‘Bullying’ is generally a pretty negative word. Speak it and you are treated to images of
crack-burning wedgies, Chinese burns and a child who is unfortunate enough to
be half decent at maths with his head being flushed in a toilet bowl. All good character building stuff...or rather
soul destroying for a youngster. But in
rugby the idea of being the bully is an entirely positive attribute –
especially in the case of matches between the Pumas and the Springboks, where
complete dominance of the other side, to the point where they cannot function, is
a key objective prior to the game.
Of course, there was no doubt who was the bully and who was
the bespectacled child with his underpants pulled over his head when the 2
sides met in the first round of the Rugby Championship in South Africa. The men in green literally obliterated their
opponents, to the point where the Argentines frankly looked like they didn’t
want to play any more – dropping off tackles and throwing abysmal
intercepts. The South Africans, though, were rampant, with
the power of Willem Alberts and Duane Vermeulan proving to be particularly
destructive. Surely the South Americans
couldn’t seriously hope to overturn such a drubbing just because they were at
home?
Straight away though, it became pretty apparent that this
wasn’t going to be anything like their last meeting. The hosts had been embarrassed, and there was
a typical South American fire in their eyes when they lined up against their
ultra physical opponents on Saturday – a desire to right a few wrongs. Lock Mariano Galarza snaffled a loose ball
and delightfully chipped forwards, and the visitors were somewhere they hadn’t
been for a fair while – under pressure. Felipe Contepomi and Marcelo Bosch affected a
turnover and, although they ran out of room and ball went into touch on the
first attempt, they were not to be denied as they executed a slick lineout move
that allowed Juan Manuel Leguizamon to wriggle over on the right. Contepomi added a marvellous conversion and the
Argentines had a dream start.
Whilst the Pumas had the bit between their teeth, the Springboks
were looking as limp as a dead fish and another loose ball allowed Martin
Landajo to scamper 50 metres down the right and put more pressure on the
visitors. Thankfully for the South
Africans they were able to clear their lines and settle things down with a
dreadful 5 minute series of scrums that never completed – a bad indication on
the new engagement rules. Despite the scrums
looking more of a contest than last week, the Beast still had an advantage over
Juan Figallo and managed to engineer a penalty, which Morne Steyn slotted.
The Pumas, though, had shown more intent and verve in the
opening 10 minutes than they showed all game last week, and were rewarded when
Bjorn Basson was penalised for offside, which allowed Contepomi to restore his
side’s 7 point lead. It should also be
noted that the Argentine veteran is now so big time that he had a mini remote controlled
landrover to bring his kicking tee on for him – as the kicking coach may be
thinking, “why walk?”.
Despite the promising start though, the Pumas were still
showing lapses of judgement, which was obvious when they failed to clear their
lines and it resulted in South African pressure and ultimately a try, following
great passing by Steyn and JJ Engelbrecht to put Basson into the corner. Steyn added the extras and we were all
square.
The game then tightened up into the traditional arm wrestle
as Argentina tried to batter down the South Africans with short balls, but the
likes of Pablo Matera and Leonardo Senatore could find no way through the solid
Springbok defensive line, marshalled well by Francois Louw. The visitors in fact went close twice as
first Ruan Pienaar almost got his hands on the ball over the tryline following
a kick chase, before Juandre Kruger looked to have crossed before being pulled
back for a knock on from Eben Etzebeth.
South Africa were going for the jugular, going for touch instead of goal
from kickable penalties, but were held out by resilient Argentine defence and
the game reverted back to its standard crash-bang-whallop routine in the middle
of the park.
Not much was happening but, after Contepomi had missed a
shot at goal from range, the hosts began to inch forward towards the Springbok
line and, following a sharp dart from Lucas Amarosino, Bosch managed to squeeze
himself through the tackles of Jannie Du Plessis and Engelbrecht to wriggle
over for the try, which Contepomi converted.
The hosts once again had a 7 point lead with 3 minutes if the half to
go, although this was long enough to Steyn to bang another kick over from
range.
The second half began with drama of a different kind as Louw
accused Mantera of gouging him – the replays were inconclusive but Mantera’s
hands were dangerously close to Louw’s eyes, regardless. He’s since been cited (but cleared) since the
end of the game, but Walsh couldn’t see any foul play at the time, so Steyn had
to make do with a 3-pointer for a separate offence to make it a one point game. Soon it was back though to a standard affair
of slow ball and strong defence with neither side able to break the other down –
the only sparks came from when tempers occasionally boiled over and from when Senatore
allegedly got a bit peckish and had a nibble of Etzebeth’s arm. I find this odd as there are far meatier arms
available to chew on in the Springbok pack, but the incident has earned Senatore
a 9 week ban following a citing even if he did escape punishment on the pitch. Ironically, it was the hosts who had the next
penalty following a powerful scrum (in itself a miraculous improvement from the
previous week) but the attempted kick from beyond half way fell agonisingly
wide.
The tension and tempers was stepping up to new levels, so it
made sense that, with 8 minutes left, Mr Cool himself, Morne Steyn, would step
up to slot a penalty following a collapsed maul, with Marcos Ayerza the guilty
party. South Africa were ahead for the
first time in the game and they never looked like relinquishing that lead as
they pressurised the hosts to the end – despite opting for a lineout instead of
a banker of a 3 points, for some reason.
The final whistle went, and another tight affair in Mendoza was brought
to a close., with the scoreline settled at 17-19 in the visitors' favour.
South Africa may have had the win but this time the Pumas
stood up to them and nearly came away with a victory they would probably have
deserved. It just goes to show – stand up
to the bully and you never know what might happen.