and Sean Everitt.

Smit said White had already put in place all the plans for next year’s Super Rugby campaign and praised his former Springbok coach for his work on the structures of Sharks rugby.

“Jake was also tasked to up-skill the young coaches as well as tidy up all rugby structures across the board from our academy all the way to our senior team. Initially it was thought this would take some time. However, being allowed to concentrate on these tasks during the Absa Currie Cup has fast-tracked the process and we can happily say our SuperRugby squad is in place and our pre-season plan ready to go.

“The mentoring role Jake has played to our coaches has been invaluable and the time is right for Jake to free himself up for any international coaching and consulting opportunities. The 2015 Rugby World Cup is just months away,” Smit said.

White’s successor could well be John Mitchell, the current head coach at the University of KwaZulu-Natal, although the former All Blacks coach comes with a reputation for being unflinchingly tough with players (leading to his sacking by the Gauteng Lions) and his relationship with Smit is not known to be especially warm.

Former Springbok forwards coach Gary Gold has a good relationship with Smit dating back to his time with the national team between 2008 and 2011 and his name has also been suggested as a possible replacement for White.

http://citizen.co.za/249886/jake-online/

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  • Thought of the Day

    Mark 16:15 – “He said to them, ‘Go into all the world and preach the Good News to all creation’.”

    We need to be witnesses for Christ, we need to be unashamed of our faith in Jesus. But sometimes we hesitate to confess our faith in Jesus before the world because of suggestions that religion is taboo in polite company or people are put off by those who are aggressively enthusiastic about their beliefs.

    “It is, however, important to know when to speak and when to be quiet. There is one sure way to testify to your faith without offending other people, and that is to follow the example of Jesus. His whole life was a testimony of commitment to his duty; sympathy, mercy and love for all people, regardless of their rank or circumstances. This is the very best way to be a witness for the Gospel of Jesus Christ.

    “Ask the Holy Spirit to guide you so that others will see Christ in everything you do and say. In this way you will fulfill the command of the Lord.” – A Shelter From The Storm by Solly Ozrovech



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