Berliner Boersenzeitung - Kolisi hopes Rugby Championship success makes South Africa 'walk tall' again

EUR -
AED 4.375994
AFN 77.441177
ALL 96.8038
AMD 450.312991
ANG 2.132699
AOA 1092.512228
ARS 1687.616776
AUD 1.679754
AWG 2.147497
AZN 2.02512
BAM 1.961932
BBD 2.398106
BDT 145.514839
BGN 2.0008
BHD 0.449184
BIF 3523.156764
BMD 1.191399
BND 1.510935
BOB 8.244875
BRL 6.202782
BSD 1.190627
BTN 107.940752
BWP 15.691244
BYN 3.431569
BYR 23351.420032
BZD 2.394615
CAD 1.615555
CDF 2621.077547
CHF 0.913731
CLF 0.025809
CLP 1019.075022
CNY 8.267058
CNH 8.239501
COP 4387.493544
CRC 590.252396
CUC 1.191399
CUP 31.572073
CVE 110.610738
CZK 24.23547
DJF 211.735312
DKK 7.470882
DOP 74.954602
DZD 154.292326
EGP 55.840631
ERN 17.870985
ETB 185.715654
FJD 2.609878
FKP 0.875878
GBP 0.871133
GEL 3.210809
GGP 0.875878
GHS 13.103122
GIP 0.875878
GMD 86.972094
GNF 10452.67214
GTQ 9.133549
GYD 249.101759
HKD 9.310443
HNL 31.45144
HRK 7.538575
HTG 156.140016
HUF 376.620878
IDR 20015.502885
ILS 3.672371
IMP 0.875878
INR 108.119994
IQD 1559.78199
IRR 50187.682272
ISK 145.004731
JEP 0.875878
JMD 186.23211
JOD 0.844698
JPY 185.7522
KES 153.630292
KGS 104.187734
KHR 4802.070393
KMF 499.196109
KPW 1072.251462
KRW 1735.760644
KWD 0.365605
KYD 0.992214
KZT 588.005344
LAK 25588.196346
LBP 106623.718451
LKR 368.513417
LRD 221.464094
LSL 19.08345
LTL 3.517892
LVL 0.720666
LYD 7.527561
MAD 10.889337
MDL 20.223468
MGA 5227.383219
MKD 61.670311
MMK 2501.55021
MNT 4248.871373
MOP 9.585683
MRU 47.279783
MUR 54.780222
MVR 18.40727
MWK 2064.579293
MXN 20.490764
MYR 4.687561
MZN 75.952171
NAD 19.08345
NGN 1617.705348
NIO 43.81696
NOK 11.407502
NPR 172.705002
NZD 1.967739
OMR 0.458087
PAB 1.190632
PEN 3.998799
PGK 5.180192
PHP 69.671855
PKR 332.935962
PLN 4.209171
PYG 7850.538596
QAR 4.340266
RON 5.091565
RSD 117.388886
RUB 91.737752
RWF 1738.355501
SAR 4.468309
SBD 9.60047
SCR 16.045255
SDG 716.629268
SEK 10.625551
SGD 1.50759
SHP 0.893858
SLE 29.129645
SLL 24983.040064
SOS 679.231641
SRD 45.239208
STD 24659.553486
STN 24.576924
SVC 10.418566
SYP 13176.366262
SZL 19.074863
THB 37.052651
TJS 11.150594
TMT 4.175853
TND 3.43935
TOP 2.868603
TRY 51.930097
TTD 8.066315
TWD 37.583854
TZS 3078.094776
UAH 51.325228
UGX 4238.247581
USD 1.191399
UYU 45.652698
UZS 14648.788029
VES 450.331093
VND 30869.147604
VUV 142.581796
WST 3.253377
XAF 658.022078
XAG 0.014446
XAU 0.000236
XCD 3.219816
XCG 2.145834
XDR 0.821894
XOF 658.013768
XPF 119.331742
YER 284.03217
ZAR 18.927518
ZMK 10724.019084
ZMW 22.509642
ZWL 383.629986
  • RBGPF

    0.1000

    82.5

    +0.12%

  • CMSD

    -0.0020

    23.948

    -0.01%

  • CMSC

    0.0130

    23.585

    +0.06%

  • BCC

    -1.5050

    89.525

    -1.68%

  • NGG

    0.3300

    88.39

    +0.37%

  • RYCEF

    0.4600

    17.34

    +2.65%

  • BCE

    0.3900

    25.47

    +1.53%

  • RIO

    3.4300

    96.84

    +3.54%

  • JRI

    -0.1800

    12.79

    -1.41%

  • GSK

    -1.1350

    59.095

    -1.92%

  • RELX

    0.0450

    29.425

    +0.15%

  • BP

    0.2750

    39.285

    +0.7%

  • VOD

    0.3790

    15.489

    +2.45%

  • BTI

    -1.5750

    61.225

    -2.57%

  • SCS

    0.0200

    16.14

    +0.12%

  • AZN

    -5.7800

    187.25

    -3.09%

Kolisi hopes Rugby Championship success makes South Africa 'walk tall' again
Kolisi hopes Rugby Championship success makes South Africa 'walk tall' again / Photo: Adrian DENNIS - AFP

Kolisi hopes Rugby Championship success makes South Africa 'walk tall' again

Springboks captain Siya Kolisi said he hoped his side's Rugby Championship triumph would provide fresh inspiration to South Africa as a whole following the world champions' thrilling 29-27 win over Argentina at Twickenham on Saturday.

Text size:

"I think I've worn this jersey when nobody wanted to watch us play and when it was hard to get a win," Kolisi, who previously skippered South Africa to back-to-back world titles in 2019 and 2023, told reporters.

"And now, at this moment, no matter how tough it is in the game, we know how to win, we know how to fight, we know how to dig deep."

One of the closest-fought editions of the southern hemisphere tournament ended in dramatic style with the Springboks winning successive Rugby Championship titles for the first time as they topped the table ahead of New Zealand on points difference, with their 67-30 thrashing of Argentina in Durban key to this latest success.

"I know what we do on the field doesn't change a lot in our country," said Kolisi. "But I know the feeling that it gives people, that South Africa is going to walk tall and people that look at us in the places that we come from, they look at us and say they know that it's possible no matter how tough things are."

The flanker added: "This win is not just for us, but the people of South Africa."

Argentina led 13-3 ahead early in Saturday's match before South Africa scrum-half Cobus Reinach and hooker Malcolm Marx both scored two tries apiece in a match where the Springboks dominance of the scrum -- a traditional Argentina strength -- proved decisive.

But with South Africa leading 29-13 heading into the final quarter, the Pumas staged an impressive rally, with wing Bautista Delguy scoring his second try of the game.

Three minutes from time, Santiago Carreras' penalty from the half-way line, which would have reduced South Africa's lead to six points, hit the right post in what proved to be a crucial miss.

Carreras' superb cross-kick sent in Argentina replacement Rodrigo Isgro for a last-minute try which the full-back converted in the last act of the game as the Pumas just fell short.

- 'Stay in the present' -

South Africa, already a record four-time world champions, are bidding to become the first side to win three Rugby World Cups in a row at the 2027 edition in Australia.

Springboks coach Rassie Erasmus, however, said: "I think one of our goals is to stay in the present, do well, and not just focus on the World Cup."

But with South Africa deploying close to 50 players during the tournament, Erasmus accepted building squad depth came at a cost.

"I think the character was OK, but tactically there's a lot of things to fix," he said after a match where rising star Sacha Feinberg-Mngomezulu had a much harder time than when the fly-half scored a Springbok individual match record 37 points in Durban last week.

"But I think definitely trying to build squad depth played a role in the lack of continuity."

Argentina captain Julian Montoya was proud of his side's improved showing in front of a crowd of over 70,000 dominated by Springbok fans in what was technically a 'home' game for the Pumas, albeit this defeat meant they finished bottom of the table, a point behind Australia.

"Last weekend it was tough," he said. "We weren't proud about that. But today we saw our character and we were better."

The hooker added: "You don't need to be an expert to realise the scrum was our biggest weakness today. But we keep going."

(P.Werner--BBZ)