Category: Memory
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Os du Randt. The Prop Who Came Back.
Most props get one shot at glory. Os du Randt got two — winning the 1995 World Cup as a 23-year-old powerhouse, then returning in 2007 to win it all over again. Twelve years. Two cups. The prop who never stopped. Share on Facebook Stay ahead of the game Get the real story after every…
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Morne Steyn. The Kick. The Lions Were Done.
The 2009 British and Irish Lions thought they still had a chance. Then Morne Steyn lined up from 55 metres and ended the series with one swing of his boot. Fifty-five metres. Dead centre. Series over. Share on Facebook Stay ahead of the game Get the real story after every game — join the Springbokfans…
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Joost. The Pace. Nobody Could Stop Him.
In 1995, when South Africa needed a spark, Joost van der Westhuizen became lightning. He played like a man possessed — explosive, fearless, unstoppable, and utterly South African. The scrum half who helped build a rainbow nation. Share on Facebook Stay ahead of the game Get the real story after every game — join the…
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Pollard. The Kick. The World Held Its Breath.
One point. Eighty minutes of war had come down to this. Handre Pollard stepped back, breathed, and sent the Springboks into rugby history with the most important kick of 2023. The kick that made South Africa world champions again. Share on Facebook Stay ahead of the game Get the real story after every game —…
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Arendse. The leap. No one saw it coming.
Kurt-Lee Arendse arrived in green and gold like a thunderbolt — diving, twisting, touching down in corners no one else could reach. Defenders had no answer for something they had never seen. He scores tries that simply should not be possible. Share on Facebook Stay ahead of the game Get the real story after every…
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Vermeulen. The carry. England was buried.
Duane Vermeulen carried into England like a freight train with no reverse gear. His 2019 World Cup final performance was a masterclass in what a number 8 is supposed to do. No one carried the Boks to glory more. Share on Facebook Stay ahead of the game Get the real story after every game —…
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Mapimpi. The first. History was made.
No Springbok had ever scored a try in a World Cup final — until Makazole Mapimpi sprinted clear and buried England’s hopes forever. One run. A nation’s century of waiting, undone. The first. Always the first. Share on Facebook Stay ahead of the game Get the real story after every game — join the Springbokfans…
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Kolbe. The sidestep. The final was his.
He took the ball, beat three England defenders with a single shimmy, and touched down in the corner. That moment in Yokohama belongs to Cheslin Kolbe forever. Some tries you just have to watch again. Share on Facebook Stay ahead of the game Get the real story after every game — join the Springbokfans community.…
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Faf. The Chaos. The Springbok Machine.
He is the smallest man on the field and the biggest threat on it. Faf de Klerk turned the scrumhalf role into something wilder, faster, and more dangerous than anyone expected. Small. Fearless. Completely unstoppable. Share on Facebook Stay ahead of the game Get the real story after every game — join the Springbokfans community.…
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Du Toit. The Fury. The World Agreed.
Game after game, he was everywhere — carrying, tackling, hunting the breakdown with unstoppable force. When World Rugby named Pieter-Steph du Toit Player of the Year, nobody argued. The best in the world. The Springboks agreed too. Share on Facebook Stay ahead of the game Get the real story after every game — join the…