Pumas Rewrite Carling Currie Cup History
Pumas Rewrite Carling Currie Cup History. Photo: SA Rugby

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Pumas Win Currie Cup for First Time in History

The Pumas emerged as the Cinderella men of the Carling Currie Cup’s modern era when they pipped Griquas 26-19 in a momentous final in Kimberley, South Africa, on Saturday afternoon to clinch their first title. In a historic battle of ultimate underdogs, the visitors maximised their maiden finals appearance by outscoring the hosts by three […]

Pumas Rewrite Carling Currie Cup History
Pumas Rewrite Carling Currie Cup History. Photo: SA Rugby

The Pumas emerged as the Cinderella men of the Carling Currie Cup’s modern era when they pipped Griquas 26-19 in a momentous final in Kimberley, South Africa, on Saturday afternoon to clinch their first title.

In a historic battle of ultimate underdogs, the visitors maximised their maiden finals appearance by outscoring the hosts by three tries to one in front of a capacity crowd of 8,500 to capture the crown jewel of South African rugby.

The Pumas class of 2022, captained by flanker Willie Engelbrecht, seized the day with a heroic performance to cap a fairy-tale season under long-time coach Jimmy Stonehouse.

The spirited smaller unions, who defied the odds to reach the decider, largely stuck to what brought them to the doorstep of destiny, playing high-octane rugby after a nervy first 20 minutes in a final unlike any other in the history of the oldest provincial rugby competition in the world.

The Lowvelders’ temperament formed the foundation of their triumph, which was powered by superior execution, finishing and defence. Their sharpness on attack and powerful driving maul saw them score two unanswered tries, which helped them take an 18-9 lead into the break, with the hosts managing just three penalty goals via the boot of George Whitehead.

The lead grew to 17 before the Peacock Blues produced a fightback, which was sparked by a scintillating try by Munier Hartzenberg in the 57th minute. A late monster penalty goal from Whitehead, who’d also converted his wing’s try, gave Griquas a chance to force the final into extra time with a last-gasp converted try.

However, it never came as the Pumas held on. With their historic victory, the unheralded men in pink and grey rose from undesirable to undeniable on what will live on in Carling Currie Cup lore as the Nelspruit union’s greatest day.

For the Peacock Blues, who were playing in their first final in 52 years and pursuing a fourth title, it was a cruel case of so close, yet so far. The men from the Northern Cape had a phenomenal first season under coach Pieter Bergh but fell just short of following in the footsteps of the legendary victorious teams of 1899, 1911 and 1970. Several of the heroes of the latter triumph were in attendance.

The Pumas, playing in their first-ever final, drew first blood after just two minutes, Eddie Fouche slotting a penalty goal following a no-arms tackle by Hanru Sirgel. Whitehead levelled the scores right away, though, after Derik Pretorius got over the ball and won a breakdown penalty from the restart.

The nerves then became evident with both sides guilty of making unforced errors for the remainder of the tense opening quarter. Whitehead put the hosts in front with his second penalty goal in the 21st minute, Eduan Swart – one of the visitors’ standouts on the day – pinged by referee Cwengile Jadezweni for not rolling away before the final came alive.

The synergy that’s fuelled the Pumas’ rise came to the fore as sterling interplay between the forwards and the backs culminated in a try for Devon Williams, who went over in the right-hand corner after an excellent one-handed take of Thinus de Beer’s long pass. Fouche nailed the difficult conversion to make it 10-6.

The Lowvelders’ discipline was becoming problematic and Whitehead made them pay with an icy cool long-range penalty goal, but the visitors immediately pulled three points back and nearly had more after Sebastian de Klerk had made a scything line break that had the Peacock Blues at sixes and sevens.

With their tails up, the Airlink Pumas turned down a kickable penalty and capped their first-half dominance with a timely try in the final play of the first half, Swart rumbling over from the back of a driving maul. Fouche couldn’t add the extras but the visitors would’ve been ecstatic with their 18-9 halftime lead.

They appeared to land an even greater blow at the start of the second half as the mercurial Williams scored a stylish chip-and-chase try. However, it was disallowed upon review by TMO Quinton Immelman, who ruled that De Klerk’s pass to his fullback had drifted forward.

Nevertheless, the Pumas were still the first to score after the break as the mounting pressure on the hosts yielded three more points for Fouche. Things went from bad to worse for Windhoek Draught Griquas as they had a kickable penalty overturned when Werner Gouws was caught palming the face of his grounded opposite number Daniel Maartens. The piece of cynical play led to the Pumas’ third try, with a good run by Jade Stighling and a great offload by Maartens seeing captain fantastic and Champion of the Match Engelbrecht score.

Trailing 26-9, it was do-or-die for Griquas, who needed something special to get back in the game and it came through Hartzenberg, who blasted through a gap and sped in for the hosts’ opening try as the crowd came alive. Whitehead’s conversion made it a 10-point game with 22 minutes left on the clock.

Bolstered by the crucial score, Windhoek Draught Griquas dug deep on defence to weather a sustained onslaught, ultimately holding the visitors up over the tryline to escape unscathed. As precious seconds ticked away, the home team had a golden opportunity to escalate the comeback as they set up a lineout in the 22. However, in a microcosm of their lack of accuracy at crucial times on the day, replacement hooker Simon Westraadt’s throw-in wasn’t straight.

Momentum had swung in the hosts’ favour and needing to score twice, they opted to kick at goal with three minutes left. Whitehead hit the upright but made good with a booming penalty goal moments later to give them a glimmer of hope, but the Airlink Pumas’ defence held firm and the Nelspruit side celebrated the sweetest of victories.

Scorers:

Windhoek Draught Griquas 19 (9) – Try: Munier Hartzenberg. Conversion: George Whitehead. Penalty goals: Whitehead (4).

Airlink Pumas 26 (18) – Tries: Devon Williams, Eduan Swart, Willie Engelbrecht. Conversion: Eddie Fouche. Penalty goals: Eddie Fouche (3).

Source: SARugby