logo
Duhan van der Merwe hits back at ‘SpringJock' jibes: ‘I know how hard I've worked to get here'

Duhan van der Merwe hits back at ‘SpringJock' jibes: ‘I know how hard I've worked to get here'

The Guardian7 hours ago

Duhan van der Merwe does not want to shake hands. It is not that the hulking Scotland winger is being rude – he is polite to a fault – but after a gruelling gym session the British & Irish Lion has blisters as big as golf balls. A fist bump – a touch daunting given the size of his biceps – must suffice.
Van der Merwe's war wounds are the first indication that public perception about him can be misleading and there are many to follow in the ensuing half-hour. From an impassioned response to accusations he is a 'SpringJock', to discussing why he runs roughshod over England once a year, Van der Merwe is illuminating company.
He is 6ft 4in and looks carved from Rustenburg granite. There is something cartoonish about the way he thunders past – or through – defenders and with gleaming blond hair he can list Johnny Bravo and Action Man as doppelgangers. Yet 'show pony' and 'flat-track bully' are brushes he can be tarred with. 'I probably make my life a little bit more difficult by diving into the corners when I don't have to,' he says with a chuckle. 'Sometimes it's just getting that nice photo, that's why I dive.'
He speaks with an unmistakable Afrikaans accent – arriving in Edinburgh in 2017 he struggled with his English to the extent he would get frustrated at his failure to grasp Scottish humour – so it makes sense to cut to the chase. He is often held up as a 'project player', a junior Springbok who sought his fortune with a country less blessed with 17st wingers. In short, his Scottishness has been questioned. No matter, it seems, that five years on from making his debut – qualifying after three years' residency – Van der Merwe is Scotland's record try-scorer.
After being selected for his second Lions tour he was among the players born in the southern hemisphere whose place in the squad was questioned. Given the grief he was exposed to by opposition players and supporters four years ago in South Africa, there must be times when he feels he cannot win.
For those that question his allegiance to Scotland, Van der Merwe points to how he failed a medical when about to sign for Edinburgh, aged 22, in 2017.
He might have been cast aside, left in limbo, without a club and eight months of rehabilitation to manage alone, but Edinburgh, and Richard Cockerill, took a chance on him and he has repaid the faith in spades.
'When I speak about it, I get really emotional because it's a country that has given me so much when I had nothing,' says Van der Merwe, who arrived at Edinburgh after an ill-fated season with Montpellier. 'I had a failed medical and at that time it would have been easy for them to say: 'Look, you've failed your medical – off you go.' But they looked after me.
'I went over as a young boy and people don't understand how hard it is, leaving your family behind, leaving everything behind, going to a country where you don't know how things work.
'Initially, my English wasn't good at all. It was tough. People don't understand how hard that transition is. It's not easy, no one has guaranteed me: 'Oh, Duhan, if you move over at the age of 22 you'll be Scotland's top try-scorer, you'll have played 49 games for Scotland, you'll go on a second Lions tour.' People don't see the amount of hard work and sacrifice you put in because I wouldn't be sitting here without it.'
Van der Merwe, now 30, had a mixed experience on tour four years ago. He was, understandably enough, appointed tour guide before being sacked within a week by his teammates because there was only so much of his native South Africa he could showcase when cooped in a Covid bubble. While stadiums were empty, it did not stop South African supporters having their say on social media.
'I always knew they were going to get stuck into me,' he says. 'There were a lot of personal messages on social media towards me. I just dust it off because I know how hard I've worked to get to where I am. You always have people on social media who are going to bring you down and slate you, but I've got to a point in my career where it doesn't faze me at all.'
Whereas Van der Merwe had appeared 10 times for Scotland when selected for the Lions four years ago, he is now a mainstay of Gregor Townsend's side, arguably their most potent weapon. An ankle injury in March has restricted him to 11 minutes of action since the Six Nations, however. He makes his comeback in the Lions' warm-up match against Argentina in Dublin on Friday, but it was an anxious wait to discover if he would make the squad, not least because it was announced alphabetically – forwards, then backs – and Van der Merwe's was the 37th of the 38 names read out.
Sign up to The Breakdown
The latest rugby union news and analysis, plus all the week's action reviewed
after newsletter promotion
'It was a very stressful period for me. I guess you take yourself back: 'Have I done enough over the four-year cycle? Have I done enough over the Six Nations?' And then you start doubting yourself a wee bit. It was really tough because I felt like I couldn't do anything about it.
'I was in shock for a full 24 hours because I just couldn't believe it because of the ankle. It really gives me a lot of confidence.'
Van der Merwe started all three Tests against the Springboks in 2021 and against the Pumas has the chance to lay down an early marker with his closest rival, James Lowe, arriving later to the squad. 'I believe if I can get as many touches as possible, somehow I can get a line break or get some gainline for the team or score some tries,' he says.
'I've worked hard at other parts of my game – if you look at the Six Nations I probably didn't score as much but I probably assisted a bit more. Somehow I always have my best game of the season against England. The boys at the club have told me: 'Duey, just imagine you're seeing white jerseys in front of you.''
After a brief stint with Worcester – hastily returning to Edinburgh when the Warriors went bust – Van der Merwe feels Scotland is his long-term home. He has even gone into business with his Edinburgh, Scotland and Lions teammate Pierre Schoeman – also born in South Africa – setting up a whisky company. They sell a 12-year-old single malt from Speyside called Hirundine, aptly named after the bird that migrates between Africa and the UK.
'Coming back to my story of giving back to Scotland and what better way for us to say thank you and give back than starting our own whisky company? I don't agree with some of the things people say because it's not easy – the biggest thing for me is buying into the culture and that's something I've done really well.
'I see Scottish people as some of my best mates, Pierre and I have started our own business, my wife has got her own company in Scotland as well. I'm still in Edinburgh and I'm loving life.'

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Meet the UFC's next generation: Fighter who cheated death and spat out the bullet, a 'Welsh Gangster', the upstart fleeing a military crackdown and Africa's next megastar
Meet the UFC's next generation: Fighter who cheated death and spat out the bullet, a 'Welsh Gangster', the upstart fleeing a military crackdown and Africa's next megastar

Daily Mail​

time2 hours ago

  • Daily Mail​

Meet the UFC's next generation: Fighter who cheated death and spat out the bullet, a 'Welsh Gangster', the upstart fleeing a military crackdown and Africa's next megastar

A generation of superstars have retired, been broken into obscurity or drifted away from the UFC over the last couple of years. Yes, there are still a handful of big names for Dana White and Co to hang their hat - and pay-per-view cards - on but the world-leading MMA promotion is ripe for a new crop of hotshots to take over.

Lions legend with calves the size of footballs who sold jeans to KGB
Lions legend with calves the size of footballs who sold jeans to KGB

Times

time3 hours ago

  • Times

Lions legend with calves the size of footballs who sold jeans to KGB

There are two spaces, about 450 miles apart, where Maurice Colclough persists. The first is at Stade Chanzy, where Angoulême reveres her former England lock; a small espace in his name where supporters can congregate on match day. The second is at 32 Broad Street in Blaenavon, at Welsh General Store. He never stepped foot in the latter, yet his memory is here. Colclough was, on paper, a great rugby man: a grand-slam champion with England, and a starter in eight consecutive British & Irish Lions Tests in 1980 and 1983. Yet his legacy is almost rugby adjacent, different from the fruits of Willie John McBride, Martin Johnson or Bill Beaumont (Colclough called Billy, his second-row partner, 'head boy'). Mountainous in stature and will, yet his family laugh at how ungainly he could be. Rugby was not his raison d'être, merely the vehicle by which he lived and which gives cause to remember him. Early one Friday, Colclough's wife, Annie, sits at a table at the back of Welsh General Store with her four daughters: Fen, from her first marriage; Morgane; and the twins, Brogane and Freya. It is a riotous morning of storytelling, punctuated by light dabbing of eye, for a husband and father who died in 2006, aged 52. Through chemotherapy and disgusting broccoli smoothies, he survived with a brain tumour for almost four years when six months was expected. The invincible man who could drop a breeze block on his foot and hardly wince, carrying on building a wall, was cut down. Colclough was outsize, a bon viveur. A second row whose calves were described as footballs, so big they would rub together and wear holes in his socks, and who sat on a bench at Freya's parents' evening and broke it. Even if he were on the delicate seating at the back of the shop now, he would not have been telling the stories. Colclough left that to others — and everyone has a yarn about Maurice Colclough. It inspires a question: is the man also the myth?His wanderlust took him to France, where he was Marquis de Colclough, running cruises as Holiday Charente and keeping a bar in Soyaux called Liverpool. Angoumoisins such as Fabrice Landreau, the France hooker who spent time at Bristol and Neath, worshipped Colclough. He remains a prince in those parts. He also played for Swansea and conducted business in South Africa, returning his family to Wales after a car-jacking. 'He directed the hijackers,' Brogane says. 'He was actually really funny. 'Would you like my watch?' ' 'I arrived in this country with a rucksack over my shoulder and £25 in my pocket,' Colclough said in 1982, a rare example of him as narrator. Story time. The legend of Colclough's arrival is that he was kicked off a train, having paid the wrong fare, and hitchhiked with a man who happened to be the coach of Angoulême. Brogane retells this. 'Oh, I didn't know that,' Annie says. This is how two hours in Blaenavon unfold: a torrent of five sources providing collective memories, or individual offerings and details pieced together. Here is a flavour of some greatest Colclough hits. He toured the Soviet Union and sold jeans to the KGB. He performed perorations inspired by Churchill, Kipling and Shakespeare as captain. He swam naked across the Liffey in Dublin to waiting policemen. He locked out a team-mate on a window ledge in Canada. He beat Fen's South African rugby friends in arm-wrestling and so they had to do the family's gardening. He frequented a French all-you-can-eat seafood restaurant with such abandon that they had to change policy. A recent Rugby Journal essay recounted some of the tales. 'A couple of things in there we didn't know,' Freya says. Now for the most famous tale, of which variations exist. Colclough, in a post-match function, downed what appeared to be a bottle of aftershave. Colin Smart, the England prop matching his consumption, did so too, but Colclough, a prankster, had switched his liquid. Smart had not. Cue stomach pump. 'He'd gone in before, he'd tipped it out, he'd put white wine in,' Brogane says. 'What Dad said he thought would happen is he'd basically put it in and then spit it out.' At Brogane's wedding last year, every guest had a bottle of aftershave with limoncello in it. 'I actually think the one where he shot the bullet through the roof is better,' Brogane adds. That was on tour when a policeman came to quell rugby rowdiness and Colclough, thinking the safety was on, aimed at the ceiling. Maurice met Annie at Cardiff Arms Park and settled in south Wales. Both were entrepreneurial. He bought a trawler called the Picton Sea Eagle with plans to turn it into a floating restaurant. When in South Africa, he was involved in slot machines. 'I remember taking him to Cyril Ramaphosa's house,' Fen says. 'For business.' A week before this interview, Ramaphosa was at the White House as president of South Africa. In her father's image, Morgane opened Welsh General Store on St David's Day this year. It used to be a bookshop with 10,000 books — she points to the sagging roof — and, seeking a change from London, she bought it in an online auction. Annie ('the veg deliverer'), Fen and Morgane live nearby. Brogane has travelled from London, Freya from Manchester, to recollect. The quintet hammer home the sense of adventure he instilled. 'Excess is best' was his motto, giving one's all but having fun. 'Life was about risk,' Freya says. When Colclough had a boat that needed to sail from Spain to South Africa, via Brazil, he enlisted a 17-year-old Fen. 'That was my choice, but I would never have made it had he not brought me up,' she says. 'I did sail with him across Biscay, so we did sail on the boat together. He bought a boat off a Russian spy, basically, and it still had all the spy stuff on it.' That included a 'spy pen' that exploded. The travelling companion fainted, and Colclough carried on sailing solo with a damaged finger. Theirs was an active childhood, with rugby as part of it. Twenty years ago the family featured in The Times as Morgane and the twins played sevens for Llandovery College (Maurice was in Vienna, having been told the wrong week). At a memorial match in France after his death, Morgane was asked to begin proceedings. 'It says she did a drop-kick in that article,' Freya says. 'She did not do a drop-kick.' Morgane adds: 'They had to restart the match. It went about two metres.' For Colclough, it was all a game, a fraction of life. The sisters chortle at his love of sports day, once sending a camera crew when he was unavailable, and training the twins for the three-legged race so well that they were almost banned. 'The head teacher was like, 'Sorry girls, you can't compete together in the three-legged race, it's not fair,' ' Brogane says. 'Dad has never gone to see a head teacher before. Ever. He turned up in the school. He must have been in the office for 30 seconds. He came out, he's like, 'It's fine.' ' No one gets in the way of a Colclough and sports day. Such activities were far more important to Colclough than publicity. 'Head boy' Billy was captain on A Question of Sport and until recently chairman of World Rugby. Colclough was a player first and last, and the family agree that he would have known no trivia. 'He didn't have any real interest in celebrity,' Brogane says. Fen adds: 'Other people are more interested in rugby than he is. He would never watch it.' Freya tells another story: 'We went camping and fishing on his motorbike and I was on the back and we turned up at this camping site, just the two of us. We were just signing in and the man that was signing us in was like, 'Oh, Maurice Colclough, there used to be a famous rugby player called Maurice Colclough.' Dad said nothing and I was like, 'That's him!' ' At the start of this interview, Annie had laughed and said: 'Sorry, can I just ask? What is the reason for this?' It was to hear memories not from the Lion's mouth, but from the cubs. 'It's sad, obviously, to think that he died at 52, but I swear to God, that man lived 12 times more in those 52 years than so many other people do,' Brogane says. Now Annie: 'I'm just trying to think what he would have thought. He did philosophy, and he could be quite philosophical. Trying to imagine him, what he'd be doing now, and that's quite painful to think about. But then I don't know if he would actually enjoy being older.' Unanimously, they believe the seriousness of professional rugby would have been anathema to him. Those who recall him are still excited when they find out they are in the company of one of Maurice Colclough's daughters. 'One of our regulars found out and he's just brought in a Lions book today that he had,' Morgane says. 'He put notes where Dad's name was.' Rugby, again, as the gateway to the man. His approach to life continues fivefold through the women on a street in Blaenavon. 'I think about it more and more now — there is so much of Dad in all of us,' Brogane says. 'I feel like I've got that tin-of-beans-on-someone's-head energy.' Oh yes, the beans on the head. Well, that's a story for another time.

Donald Trump sends message to wrestling legend Brock Lesnar's daughter after major sporting success
Donald Trump sends message to wrestling legend Brock Lesnar's daughter after major sporting success

Daily Mail​

time3 hours ago

  • Daily Mail​

Donald Trump sends message to wrestling legend Brock Lesnar's daughter after major sporting success

Donald Trump has paid a glowing tribute to the daughter of wrestling icon Brock Lesnar after she won a major college athletics title. Mya Lesnar won the NCAA shot put title with a first-round toss of 19.01 meters earlier this month to become the first Rams athlete to win an outdoor event title since Loree Smith did so in 2005. Just the sixth Colorado State athlete to win outdoor gold, the younger Lesnar previously won the NCAA indoor shot put title in 2024. What's more, the 23-year-old is the only competitor in program history to win both indoor and outdoor titles. She followed in the footsteps of her father, who was actually an NCAA title winner as a heavyweight wrestler at Minnesota. Now Maya has received some special praise from the president, who took to Truth Social on Thursday night to send his congratulations. Mya Lesnar of the Colorado State Rams competes in the shot put during the Division I Men's and Women's Track and Field Championship held at Hayward Field Trump wrote: 'Congratulations to Mya Lesnar on the WIN — Great Genetics!' 'Heck yeah it was. It was pretty awesome,' Lesnar told the school's athletics website, after her victory. 'Obviously throws like that don't happen often, and to do it on my first one was pretty cool. I just went calm, hit my cues. [Rams coach Brian] Bedard and I have tons of trust, and that's exactly what we did. 'I think it had more of an effect for me. It meant more for me to do it on the first one, to start off the competition strong. A lot of the other ladies responded. It was awesome.' While her 19.01m effort remained the best throw of the day, Mya would nearly top it with an 18.8m effort for the top two results of the day. Remarkably, Rams coach Brian Bedard thinks Mya is actually capable of much more. 'I still think she missed the big one today because in training we've been seeing throws in the 19.30-meter range, so she didn't quite put it together,' Bedard said. 'She probably had a B-plus day for her, but when a training is going so well to have a big margin that she can maybe not hit her best and win it is awesome. 'It was a great start for her. We've been working on the mental game and trying to have some joy when she competes and really simplify some technical cues and managing excitement levels and all that, and I thought she did that today. When she came up and talked to me between throws, she had a really good awareness of what she was doing in the throw and what she was feeling. I just loved her mindset today. It was mature.' To put Mya's top throw into perspective, China's Lijiao Gong won the shot put at the Tokyo Games in 2023 with a toss of 20.58. Mya's toss Thursday would have been sixth in Tokyo To put Mya's top throw into perspective, China's Lijiao Gong won the women's shot put at the Tokyo Games in 2023 with a toss of 20.58. Mya's toss would have been good enough for sixth place in that tournament. Mya has gone viral in recent years both for her sensational athletic ability and her striking resemblance to famous father Brock. Back in 2023 the track and field athlete grabbed headlines after breaking the shot put record at Colorado State with a superb 18.50 attempt, while she also claimed three straight Mountain West Conference titles. Brock, who has not featured in WWE since losing to Cody Rhodes at SummerSlam in 2023, is one of the wrestling's most celebrated stars and a highly-successful combat-sport athlete.

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