
Springbok Concern? Plumtree provides Etzebeth injury update
Heading into the match Sharks coach John Plumtree provided an injury update on the two-time World Winner: that he would be available if they advanced to the final, which will be music to ears of Springboks coach Rassie Erasmus.
It's been a tumultuous time for South Africa's most capped player, who was sidelined for several months after picking up a concussing against Exeter Chiefs last December. A relapse in symptoms prolonged his recovery.
'He got a head knock at training, but he's feeling a lot better already. We decided that it's best not to risk him this week, so we made a pretty early call,' Plumtree said last friday.
'He's feeling a lot better by the way, he's been communicating with me and the team, and I'm not overly concerned about it. I'm pretty sure that if we go through, he'll be available next week.'
'Eben's probably the best lock in the world so it's a big loss, but the thing is it's a team game. One person doesn't make this team and we've won games without him this year,' Plumtree added.
'Jason is a big loss for us too. He played a pivotal role for us, with Eben being out for so much. He's played at four, and he's played at five. It's really disappointing not to see him in the Springbok squad at the moment as well. I think he deserves to be there.'
'Obviously Corne is a different player to Emile, in so many ways. Corne's more abrasive, and Emile's the ball winner, and a smart player and a good developer in his leadership as well. We've got full backing of the boys, and the boys are really pleased they've got this opportunity.'
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

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


The Citizen
5 minutes ago
- The Citizen
East London wreaks havoc with National Extreme Festival
Early morning wet weather resulted in changeable conditions that saw a series of accidents involving multiple red flags in the various categories. Julian van der Watt took his works Volkswagen Motorsport Golf GTI to victory in Saturday's opening South African Touring Car race. Photograph: Brandsponential. Adverse weather conditions played havoc with round five of the National Extreme Festival Presented By Coca-Cola at the East London Grand Prix circuit on Saturday. Programme rescheduled Rain overnight and into the early morning left the circuit sodden, with little rivers running over some of the fastest parts. Following no less than two massive accidents in early morning qualifying that requires tyre barriers to be rebuilt, racing only commenced in the early afternoon, forcing the organisers to cut the programme drastically. ALSO READ: National Extreme Festival gives the Zwartkops faithful their wish At the centre of this was the complete cancellation of both SunBet Kawasaki ZX10 Masters races, a reduction in lap count to eight for all the other classes, and a single 'long' race over 12 laps for the Toyota GR Cup. Eventually, with the weather cleared and the track repaired, the event got underway, producing some excellent racing. Touring Cars Premier billing went to the South African Touring Car category, with the day's opening race providing a one-two finish for the works Volkswagen Motorsport Golf GTI entries of Julian van der Watt and Jagger Robertson. Nathi Msimanga took the final podium place in a rather battered Toyota Gazoo Racing Corolla after a crash in practice, leading home Andrew Schofield (Safair BMW 128it), Michael van Rooyen (Toyota Gazoo Racing Corolla) and Saood Variawa (Toyota Gazoo Racing Corolla). Keegan Campos (Campos Transport BMW 128it) fought with the leaders until the pit straight of the final lap, where his car cut out. Campos heroically pushed it the last 200 metres to the flag, to clinch seventh place championship points. Starting from an inverted grid, van Rooyen led race two all the way, though behind, a mid-race clash between Msimanga and Robertson in the tight complex section prevented another Volkswagen 1-2 finish. Van der Watt was, therefore, second ahead of Schofield, Msimanga, Variawa and a less than pleased Robertson. Not taking the grid was the privateer Toyota Corolla of Siyabonga Mankonkwana after a monstrous accident in the complex in race one that completely destroyed the car, without any harm to the driver. SupaCup Jonathan Mogotsi (Volkswagen Genuine Parts SupaPolo) won the opening SupaCup category from Tate Bishop (ANGRI Volkswagen SupaPolo), Dylan Pragji (Styling Auto Volkswagen SupaPolo), Jason Loosemore (Volkswagen Genuine Parts SupaPolo) and Dawie van der Merwe (Toyota Gazoo Racing SupaStarlet). Jonathan Mogotsi (Volkswagen Genuine Parts SupaPolo) won both SupaCup races. Photograph: Brandsponential. Mogotsi took race two as well, leading home Bishop, Loosemore, Pragji and Nicolaos Vostanis (Campos Transport SupaPolo). Polo Cup Bradley Liebenberg returned to the Astron Energy Polo Cup arena in an unsponsored Polo, and won race one by a narrow margin from Mohammed Karodia (Fast 5). Bradley Liebenberg returned to the Astron Energy Polo Cup arena on Saturday, and won the race. Brandsponential. They were chased to the flag by Judd Bertholdt (Rookie Cup), Rory Atkinson (Industry Petroleum) and lady racer Tyler Robinson (AF Fans). Wayne Masters (Performance Masters) took the Masters category from John Kruger (Harbot Lubricants), Derek Smalberger (SABERTEK) and Mike Barbaglia (Pabar Polo). GR Cup The one and only GR Cup race, in the GR86 class, went to Jason Coetzee ahead of Kent Swartz and Kanya Ngwenya. Jason Coetzee (Toyota GR86) won the day's only Toyota Gazoo Racing Cup round overall. Photograph: Brandsponential. Runaway championship leader Nabil Abdool (SuperSport) took the GR Yaris media section win from Yaris Cup victory from Phuti Mpayne (TimesLive) and Kyle Kock (CAR Magazine). GR driving instructor Devon Scott won the GR Corolla leg from GR dealers Mario da Sousa and Werner Venter. MSA4 The opening heat for the Investchem MSA4 single-seaters saw numerous spins and off-track excursions, as the drivers of the new cars got to grips with the conditions. KC Ensor-Smith (Investchem MSA4) won both the races for Investchem MSA4 single-seaters. Photograph: Brandsponential. Eventually, the victory went to KC Ensor-Smith (Investchem), leading home Mikel Bezuidenhout, Shrien Naidoo and Karabo Malemela. Ensor-Smith won race two as well, chased to the flag by Naidoo, Bezuidenhout and Malemela. Ending on a low The race day ended early when the second Astron Energy Polo Cup race was red-flagged after two laps. First Rory Atkinson lost his car through the ultra fast Potters Pass sweep and plowed into the tyre barrier. He was unhurt, but the Polo became a lot shorter. On the next lap, Tyler Robinson lost control of her car in the main straight after putting a wheel off into the muddy veld and rolled it at high speed. The young lady crawled from the wreck having escaped injury, but the tyre barrier was knocked down and the organisers were forced to end the meeting before daylight ran out. Staying at the coast The next round of the National Extreme Festival Presented By Coca-Cola will be at the Western Cape Killarney circuit on Saturday, September 13. ALSO READ: National Extreme Festival gives it its all at Aldo Scribante


The South African
35 minutes ago
- The South African
Hero's welcome? Here's when world champion Junior Springboks return home
South Africa's victorious Junior Springboks will return home on Monday after their historic triumph in the World Rugby U20 Championship, where they defeated New Zealand 23-15 in the final to claim their first title since 2012. The team is scheduled to touch down at OR Tambo International Airport in Johannesburg at 10:35 on Turkish Airlines flight TK 042 on Monday morning. And they are expected to be met with a hero's welcome. SA Rugby President Mark Alexander will join the players and coaches for a media conference at 11:15 in the airport's media room, celebrating the young team's undefeated campaign. Coach Kevin Foote and several Junior Springboks players, including captain Riley Norton, are also scheduled for a brief stand-up media session at Cape Town International Airport following their arrival in the Mother City at 15:45. The Junior Springboks' win in Rovigo, Italy, marks South Africa's third world title across rugby's major competitions, joining the senior Springboks and the Blitzboks as reigning global champions. Their gritty, physical style and strong team unity earned them seven straight wins in the tournament, including two victories over New Zealand. Speaking after his team's title triumph, Norton said the squad was still absorbing the scale of their achievement. 'It's overwhelming. We knew what we were capable of, but to bring the trophy back home means the world to us.' Coach Foote added: 'These boys showed South African heart. It's not just a win for the team, it's a win for the future of our rugby.' Let us know by leaving a comment below, or send a WhatsApp to 060 011 0211. Subscribe to The South African website's newsletters and follow us on WhatsApp, Facebook, X and Bluesky for the latest news.

TimesLIVE
an hour ago
- TimesLIVE
‘We always knew Andile could save one or two': Ellis after Banyana's shoot-out win
Banyana Banyana coach Desiree Ellis said they always knew goalkeeper Andile Dlamini could 'save a penalty or two' if Saturday's Women's Africa Cup of Nations (Wafcon) quarterfinal against Senegal came to a shoot-out and praised her team's resilience in prevailing. With both teams having had their chances — though South Africa shading those but unable to break down a tall, physical Senegal the game went to the dreaded shoot-out at Stade d'Honneur in Oujda. Dlamini pulled off two huge saves that saw Banyana win 4-1 and progress to their semifinal against Nigeria at Stade El Arbi Zaouli in Casablanca on Tuesday (6pm Moroccan and South African time). 'We've been practising penalties and we knew which kickers there were going to be [for Senegal] and that's why we made the changes we did,' Ellis said afterwards. 'We always knew Andile could save one or two — she's done it before. 'By the way, this is our first penalty shoot-out win at Wafcon — we lost in 2006 and in 2018 in the final. 'I said the game was going to be tough, but we prevailed in the shoot-out.' Ellis said Banyana were not overly concerned they lost number one penalty-taker Linda Motlhalo when she limped off injured, replaced by Bongeka Gamede in the 106th minute, just before the shoot-out. 'She couldn't continue but we were confident we had enough kickers on the pitch, but also confident Andile would make a save or two. 'We just needed to do on the pitch what we had practised in training. Because we have so many players who can take penalties. 'Linda would have been the first, Karabo [Dhlamini] them became the first to step up. She was also one of the walking wounded but the courage and resilience this team has shown, I cannot talk enough about that.' Banyana battled to break down the big, hard-working Senegalese, though had the better of the game in the second half and extra time without being able to produce enough chances, or bury those they did, to settle the game before the shoot-out. 'I think we had a few chances, I think we could have made better decisions in the final third,' Ellis said. 'We had two really great opportunities where if someone just rolled the ball across [goal] it could have been tapped in. But they had a really good chance at the end where we didn't pick up and our hearts were in our [throats]. 'We knew their gameplan and I thought we dealt well with their long ball. The minute we put the ball on the ground that's how the opportunity came for the penalty [for a foul on Magaia in extra time, turned down by the match officials and a VAR review], and I've had messages from home that it was a penalty. 'But we prevailed. Our last two phrases in our team meeting were, 'Outplay them and outlast them', and we outlasted them tonight.'