RWC: South Africa’s Springboks Secure Nine-Try Win Over Namibia
TOYOTA CITY, Japan – South Africa’s electric wing Makazole Mapimpi scored two tries as they eased to a nine-try 57-3 win over neighbours Namibia… but it was a far from polished performance in the Rugby World Cup Pool B clash at the City of Toyota Stadium on Saturday. Billed the ‘African Derby’, there was only […]
TOYOTA CITY, Japan – South Africa’s electric wing Makazole Mapimpi scored two tries as they eased to a nine-try 57-3 win over neighbours Namibia… but it was a far from polished performance in the Rugby World Cup Pool B clash at the City of Toyota Stadium on Saturday.
Billed the ‘African Derby’, there was only ever going to be one winner despite what Springbok coach Rassie Erasmus termed his ‘fringe’ selection, and minnows Namibia simply could not cope with the physicality of the South Africans.
Hooker Bongi Mbonambi (two), loose-forwards Francois Louw, Schalk Brits and Siya Kolisi, full-back Warrick Gelant and centre Lukhanyo Am also crossed for tries, but there was a lack of cohesion and, at times, quality to the Bok play that will worry Erasmus.
They next face Italy on Friday in Fukuroi City in a match that should decide second place in the pool, while Namibia face the daunting prospect of meeting New Zealand in Tokyo on Oct. 6.
The number of unforced errors made by the Boks, especially in the first half, was high and Elton Jantjies did little to suggest he is pushing Handre Pollard for a starting place at fly-half with some poor decision-making and execution.
Namibia, made up almost entirely of amateur players, never stopped trying to run the ball but did not manage a single line-break in the game.
South Africa produced four monstrous attacking scrums early on to show their dominance, referee Mathieu Raynal showing restraint as Namibia buckled and wheeled under the pressure.
The first three tries were all from rolling mauls following line-outs, two for Mbonambi and one by Louw, before Mapimpi secured the bonus-point inside 27 minutes with a neat finish out wide.
Namibia fly-half Cliven Loubser replied with a penalty before Am crossed to hand the Boks a 31-3 halftime lead.
They took almost 10 minutes to find their rhythm after the break but added a sixth try as Am sliced through a gap in the defence, Gelant finishing off.
Mapimpi crossed for his second out wide and then regular skipper Kolisi came off the bench to canter in, captain for the day Brits adding the ninth with 16 minutes remaining.
(Reporting by Nick Said; Editing by Ken Ferris and Tony Lawrence)