Springboks brought crashing down to earth by Wallabies in Rugby Championship opener
What is astounding is that the Springboks were breathtaking in their brilliance in the opening quarter. It seemed the Australians had no chance of adding to their 1963 win at Ellis Park, their sole victory in Johannesburg in 12 attempts.
The Boks had led 22-0 before the 20th minute, only to concede 38 points without reply in the worst 60 minutes for the Springboks in the Rassie Erasmus era, dating back to 2018.
Who would have thought that the Ellis Park faithful would be leaving in droves five minutes before the final whistle, after Tom Wright's sixth try for his team confirmed one of the greatest capitulations in modern rugby history?
Punch-drunk or battle-hardened? That was the question Springbok coach Rassie Erasmus posed early in the week in his assessment of the Wallabies, and he got his answer on the scoreboard as the plucky Aussies put the world champions in their place to the tune of 38-22.
The battle of the breakdown had been the talk of the week, and it was the Springboks who ruled the early exchanges. A penalty won in the seventh minute was booted over by Manie Libbok.The 55,000-strong crowd sighed in relief — Manie had brought his radar to work.
The Boks were in an irrepressible mood, and in the 12th minute they scored a cracker — another all-encompassing move that culminated in André Esterhuizen taking an inside pass from Edwill van der Merwe to motor home.
The third Bok try was majestic. Wave after wave of spotless play pushed the Boks from the halfway line into the Aussie 22, where Eben Etzebeth darted toward the line and, when brought down, his close mate and fellow veteran, Siya Kolisi, picked up the ball and shot over.
It was 22-0 before the 20th minute, and the Wallabies had barely touched the ball. They were being soundly beaten — but they were unbowed.
On the half-hour mark, left wing Dylan Pietsch was put away for a try in the corner to make the score 22-5. That would be the half-time score — and it marked the turning of the tide, as the green and gold gave way to the gold and green.
We know from the British and Irish Lions series that the Wallabies have that famous Aussie grit, and we saw it in spades when No. 8 Harry Wilson exploded through the Springboks' defence to score two minutes into the second half. James O'Connor's conversion made it 22-12.
And the cat was among the pigeons when Aussie rugby league convert Joseph-Aukuso Suaalii scampered home from a counter-attack to narrow the score to 22-19.
The Wallabies took the lead with 15 minutes to go when a fine break by fullback Tom Wright paved the way for Wilson to score his second. O'Connor's conversion put the visitors in front.
The Ellis Park crowd could not believe what they were seeing, and they were silenced when left wing Max Jorgensen went around Arendse to score. The conversion made it 33-22, advantage to the Wallabies — virtually unassailable.
It became a Mount Everest total when fullback Wright scored again.
Scorers
South Africa — Tries: Kurt-Lee Arendse, Andre Esterhuizen, Siya Kolisi. Conversions: Manie Libbok (2). Penalty: Libbok.
Australia — Tries: Dylan Pietsch, Harry Wilson (2), Joseph-Aukuso Suaaali, Max Jorgensen, Tom Wright. Conversions: James O'Connor (4).

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


The South African
2 hours ago
- The South African
Rude awakening must spark Springbok response
It was supposed to be a Springbok statement, a powerful start to their Rugby Championship title defence at the venue where they traditionally dominate. Instead, it turned into a sobering reminder: reputations don't win Test matches. The Wallabies didn't just survive the altitude and the crowd; they thrived in it. They scored six tries to three, ran in 532 metres to South Africa's 580, and made 26 defenders miss. Australia didn't just take their chances, they made their own. Statistically, the Springboks edged some categories. They carried the ball more (139 carries to 97), gained more metres, and even broke the line more often with 14 clean breaks to Australia's 10. But the key numbers don't lie. South Africa conceded six turnovers, more than Australia's three, and managed just five offloads compared to the Wallabies' 14. That tells the real story: Australia kept the ball alive, moved it quicker, and adapted better. Even more telling, the Boks had 77 more passes than the visitors but couldn't translate that into scoreboard pressure. The Wallabies' 38 points came from variety, ruthlessness and unpredictability, everything the Springboks lacked. South Africa hadn't lost to Australia at home since 2011. They hadn't lost to anyone at Ellis Park in years. But the Wallabies, ranked sixth in the world and desperate to shake their underachiever tag, didn't flinch. They came to spoil the party and did just that. While the Springboks tried to wear them down, the Wallabies were direct, clinical, and fearless. Every time South Africa threatened a comeback, the Aussies hit back with sharp, simple rugby. Rassie Erasmus' men usually dominate through the forwards. But on Saturday, they couldn't. The rolling maul barely functioned. The scrum was neutralised. Eben Etzebeth was energetic, but he couldn't carry workload of the entire pack on his shoulders. In the backline, there was pace but no punch. Despite all the carries, the likes of Kurt-Lee Arendse and Edwill van der Merwe rarely found real space. The connection between nine and ten felt disjointed. Too often, the Boks passed sideways and waited for impact; it never came. This wasn't a lucky win. It was a blueprint. The Wallabies brought controlled chaos and executed it perfectly. From quick tap penalties to skipping wide channels, they stretched South Africa in ways few teams do. Yes, it's only round one. But in the Rugby Championship, every result matters. With the All Blacks lying in wait, the pressure rises immediately. Erasmus and his staff won't panic, but they will be concerned. The numbers show effort, not execution. The game showed a team slightly off the pace, outsmarted and outscored. If the Springboks want back-to-back Rugby Championship titles for the first time ever, this loss must be the alarm bell they answer loudly next weekend. 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.


The South African
2 hours ago
- The South African
UPDATED Top 10 most-capped Test players list after Eben Etzebeth joins exclusive club
Saturday's opening Rugby Championship match between the Springboks and Wallabies at Ellis Park in Johannesburg marked a significant occasion for veteran lock Eben Etzebeth who extended his record as the most capped Springbok of all time to 134 matches. That feat also saw him break out of a tie with former Ireland scrumhalf Conor Murray in joint-11th place in the global pecking order to joint 10th position alongside Welsh prop Gethin Jenkins. Only two players ahead of Etzebeth in the list – James Slipper and Beauden Barrett – are still playing. Etzebeth should get the chance to claim 10th place on his own when the Springboks take on Australia for a second time this coming weekend in Cape Town. At still only 33 years of age, there is plenty of time for Etzebeth to further climb the list before he hangs up his studs. Rank Caps Player Team 1 170 Alun Wyn Jones Wales (158), British and Irish Lions (12) 2 153 Sam Whitelock New Zealand 3 148 Richie McCaw New Zealand 4 147 James Slipper Australia 5 142 Sergio Parisse Italy 6 141 Brian O'Driscoll Ireland (133), British and Irish Lions (8) 7 139 George Gregan Australia T8 137 Cian Healy Ireland T8 137 Beauden Barrett New Zealand T10 134 Gethin Jenkins Wales (129), British and Irish Lions (5) T10 134 Eben Etzebeth South Africa Full names: Eben Etzebeth Date of birth: 29 October 1991 Place of birth: Cape Town School: Tygerberg Springbok #833 Physical: 2.03m, 117kg Current age: 33 Test summary: Tests: 134 Tries: 7 First Test: 9 June 2012 – Lock against England at Kings Park, Durban Last Test: 16 August 2025 – Lock against Australia at Ellis Park, Johannesburg TBA TBA Date: Saturday, 23 August Venue: Cape Town Stadium, Cape Town Kick-off: 17:10 Referee: James Doleman (New Zealand) Assistant referees: Ben O'Keeffe (New Zealand), Gianluca Gnecchi (Italy) TMO: Richard Kelly (Australia) 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.


The Citizen
2 hours ago
- The Citizen
OPINION: Boks were not awful … shock results are part of the beauty of sport
The Boks suffered a surprising defeat but there have been far worse performances over the years. Relax, people. Yes, the Springboks gave up a 22-0 lead inside 20 minutes to lose 38-22, letting in six unanswered tries to go down to the Wallabies, but the performance by the world champions was far from awful, as suggested by coach Rassie Erasmus. It was also not embarrassing. The Boks weren't horrible. Yes, they made a few errors but they weren't outplayed, as they so often were during the 2016/17 season before Erasmus and Co took charge. The end result is far more bewildering and quite astonishing, but there have been far worse Bok performances over the years. The reaction to the defeat has been something to behold. All of a sudden a slew of players are past their sell-by date, this one is the worst who's worn a Bok jersey, and that one doesn't belong close to the Bok team. Really? Come on. Does one bad period in one match make this Bok squad, who lost only twice last year and have won two World Cups, terrible? No way. Credit to the winners Give some credit to the Australians. They were down and out after being 22-0 down and grabbed every chance that came their way to fight their way back into the match. Well done to them. It's sport, people. That's the beauty of it. You never know what is going to happen in a match and on a day. I can't help but agree with Erasmus that 'tactically we totally overplayed every time we thought something was on', which is exactly what the Boks did. At 22-0 up, one more try might have broken the Australians' spirit, so dominant were the Boks in the opening quarter, even up to half-time. Those are the fine margins. And as Wallabies boss Joe Schmidt makes the point, his side got a 'little lucky' and 'sometimes there is a lapse in effort and concentration' by one team when they go up so quickly. It's been fairly plain-sailing by Erasmus and his Boks over the last few years, and things have gone their way for the most part. But sport is the great leveller and there was going to be a 'shock' Bok defeat somewhere. Now we wait and see what the response will be.