Boks show steel to survive late scare as bonus point puts them in pole position for TRC crown

By Harry Jones / Expert

The Springboks stayed in the hunt for an elusive Rugby Championship title by scoring five tries against two-try Argentina in Buenos Aires, surviving a late scare to win by 16 points.

With the All Blacks in reach, both teams had incentive to play for a bonus point win. It was full sun in the capital as the stately anthem played.

The site of the game had changed: reddish Libertadores de America Stadium, home of Club Atlético Independiente was chosen after the playing surface was deemed unplayable at Estadio Velez Sarsfield.

A heavily leg strapped Santiago Carreras drew first blood. His opposite number Damian Willemse was held up in tackle.

However, Julian Montoya gave the ball right back by forgetting that pesky brake foot. This gave the Boks an easy exit; a theme of the first half, along with incessant warnings to the Pumas by the referee.

However, at scrum time, the Pumas were cleverly slipping the hit and getting rewarded. Frans Malherbe had a number of strong carries and even took a lineout, but he was 1-2 in scrum penalties, the first time he was bested in a long time.

On the Pumas feed, Marco Kremer packed down at blindside; part of an ever-changing Pumas loose trio configuration.

The Boks kept guessing wrong as to when the ball was out of the ruck, which led to all six points by Argentina, off the big booming boot of Emiliano Boffelli who has the most annoying pre kick routine in rugby now.

Damian de Allende was lively in attack, forcing several offsides calls.

Willemse looks the goods at ten, but his boot will have to be re-educated. The Boks left at least seven points on the board.

A maul feint, with Marx splitting off, was a key tool. Finally, the pressure told. Marx split off, hit Canan Moodie on the fly, who stepped to a metre out and Jaden Hendrickse was tackled from an offside position by Carreras, leading to a penalty try, but an early tackle by Eben Etzebeth made it 10-6. He made up for that lapse with a berserker kick chase, which allowed the visitors to camp out in the Pumas 22 and score on a snipe by Hendrickse. At 17-6, it looked ominous.

Marx started to rule the ruck and was rewarded with a maul break off try to make it 22-6 after 33 minutes.

The Pumas oddly kept kicking to Jasper Wiese who kept running easy crash-ball for exits, but the rest of the half was a familiar problem for South Africa: knocking on the door and not earning any more points, but did force a second card against Argentina.

A certain try by Lood de Jager was disallowed for a juggle and Argentina may have felt relieved to be down ‘only’ by 16.

But as we have seen all season, the effort it takes to get all the way back from such a large deficit can sometimes be cruel at the end.

The second half opened with a mad back-and-forth three-intercept series, which may be a record, but it was scrappy for over ten minutes.

The Pumas simply could not calmly form an attack. The last pass kept going to ground.

Kwagga Smith came on and pilfered immediately. With 27 minutes to go, the penalty count was 15-6 against the hosts.

Pumas threw the kitchen sink at the Boks, who were forced to infringe several times to keep a Pumas attack at bay.

The delay in allowing the Pumas’ two tries saved the match for South Africa.

Ironically, the dam broke when excellent starters Siya Kolisi, Frans Malherbe and Jaden Hendrickse went off at 59 minutes.

A stronger scrum and more poise by the Pumas led to more territory, and the 50-50 calls began to flow the other way.

Willemse was knocked out and replaced by Frans Steyn. The Pumas pounced and were rewarded when Smith’s holdup tackle was ruled to be foul and a penalty try was awarded.

Damian Willemse. (Photo by Daniel Jayo/Getty Images)

He joined Willie le Roux in the sin bin and with 13 minutes to go, only 13 Boks on the pitch, and just a nine point deficit, the crowd was raucous.

A lovely break by Argentina led to a possible try but there seems to be a forward pass by Tomas Lavanini who had a good game. It looked dicey but the TMO cleared it. The fans went ballistic.

Then, after the Argentine conversion was taken, the TMO checked Matias Moroni’s grounding, which always looked fine.

‘Suddenly’ the score was 20-22 with plenty of time to go against the 14-man Boks.

When Tomas Cubelli won a superb turnover, the stadium Buenos Aires was as loud as any in the land, even football.

But then, it was a tale of two halves of one half.

South Africa turned to Etzebeth, Marx and Steyn. Control was the word.

Steadily, the Boks asserted themselves into the red zone. A maul followed a maul, but then it was runners round the corner and Damian de Allende monstered his way over with that extra oomph.

At 29-20 the game was won, but there was still the matter of catching the All Blacks at 14 points to set up a final weekend finale (the Boks own the head-to-head differential).

The Pumas did everything but score to deny the world champions, showing brilliant hands but also running into clumsy corners.

Steyn’s tip tackle seemed to stymie the Boks at 13 log points, but then a Deon Fourie turnover gave that one chance the bloody minded Boks needed.

A sweeping movement to the left found Mapimpi at pace, and eighty minute man Marx finished it with a soft hands and astounding fitness.

So, 36-20 was the final score after big Steyn banged it through with gusto.

The second half ended 14-14. It is hard to chase back, isn’t it?

For the Boks, Jaden Hendrickse looks to have cemented his place at nine with aplomb. De Allende easily quieted the calls for Andre Esterhuizen.

Rugged kick chaser Etzebeth was in the middle of all of it with his old Stormers mates Malherbe, Kitshoff and Kolisi. Marx and de Jager were full value, along with Franco Mostert who just never stops grinding.

For Argentina, Julian Montoya and his loose forward friends were immense, with Marco Kremer a machine. But the slight Bok edge in the tight five seemed to win the day, along with just enough speed advantage in the backline to scramble most Puma forays. Several times the home team just needed an out-and-out flyer to round Mapimpi and Canan Moodie.

Also, the absence of an experienced ‘Bernard Foley’ type (Nico Sanchez) shows.

The game was played in a good spirit, with only one minor handbag dance, but it was as brutal as any collision sport is allowed to be and still be legal. There were 33 penalties whistled by the new referee; with four cards.

It is on to Durban (on the very same flights) where South Africa will know the number they must achieve after Eden Park, depending on how the Australian revenge tale goes.

The Crowd Says:

2022-09-21T12:38:56+00:00

NOTASaffaSpy

Roar Rookie


Still one of the greatest things I have ever done. Was lucky enough to watch River vs Boca in La Plata in the stadium in 2007. Don't think I have ever been anywhere that loud and rowdy it was incredible.

AUTHOR

2022-09-19T14:17:09+00:00

Harry Jones

Expert


Correct. The job will be known. And regardless, Boks will have a chance, but it will be pretty much impossible if ABs stampede the Wallabies. A close match at Eden Park and the Boks will have an open door.

2022-09-19T13:10:58+00:00

Justin

Roar Pro


Thanks! By kickoff the Boks will know exactly what they need to do. And for Wallabies to top the log they'll need a BP victory and for the Pumas to beat the Boks. Amazingingly open final weekend!

AUTHOR

2022-09-19T12:08:15+00:00

Harry Jones

Expert


OK, I’ve confirmed (officially) you are right. If a losing Australia can deny NZ the bonus point, SA will need to EITHER beat Argentina with a bonus point or overcome the overall PD (currently a 13 point edge to NZ). So, NZ controls its own destiny: win big, win it all.

2022-09-19T10:04:41+00:00

Faith

Roar Rookie


I thought just the two of them stemmed Pumas comeback ...

2022-09-19T10:02:28+00:00

Faith

Roar Rookie


The TMO was constantly in Doleman's ear in ways that a more assertive ref would have pushed back on. Checking every neck roll as if always looking for a reason. I think the Boks had quite a few decisions go against them that let the Pumas back into things. Nothing big just letting the Pumas roll up the field. While their defence was brutal, the Boks seemed to completely lose their wasy in the first half hour of the 2nd half. But in those last 10 minutes they showed how they are on for a RWC repeat next year. It was like they flipped a switch and started making penalty tunrnovers and marching up the field. Very impressive stuff. By bringing in new players i.e Hendrikse who has gone past Faf and Willemse they've increased depth even if the latter really can't afford to miss easy kicks off the tee. They was a new no. 8 who I thought was very good. Pumas showed a lot of their problems in the past - indiscipine and a harum-scarum style of play that's beyond their skills. I wonder how many tries they let just from the wrong play at the end of a phase. An attempted pass when holding would be better. A kick that breaks down a movement.

2022-09-19T07:52:44+00:00

Brad

Roar Rookie


That would mean Boks are currently top of the table

2022-09-19T07:49:44+00:00

Justin

Roar Pro


Keep us updated, potentially very important!

AUTHOR

2022-09-19T07:24:03+00:00

Harry Jones

Expert


I’ve been reading up on that and have seen different rules. Currently trying to nail it down.

2022-09-19T07:17:08+00:00

Justin

Roar Pro


Hi Harry, are you sure the head to head differential is used before series points differential? This link suggests otherwise: https://super.rugby/therugbychampionship/about-trc/

2022-09-19T01:58:32+00:00

CW Moss

Roar Rookie


Good one Pedro. :happy:

AUTHOR

2022-09-18T17:13:06+00:00

Harry Jones

Expert


The ref was good at explaining himself.

2022-09-18T11:25:13+00:00

Pedro

Roar Rookie


Apparently the dietician took the week off.

2022-09-18T09:24:55+00:00

Flyman

Roar Rookie


Probably gave them an advantage :laughing:

2022-09-18T06:30:54+00:00

Muzzo

Roar Rookie


TBH, I'd love to see the Boks taking out the RC, As it was, I thought they had lost it, when the Puma came back to reduce the lead, at 22-20, but then those great forwards they have, showed again why they are the current World Champs. A big win, next week would help their cause, especially if the Wallaby can give it to the AB's at the Garden of Eden. Then again this win also had it's controversial issues.

2022-09-18T06:23:21+00:00

Englishbob

Guest


Probably a good thing that SA should win the TRC, NZ have been painfully inconsistent this year, any trophies they win would reflect badly on the competition as a whole than their achievement, it has been a very entertaining TRC with a smattering of good performances rather than a high quality affair. I personally thought the ref last night was really good, 34 penalties is about right, the breakdown was a shambles but he cant make players play properly, he was clear and concise, YCs in the red zone are hard to argue if they're applied fairly which they largely were and the scoreline reflected the game. One for the purists.

AUTHOR

2022-09-18T05:47:42+00:00

Harry Jones

Expert


Definite. Both were super busy. Elrigh looks like a Test player in the making

2022-09-18T05:06:15+00:00

Mungo69

Roar Rookie


It wasn't just the TMO. Assistant referee (formerly known as touch judge) Damon Murphy made more calls than the actual referee in the first half. Poor referee Doleman was getting confused with all the chatter going on in his earpiece.

2022-09-18T03:43:03+00:00


What did you make of Elrigh Louw’s outing? Would you expect to see him again in the tests? I thought he and Kwagga Smith made a fairly solid impact as replacements except for the penalty try.

2022-09-18T02:38:38+00:00

In brief

Guest


Well done SA - looking very solid - but, the game itself was the ultimate s_show. The constant interjections by the TMO took away all authority from the referee

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