
Australia stun South Africa with incredible comeback in Rugby Championship opener
South Africa raced into a commanding lead through tries by winger Kurt-Lee Arendse, centre Andre Esterhuizen and number eight Siya Kolisi, but their Achilles heel has been the breakdown and it was there that Australia began to take control.
The Springboks led 22-5 at half-time but Australia came alive in the second period and were excellent in soaking up pressure and hitting the world champions with fast breaks as they won on South African soil for the first time in 14 years.
Winger Dylan Pietsch, centre Joseph Suaalii, winger Max Jorgensen and Tom Wright also crossed for the visitors in one of Australia's greatest test wins.
"This (victory) is right up there, it has been 60-odd years since the Wallabies have had success in Joburg. We worked hard and had confidence in ourselves," Australia prop James Slipper said.
"We had a slow start, but credit to the boys, they stuck in there. It was a good squad effort tonight and one we can be proud of. It is a special moment for the group."
South Africa did not score a point after the 18th minute in a performance that will provide much soul-searching as they could not handle Australia's accuracy in the tight and broken play.
"We let ourselves down," Springboks captain Kolisi said. "Things we worked on, discipline, the breakdown ... they won the breakdown battle. We have to take it on the chin, but it is unacceptable the way we performed.
"We would get into their 22 and they would steal the ball (at the breakdown). Credit to Australia, they kept fighting and never gave up. They deserved it."
Australia looked all at sea at the start, but thanks to several outstanding individual displays they clawed back to secure a comprehensive victory.
When Arendse, Esterhuizen with his first Springbok try, and Kolisi crossed, it was early one-way traffic but by the half-hour mark the momentum had swung Australia's way.
They scored first in the second half to close the gap to 10 points when Wilson burst into a gap in the Springbok defence and flyhalf James O'Connor added the conversion on his return to test rugby after three years.
Australia then took control against the rattled home side, whose increasingly desperate attacks were countered with further tries by the visitors.
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