REACTION: Boks turn salty tears into raging torrent of revenge, Marika smashed and humbled in TRC 'mugging'

By Tony Harper / Editor

Bad blood between Marika Koroibete and his Springbok rival Makazole Mapimpi led to a shocking conclusion as South Africa won a bitterly fought battle 24-8 against Australia to launch the new Sydney Football Stadium.

A week ago Australian rugby fans were starting to believe that they were heading for Bledisloe Cup glory for the first time in 20 years. A week ago Marika Koroibete sent Mapimpi into orbit and was lauded as the greatest winger in the world by anyone who was asked.

After the All Blacks’ crushing win over Argentina and Koroibete’s nightmare night – where Hunter Paisami and Noah Lolesio were forced off and Taniela Tupou couldn’t even get through a warm up – you have to ask now what?

“A week is a long time in rugby union and a week is very long for the Wallabies,” said Justin Harrison on Stan Sport.

“The Springboks did their home work, got some energy and changes in that team. They were ahead of the Wallabies in just every aspect of the match tonight. A well deserved win and dominant performance.”

As the dust settles, the All Blacks, who are Australia’s next opponent, top the Rugby Championship table on 10 points with three other teams locked on nine. All teams have two wins and two losses.

South Africa were already on their way to their first win on Australian soil in 13 years, after Koroibete had earlier been out gunned by debutant Canan Moodie, when Mapimpi ploughed through the Australian for a third try.

Mapimpi stood over Koroibete, taunting him, and players from both sides waded in, the ugliest clash being a one on one fight between Allan Alaalatoa and Eben Etzebeth.

It was clear the South Africans were still seething after what many of them believed was an illegal hit by Koroibete in Adelaide.

That incredible try saver, and the constant harping on it by Wallabies fans, has produced enough salty South African tears to refill the Indian Ocean. Expect them to pay it back in floods this week after Moodie outjumped the Australian winger to score his debut Test try at the end of the first half and Mapimpi destroyed him a revenge hit.

“It was a tough week last week. I’m grateful with how the boys stood up and for the support from people back home. They took it really hard, so did we,” said their inspirational skipper Siya Kolisi.

“I think last week we created so many opportunities in the first half and we didn’t take any of them. Today we took most of the opportunities that we got. People are hurting back home. It has been a long drought for us. 11 games without a win here and it is great for us as a group.”

In Adelaide it was the Wallabies who got off to a flyer with a try in 62 seconds but the tables were turned in Sydney as Bok intensity and the whistle of Ben O’Keeffe had the hosts on the back foot from the off.

Their ruck and maul work was ferocious and they made the most of plentiful penalty advantage by running the Wallabies ragged. On nine minutes a quick tap from a penalty just five metres out from the Wallaby try line saw Etzebeth pop up a pass for Damian de Allende to power over. The inside centre was delirious, smashing the ball down in celebration, while O’Keeffe pulled out a yellow card for Matt Philip for being offside in the buildup.

It was no more than the Boks deserved.

“That is what you call a mugging,” said Andrew Mehrtens on Stan Sport. “That has been brutal. Some beautiful, skilful pieces within it. The likes of Damian Willemse, but that is just raw aggression, raw power.”

Morgan Turinui added: “The catchphrase in modern sport is that fast start. Last week it was the Wallabies. Thus far in the first nine minutes it’s been all the Springboks. Territory. We talk about the physical nature of the way they want to play. That’s the snapshot of it. That’s the recipe for them.”

No sooner had Philip returned to the field they might have lost fellow forward Jed Holloway.

Reaching out with one hand to gather in a Bok pass, he knocked it on. O’Keeffe gave him a reprieve for an incident quite similar to a yellow card handed out to Izzy Perese against England in Brisbane for a deliberate knock down.

“I like the decision but it goes against all of the criteria for a deliberate knock-down,” Turinui said. “We’ve been
told if you go with one hand, you put yourself at the mercy of penalties and cards. I love that decision.”

Australia were forced into a backline change when Paisami clashed heads in an attempt to tackle Siya Kolisi and Andrew Kellaway stepped into outside centre with Len Ikitau moving next to Lolesio.

On 29 minutes the Wallabies entered the Boks’ 22 for the first time and emerged with a penalty goal.

But 90 seconds out from the break Moodie came up with a play the Springboks came up with a moment of magic that is likely to be replayed time and again for years to come.

Moodie was thrust into his first Test after just 18 senior games with the Blue Bulls, and what an impact he made opposite Koroibete, judged by many as the world’s best winger.

Koroibete seemed to momentarily lose track of the flight of a high kick from Jaden Hendrikse and Moodie out leapt the Australian and raced away for a try that was wildly celebrated by the South African bench players.

“I’ve heard noise this week about how good this player is going to be,” Turinui said. “Jake White said he will play 100
Tests. Marika Koroibete gets caught flat-footed because the kick’s great and he gets in the air and win this contest. This kid is made for Test rugby.”

Drew Mitchell was also raving about Moodie’s first Test try.

“The first try was all power, this one was all finesse. A really well weighted kick put right down on top of Marika Koroibete,” Mitchell said.

“It’s always a really difficult position to be in when you have no momentum, you’re sitting there and you’re waiting for the ball to come down and Moodie has come with all the momentum, gets up higher gets a beautiful take and gets a try on debut for the young fella.”

The Aussies were perhaps fortunate to be only down 12-3 at the break.

“It’s our discipline, we can’t give the Boks a world class team, the best in the world, that many penalties and that much possession.”

Dave Rennie’s message would be been clear and abrupt, but his mood will have been well and truly soured by news in the break that Tupou wasn’t fit enough to take his place off the bench.

Rennie cracked the grumps about negative questioning on Thursday after questions about Tupou’s form – more Dave grumpiness incoming stat.

And any hope of a better start to the second half was ruined less than three minutes after the resumption.

Some swift hands off a ruck on the right flank, after desperate play to keep the ball in by Kolisi and a break by Steve Kitshoff caused chaos in the Australian defensive line and flanker Franco Mostert finished well.

“You won’t see much better than that from the boys in the Springboks jersey,” said Sonny Bill Williams. “They started the second half just like they finished the first. Winning the battle physically and then that confidence that they playing with. It was magical to see.”

Lolesio was forced off less than 10 minutes into the half, with Jake Gordon, the only back on the bench left after Kellaway coming onto the wing.

This Test was the first time as Wallabies coach that Rennie had the luxury of sending out an unchanged team. Now he has some big issues to confront ahead of the New Zealand clash.

“We just struggled to get into the contest. They were very good post-tackle,” said Rennie. “They won the majority of the collisions with and without the ball. It was a frustrating day.

“We got to a stage where we needed to play more , we got sucked into kicking the ball back to them or kicking the ball out and giving them a set piece to play off.”

His decision to go with a 6-2 bench split was a risky one and didn’t pay off.

“No doubt with a 6-2 split you lose your 10 and 12 it puts you under heat. I felt like we needed to play with more tempo,” Rennie said.

On the fisticuffs near the end he added: “It is a physical sport and guys are going to stick up for their mates, there was a fair bit of niggle through out.”

The Crowd Says:

2022-09-07T22:42:26+00:00

Dally M

Roar Rookie


You need to re-phrase that to ANY match refereed by BOK. I much prefer the Northern Hemisphere referee's and the way they control the matches.

2022-09-07T13:28:31+00:00

ForeverBok

Roar Rookie


The Bokke had the last laugh. Korobeite was smashed.

2022-09-06T09:55:46+00:00

WEST

Roar Guru


Yeah.. at the moment all the world rugby decisions are being made in Dublin, it will be us who have to adapt to the rules and interpretations of the game.

2022-09-06T09:40:11+00:00

Rusty

Roar Guru


Look I totally agree on the reffing interpretation. That fact the hiring nation can dictate how the game should be interpreted based on a domestic perception of spectacle is not good. Its opens all sorts of cans of worms when you play internationals. As you say - we need consistency across the board or its going to be mayhem again come RWC time. The sooner they move to central contracting to WR the better I think

2022-09-05T19:25:41+00:00

WEST

Roar Guru


Look at the ref interpretations of the game also, very clear difference in the way the game is reffed. Example ABs vs Pumas game 1 vs 2. If you think World Rugby will gift a SH ref in a RWC playoff game, you’ll be very disappointed. Not a conspiracy theory or anything, just the facts it is a North vs South situation when it comes to the style and approach to rugby.. France being a bit of an exception to the rule, but still focused heavily on big men winning the collision. As you said.. lots of ways to win games using your strength and taking away the oppositions.. exactly what this conversation was about. So when the SH teams head North and face teams, or meet say England or Ireland in a match in a RWC playoff wouldn’t it be better to have the ammunition to deal with that style of contest? Or we just keep ignoring the current situation and lose home series now because we don’t put any thought into it, keep running around in SR comps and have loose, open free flowing games with refs turning a blind eye to a lot of the breakdown rules because they want to see the ball shifted around.. Then lose to another NH team with a NH ref.

2022-09-05T18:01:00+00:00

Rusty

Roar Guru


To me thats such a misnomer - the whole impression of negative rugby being some sort of NH conspiracy. Some of the best attacking teams going e.g. Leinster, Harlequins, Racing, Saints etc are from the NH. If anything the SH could learn a few tricks from these teams rather than get wrapped in an us vs them thing. There are lots of ways to play and win games - which is what make it so intriguing. Using your strengths and taking away the oppositions. If a specific way isnt working - then adapt or die until the next cycle of attack vs defence comes along

2022-09-05T17:46:23+00:00

WEST

Roar Guru


The 6 Nations contest is pretty competitive, Italy being the exception of course. But we’re certainly giving it a run for it’s money! Be good to see the Wallabies do well in the Bledisloe Cup. Great opportunity to pick up a win over the All Blacks. Heard an interesting conversation about NZ rugby & ARU coaches coming together to discuss the Northern Hemisphere tactics. Such as line speed, defence focused or negative strategy on the current game of rugby. Of course all the World Rugby decisions are made and decided up North.. So they’re not going to be making any shifts or decisions on changing anything while they’re getting the upper hand. So it comes down to the Southern Hemisphere to figure it out as a collective. One suggestion was to perhaps change some of the approach in the way the game is played to help players deal with rush defensive patterns also the emphasis on the breakdowns. . Lack of South African rugby only emphasised the hole that our players are missing in their game. Not sure how that will work?? Even if ARU and NZRU would even discuss such a thing? But it would go a long way. Another option was to have our SR teams do a northern hemisphere tour each year to expose the players to NH tactics.

2022-09-05T14:16:11+00:00

Rusty

Roar Guru


Explains the WA drawl then!

2022-09-05T14:03:23+00:00

Derek Murray

Roar Rookie


Good girl. Gold is a more flattering colour too

2022-09-05T13:54:06+00:00

Rusty

Roar Guru


Thanks for that mate - the general stereotypical stuff starts to grate after awhile. On another tangent - for a chuckle I have an opposing story - moved to Australia, married a Slovak and now my daughter supports the Wallabies even though we have moved back to Europe :shocked: :shocked: :shocked: I am still working on her though... but in truth I will probably lose her to ice hockey before I convert her to the Boks

2022-09-05T13:45:49+00:00

Rusty

Roar Guru


100% - all said and done its been a pretty good albeit tops turvy competition Should make for an interesting finish!

2022-09-05T13:41:14+00:00

Rusty

Roar Guru


Gold :laughing:

2022-09-05T13:40:46+00:00

Rusty

Roar Guru


The only test nations that gets excited by BOK calling the shots are the ones not on the field. Terrible terrible ref and even worse TMO

2022-09-05T09:00:16+00:00

sheek

Roar Guru


Kenny’s other leg, If you read the history of Australian rugby, most of the mistakes have been self-inflicted. Usually by arrogant officials so up themselves & out of touch as to be completely devoid of forward vision. Go right back to pre-1908 when UK officials insisted on strict amateurism. The Aussies should have said, “yeah, no worries” but continued to quietly pay significant medical insurance & rep duty remuneration. The Kiwis, Saffies & Froggies, who who were so much smarter in practical terms, continued to do under the table deals for their players, while the Aussies, with their blind faith in Brittanica, continually found novel ways to screw the game. Amateurism was a noble concept in a perfect world. But it was never going to survive in the often ugly, real world. Sometimes I just think Oz rugby deserves to be cast into oblivion.

2022-09-05T08:12:23+00:00

Derek Murray

Roar Rookie


I am still yet to watch anything but 6 minutes of highlights and have promised myself I won't be one of those guys bagging the ref but I never look forward to a Wallaby match refereed by BOK. It just never seems to work out well for us

2022-09-05T08:07:47+00:00

Derek Murray

Roar Rookie


I lived in SA for 6 years before moving to London, married an Afrikaan woman, and have a child who, to my eternal regret, supports the Boks. I have watched a huge amount of SA rugby before that time, during and after and you're wrong about one thing here BB - they play hard but it's not dirty. Eben, Duane and Siya to name a few from the current side, play an extremely physical brand of rugby and are rarely, if ever, carded. The dirty Bok is a myth. Tough and uncompromising maybe, but not dirty. For every Bakkies Botha we can name a Steve Finnane - every international side has had hard nuts in it's history but for the last decade, they have distinguished themselves by their adherence to the laws of the game

2022-09-05T03:55:09+00:00

Jimbo81

Roar Rookie


I can't get over how badly the Wallabies were dominated. Rudderless - completely dominated physically - what are they doing in the gym - we see a lot of vision of Wallabies in the gym - do they do anything beyond posing? How can the opposition be so much stronger? How? How does Alaalatoa, a prop, get manhandled by Bruno, a 2nd rower? How was it just called play on without a sanction? It was deliberate time wasting by RSA because they had scored. By winding down the clock by five mins, it effectively sealed the win - it was too far gone anyway but they still used this tactic. Where does Rennie start? He's had three years and the team is now worse off than when he inherited it. He's made no impact - he hasn't developed any players - they're all more or less at the same or worse level than they were before he started, or he's been forced to make selections that he never ever would have like McReight at 7. I have no confidence whatsoever in McKeller or Rennie and can't wait for the world cup cycle to chew them up and spit them out - anyone would be better than this!

2022-09-05T03:32:55+00:00

Reframe

Roar Rookie


To be fair the same can be said for all four. Some coaches however man up and others don't, won't or simply can't.

2022-09-05T02:59:20+00:00

Reframe

Roar Rookie


Jacko, Do you really hate the All Blacks that much that every wrong doing has to be related to them. Just asking.

2022-09-04T22:29:30+00:00

Derek Murray

Roar Rookie


It’s been a wild couple of weeks on social media. I’m ducking out, I don’t meet the requirement of a mental age of 12 to play

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