logo
Kolbe shines through storm to power Boks to dominant win

Kolbe shines through storm to power Boks to dominant win

TimesLIVE15 hours ago

Though clashes against the Barbarians are devoid of Test status the hunger to improve in the Springbok camp was perhaps best exemplified by wing Cheslin Kolbe in Saturday's 54-7 win at a rain-soaked Cape Town Stadium.
Kolbe delivered a star-studded performance in atrocious conditions to help elevate the home team to an emphatic win to start off their season.
Kolbe, a man who has risen to the occasion on the game's best illuminated stage, again shone with restless, relentless energy en route to a man of the match performance against the game's most revered and cherished composite team.
Though he scored a first half try when he chased after a well weighted Aphelele Fassi toe poke, it was after the break that he stamped his authority on proceedings.
While others tread water, Kolbe ran and manoeuvred like a player fitted with all-weather tyres as he deftly teased and tormented the Barbarians defence. He ran onto and jumped for the ball with zeal and purpose.
He slid past defenders at will and even ran over visiting hooker Ricky Riccitelli in a surge for the try line before being halted just short.
The Springboks retain the Qatar Airways Cup 👏👏 #SSRugby | #BARvRSA pic.twitter.com/OfCbWxTgo3
— SuperSport Rugby (@SSRugby) June 28, 2025
Barbarians coach Robbie Deans is an admirer of Kolbe's work. 'I always enjoy watching Cheslin. Even when you're playing against him. He's just so positive. You can see his positivity into contact and in the air. He is just a freakish footballer.'
Kolbe, 31, showed that his desire to make an impression in the Bok jersey remains undiminished.
To be fair, that attitude permeated the Boks ranks with several players putting shoulder to the wheel in the kind of match often dismissed for its frivolity.
After a two-year absence lock Lood de Jager made an impressive return to the Bok fold. He tirelessly toiled for 70 minutes before being withdrawn from the action. Jean-Luc du Preez, another Bok absentee in the last few seasons, also showed his worth in the No.8 jersey. He however left the field injured just before the break.
Flank Vincent Tshituka went through a huge workload and would have been well satisfied with his effort.
Like Kolbe, Kurt-Lee Arendse also sparked when opportunity presented.
It was the need to impress before the two-Test series against Italy that drove the Boks. In the second half in particular they played with greater hunger and urgency, displaying also the willingness to go the extra mile.
Centre Andre Esterhuizen certainly fell into that category when he was deployed as a loose forward when he came on as a second-half substitute.
Champagne rugby by the Boks 🥳🎉
📺 Stream #BARvRSA on DStv: https://t.co/0P0NNhnwKw pic.twitter.com/yQLhFwtZl3
— SuperSport Rugby (@SSRugby) June 28, 2025
'If I wasn't willing I would not have played today,' he said. 'I'm willing to learn and slot into a bit of a hybrid role that covers forwards and backs. It can help me as a player as well and it can help the team. Hopefully we can see more of that in the future.'
Knowing head coach Rassie Erasmus and his penchant for innovation Esterhuizen wasn't surprised to be pressed into a new role. 'I was waiting for the conversation to happen. It has been brought up in the past and it was shrugged off by different people. As you get older you learn how you can slot in everywhere. How you can get yourself into the team more constantly. You have to adapt as a player. I'm looking forward to see what it can be.'
It is another example of the back-to-back Rugby World Cup holders forever pushing boundaries. At the last Rugby World Cup they often pushed players into situations and positions with which they are less familiar. The players by and large responded positively and rose to the occasion. A fleet-footed forward like Kwagga Smith may find himself in the backline but now a hulking back like Esterhuizen finds himself mixing it with the heavies upfront.
The Boks keep innovating and it is keeping the rugby world on its toes.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

A vibe! Jesse Kriel leads Springboks in Gwigo song
A vibe! Jesse Kriel leads Springboks in Gwigo song

The South African

time6 hours ago

  • The South African

A vibe! Jesse Kriel leads Springboks in Gwigo song

Jesse Kriel is a man of many talents, from his proficiency in multiple languages to his superfit physique to his current captaincy of the Springboks. The 31-year-old captured the hearts of South Africans in a throwback video of him singing a Gwigo song. On Saturday, 28 June, Jesse led the Boks to a 54-7 defeat over the Barbarians at the DHL Stadium in Cape Town. On TikTok, Springbok captain Siya Kolisi posted a throwback clip of Jesse Kriel leading the squad in a Gwijo song – a Xhosa a cappella song – following their 2023 Rugby World Cup victory. 'It's that time again', he captioned the heartwarming clip. @siyakolisi It's that time again 🇿🇦 #sportsontiktok #rugby #springboks #gwijo #siyakolisi ♬ original sound – Siya Kolisi Jesse Kriel is known for being fluent in several languages. Earlier this month, a clip of the Canon Eagles player effortlessly conversing in Japanese went viral. Last year, Jesse won the hearts of many South Africans after a clip of him speaking Xhosa went viral. A day before kick-off, Springboks management revealed that Jesse Kriel would captain the national team in their first match of 2025. This followed Siya Kolisi withdrawing over an injury 'niggle'. According to assistant coach Mzwandile Stick, Siya's stiff neck is likely to loosen up before the squad takes on Italy next weekend at Loftus. Let us know by leaving a comment below, or send a WhatsApp to 060 011 021 1 . Subscribe to The South African website's newsletters and follow us on WhatsApp , Facebook , X, and Bluesky for the latest news.

‘Hybrid' Esterhuizen at flank the next innovation as Springboks continue to push limits
‘Hybrid' Esterhuizen at flank the next innovation as Springboks continue to push limits

Daily Maverick

time7 hours ago

  • Daily Maverick

‘Hybrid' Esterhuizen at flank the next innovation as Springboks continue to push limits

Centre André Esterhuizen made his first international appearance as a flank during the Springboks' 54-7 win over the Barbarians in Cape Town on Saturday. There was a moment in the media tribune when we suspected the Springboks might have 16 players on the field. The Bomb Squad had just been unleashed en masse. Centre André Esterhuizen was among the eight replacements sent on simultaneously. But as the exchange of players settled down, it was obvious that centres Jesse Kriel and Damian de Allende were both still on the field. The Boks wouldn't make such a basic error as having 16 players on the field, would they? This was not New Zealand in a sevens game. 'Where is Esterhuizen playing?' 'He must be at wing, or fullback?' No and no. 'Hang on, isn't that him at flank?' Yes. And the penny dropped. Rassie Erasmus was doing Rassie Erasmus things again. The Boks were thinking outside the box. You had to have a chuckle because we've always known that Esterhuizen is built like a flank at 1.93m tall and around 110kg. Of course Rassie would do it. The answer to where the next Bok innovation would come from was revealed in the opening game of the year. And it probably won't be the last. 'You can call him (Esterhuizen) a hybrid player,' Erasmus said after the match with a glint in his eye. 'You can have two ways of looking at it. When you have a 6-2 split (between forwards and backs), you have Kwagga (Smith) covering the wing. 'But now, we're just doing it the other way around – where you have a back covering a forward position, like André covering flanker. 'So if you have three backline injuries, a guy like André gives us the options now, because he has been training with the forwards and backs.' Hopefully, no one tells that Australian pundit who is making a career of finding anything the Boks do as being against the spirit of the game. The original Bomb Squad with the 6-2 split was bad enough for some sensitive souls. The 7-1 split nearly sent rugby into meltdown. That's before you even consider four scrumhalves in a match-day 23, first-half tactical substitutions and scrums called from marks. Performance Once the realisation set in that Esterhuizen was at flank, it became about watching his performance in that context for the final 30 minutes of the Boks' 54-7 win over the Barbarians at the DHL Stadium. The Boks scrum didn't have it all their own way at that stage. Whether that was down to Esterhuizen's contribution to the scrumming effort is unclear. In the loose, he seemed to grasp the positional needs of his new assignment well, making one great tackle as a Barbarian player came 'around the corner' at a ruck. It was the type of tackle that hardly raises an eyebrow when Pieter-Steph du Toit makes it, but if you're one step too late, then the player is through a hole. Other than that, Esterhuizen was neither bad nor great. He was functional in the position. 'We started chatting to him (André) about five months ago, just to make sure he is a backline player who can also play forward,' Erasmus said. '(Coach) Felix Jones handles his load very well in how much he does with the forwards and how much he does with the backs.' Only the 31-year-old Esterhuizen knows if he fully buys into the idea, but he made the right noises after the match. Time is also counting down in his career. After all, his options at centre remain limited with the brilliant De Allende continuing to perform so well. Esterhuizen also doesn't have the versatility as a player to cover more than one position in the backline. But as a potential hybrid centre/flank he makes a stronger case for regular inclusion in the 23. 'It was a good experience. I trained at flank during the week, and it's a good attribute for the future,' Esterhuizen said. 'I like to learn, and I'm willing to slot into the hybrid role, playing in both forwards and backs. 'It will help me as a player, and obviously it can help the team. Hopefully, we can see more of it. 'Rassie and I spoke about it and came to an agreement. I told him I'd like to try it – it gives you so many more options. I was waiting for the conversation because it had been brought up in the past. But I just shrugged it off. 'However, as you get older, you learn how you can slot in everywhere and how you can get yourself into the team more consistently, and you have to adapt with the players. 'I'm really looking forward to what can be.' Good start The Esterhuizen experiment aside, Erasmus was content with the first outing of the season. The Boks endured an intense few weeks of training leading up to the Barbarians clash, and it showed. Despite the wet field and showers throughout the match, they were mostly slick and cohesive. The set pieces, especially the lineout, functioned well; they attacked beautifully at times, the aerial kicking game was on point and the defence, intense.'We came in here to be bold and positive and not let the conditions affect us and keep the ball in hand, and I thought we looked dangerous on turnover ball,' said captain Jesse Kriel. 'I thought we looked dangerous when we got the ball into guys like Aphelele Fassi, Kurt-Lee Arendse and Cheslin Kolbe's hands. They're special rugby players, they can make something out of nothing, and we saw that today.' Erasmus added, 'We won't get carried away with this performance. Certainly, some of the newer guys showed us that they can do it at this level, but we'll layer them in. 'We know who is going to play in Italy one and two, and certainly by the end of the Georgia game, which will be a grind, we'll have a group of 45, 50 that have had some game time. 'Some of the half gaps and some of the line breaks we made would have stuck if the weather had been drier,' he said. 'We can't wait to play on a dry pitch and improve on our attack. 'We want to get better. The next three matches we'll be trying to focus on us before we hit the Rugby Championship.'

Springbok coach Erasmus introduces 'hybrid player' Esterhuizen
Springbok coach Erasmus introduces 'hybrid player' Esterhuizen

Eyewitness News

time7 hours ago

  • Eyewitness News

Springbok coach Erasmus introduces 'hybrid player' Esterhuizen

CAPE TOWN - Innovative South Africa head coach Rassie Erasmus called centre-turned-flanker Andre Esterhuizen a "hybrid player" on Saturday after a 54-7 victory over the Barbarians in wet and cold Cape Town. When replacement back Andre Esterhuizen came on early in the second half of the non-cap exhibition match for the world champions, it was as a loose forward. "You can call him a hybrid player, he is a backline player who can also play in the forwards now," Erasmus told a press conference. "You can have a forward covering a back position like (flanker) Kwagga Smith covering wing, and you can have a back covering a forward position, like Andre. "We started chatting to Andre about it five months ago, now he is a backline player who can also play as a forward." Former Springboks flanker Erasmus, who played key coaching roles in the 2019 and 2023 Rugby World Cup triumphs of South Africa, is a master innovator. He is best known for changing the traditional five forwards-three backs split on the substitutes' bench, choosing six-two and even seven-one combinations instead. Erasmus hailed lock Lood de Jager, back in the team after a two-year absence with a career-threatening heart illness and then injuries. "The condition that he had was almost career-ending, but when we did the fitness testing three weeks ago, he was exceptional," said the coach. LOCK DEPTH "His body might be 32 or 33, but he has had some 'rest' in the last couple of years, and I think that showed. "We are very glad Lood came through, and we have some nice depth at lock now," said Erasmus, referring to eight locks in a 45-man squad for three July Tests against Italy and Georgia. After torrential rain during the eight-try victory over the Baabaas, Erasmus said he was hoping for dry weather when the record four-time Rugby World Cup title-holders face Italy on July 5. "Some of the half gaps and some of the line breaks we made today would have stuck if the weather had been drier," he said. "We cannot wait to play on a dry pitch and improve our attack. We want to get better, and in the next three matches, we will be trying to focus on ourselves before the Rugby Championship. "We know who is going to play in the two Tests against Italy, and certainly by the end of the Georgia game, which will be a grind, we will have a group that have had some game time. "We will not get carried away with this performance, (but) some of the newer guys showed us that they can do it at this level," added Erasmus. Democratic Republic of Congo-born flanker Vincent Tshituka from the Sharks, one of four debutants, scored two tries. South Africa face Italy in Pretoria, then in Gqeberha on 12 July, before a one-off Test against Georgia in Mbombela on 19 July. Two Rugby Championship fixtures each against Australia, New Zealand and Argentina follow between August and October. November Tests in France, Italy, Ireland and Wales complete the schedule for the Springboks, who will defend the World Cup in Australia in 2027.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store