‘I ran as fast as I've ever run': Inside the Wallabies' 1963 Ellis Park victory
'The South Africans were, how can I put it, just so confident that they didn't expect it [a Wallabies win],' Wolfe said. 'Even during the club games or the provincial games, they were always quietly confident and didn't expect us to win anything.
'I remember the crowd at Ellis Park was electric. It was very dry conditions. Apart from the altitude, it was just a perfect day.'
Williams was a renowned sprinter, having missed the 1962 rugby season to train with Australia's Empire Games squad.
Randwick's commitment to running rugby had given him a licence to take risks and use his speed, and when he saw the hard field at Ellis Park, he knew an Australian victory was possible.
'The day we played them in Johannesburg, the ground was sort of yellow in colour, the grass was very thin, and it was a very hard surface, which suited me for running, because I liked the harder ground to run on,' Williams said.
'I also remember when we came onto the ground to play the game, we all lined up and they sang the South African national anthem, but didn't let us sing ours, and that fired us up a bit.'
Williams' fellow winger, Jim Boyce, was similarly stunned by the South African decision not to play the Australian anthem.
'There were big crowds singing, it was just a huge volume of noise singing their anthem, and then there was nothing,' Boyce recalled.
'We were absolutely astounded by that decision not to play our anthem. Now, I can understand why they wouldn't play it, because our anthem at that point in time was God Save the Queen, and that would have created all kinds of problems in South Africa. But we would have been more than happy to hear Waltzing Matilda.
'It sort of rippled along the line that they're not going to play our anthem, and it just galvanised everyone to [perform at] another level.'
The Wallabies were also spurred on at Ellis Park by a brilliant performance from fullback Terry Casey, who kicked a conversion from touch, a penalty goal and a 40-metre drop goal, helped on its way by the thin air.
Williams still remembers scoring his side's lone try that afternoon.
'It all happened so quickly, but it was a perfect try, because it started off with a lineout,' Williams said. 'Jim Boyce threw the ball into the lineout – and we had a terrific lineout forward, Rob Heming, who is no longer with us – he deflected the ball down to Peter Criddle, and Criddle went forward and turned his back on the opposition and passed the ball back to Dick Marks, who took off.
'I knew he [Marks] was going to pass the ball to me – he gave a perfect pass to me, and I just couldn't believe how good it was.
'I ran as fast as I've ever run down that sideline. There were four defenders coming across to get me, but I actually had enough speed to get away from them and get the ball down in the corner.
'It was a sensational time. I can't believe it happened so quickly. It's amazing, to be honest with you.'
At the final whistle, Williams watched the South African team chair Wallabies captain John Thornett off the field on their shoulders in a gesture of sportsmanship. The celebrations lasted long into the night in the Australian team hotel.
'They didn't think they were going to be beaten, but they took it very well,' Williams remembered.
'They were a pretty polished side, and at the time they were one of the best sides going in rugby.
'But they were very, very good about it, and we had a good time in the sheds after the game and back at the hotel. One of our players got up on the desk in the hotel, and we all sang Waltzing Matilda, including the hotel staff.'
Although the Wallabies were defeated in the final Test 22-6 in Port Elizabeth to leave the series locked at 2-2, the team was greeted in Sydney by 20,000 fans, who lined the streets for a ticker tape parade to mark their achievement.
Gordon Bray covered his first Wallabies Test for the ABC in 1976 against France and has written extensively about the 1963 tour in his book The Immortals of Australian Rugby Union. Bray believes the victory in Johannesburg still stands up as one of the Wallabies' greatest, 62 years later.
'It's got to be right at the summit of Wallaby victories to win at altitude,' he said. 'The fact that we haven't won there for 62 years lets you know how hard it was.
Loading
'I mean, the All Blacks really struggled to win there – they couldn't win a series in South Africa until the game went professional – so that's how hard it is.
'That Australian team [of 1963] didn't have the size of the South Africans up front, but they had brilliant players, and the way we played the game, the intelligence of the Australian team, really applies today. I think, that's the Australian way of playing ...
Hashtags

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


Perth Now
44 minutes ago
- Perth Now
Another blow for Kyrgios with US Open injury withdrawal
Nick Kyrgios has suffered another predictable blow in his ailing tennis career, having to pull out of the US Open men's singles with injury. It's the third successive year that the 30-year-old Australian has withdrawn from the New York grand slam and he has now missed the season's final three majors after getting knocked out in the first round at his home Open in Melbourne in January. Kyrgios, the Wimbledon finalist in 2022, went on to reach the quarter-finals at the US Open that year but has struggled ever since then with a catalogue of foot, knee and wrist injuries. While vowing to try to get back to his best, he's managed to win just one singles match while losing four in his comeback 2025 campaign. He didn't play at all last year and had just one match in 2023, and has now missed 11 of the last 12 grand slams. Kyrgios hasn't played any singles match since being beaten by Karen Khachanov at Miami five months ago, with his long-term wrist trouble still a problem while he also reported in July that his knee was still "cooked". He last played - and lost - in a doubles match with veteran Gael Monfils in Washington in July as he sought to rekindle his career, first in the much-hyped mixed doubles competition with Naomi Osaka at Flushing Meadows. But after withdrawing from that, organisers announced, to no great surprise, on Thursday that the maverick seven-time tournament winner would now also not feature in the men's singles, which starts on Sunday. His place will be taken in the draw by a 'lucky loser' from the final round of qualifying.


7NEWS
44 minutes ago
- 7NEWS
Nick Kyrgios withdraws from US Open in latest injury blow
Nick Kyrgios has suffered another predictable blow in his ailing tennis career, having to pull out of the US Open men's singles with injury. It's the third successive year that the 30-year-old Australian has withdrawn from the New York grand slam and he has now missed the season's final three majors after getting knocked out in the first round at his home Open in Melbourne in January. Kyrgios, the Wimbledon finalist in 2022, went on to reach the quarter-finals at the US Open that year but has struggled ever since then with a catalogue of foot, knee and wrist injuries. While vowing to try to get back to his best, he's managed to win just one singles match while losing four in his comeback 2025 campaign. He didn't play at all last year and had just one match in 2023, and has now missed 11 of the last 12 grand slams. Kyrgios hasn't played any singles match since being beaten by Karen Khachanov at Miami five months ago, with his long-term wrist trouble still a problem while he also reported in July that his knee was still 'cooked'. He last played — and lost — in a doubles match with veteran Gael Monfils in Washington in July as he sought to rekindle his career, first in the much-hyped mixed doubles competition with Naomi Osaka at Flushing Meadows. But after withdrawing from that, organisers announced, to no great surprise, on Thursday that the maverick seven-time tournament winner would now also not feature in the men's singles, which starts on Sunday. His place will be taken in the draw by a 'lucky loser' from the final round of qualifying.


Perth Now
4 hours ago
- Perth Now
Teen star gets Wallaroos nod in Rugby World Cup opener
Teenage fullback Caitlyn Halse will make Women's Rugby World Cup history with Wallaroos coach Jo Yapp unveiling the Australian line-up for their opening pool match in England against Samoa. Yapp has included 10 World Cup debutantes for the Salford clash on Saturday (9pm AEST), while Ash Marsters has been named on the bench in her third tournament. NSW Waratahs rising star Halse, who has 11 caps, is set to become the youngest Australian woman to ever play at the global showpiece. Becoming the youngest debutante in either the men's or women's Test teams in 2024, the 18-year-old will eclipse the previous World Cup record set by Millie Boyle in 2017 (19 years, 82 days) when she takes the field. Katalina Amosa will start at hooker while her older brother Brandon Paenga-Amosa is the reserve rake for the Wallabies, who will take on the Springboks in Cape Town a few hours later. The pair are the third sister-brother combination to play Test rugby for Australia. Kaitlan Leaney will become the 20th captain of the Wallaroos, joining back-rower Emily Chancellor in sharing the duties against Samoa. The Wallaroos will be boosted by the return of prop Brianna Hoy, who will come off the bench for her first game since rupturing her ACL during a training session in Ireland last Coffs Harbour product is one of five changes to the side that defeated Wales at North Sydney Oval earlier this month. Experienced pair, prop Asoiva Karpani and centre Cecilia Smith return to the starting line-up, Adiana Talakai is the back-up hooker while veteran outside back Lori Cramer also comes into the 23 as a utility on the bench. Sevens superstar Charlotte Caslick was ruled out of the tournament following ankle surgery, while injured skipper Siokapesi Palu (foot) is with the squad but was unavailable for selection. The Wallaroos have previously met Samoa once in a Test match for an 87-0 victory in 2010. More recently an Australia A side defeated Manusina 50-22 in Canberra. Yapp said preparation had been smooth in their northern England base. "We've had a good week settling into Manchester with everyone making us feel really welcomed and the players have hit the ground running at training," she said in a statement."We know Samoa will be a tough, physical side and we need to match it with them on Saturday."There are no second chances at a World Cup and for us it starts with a good performance in our first match and building from there."It's also fantastic to see Bri Hoy back in the team. We know how hard she has worked to make a return in time for the World Cup and she is deserving of her spot."We're also really pleased to be able to give co-captaincy to Kaitlan Leaney, who is growing as a leader in the team every day."The Women's Rugby World Cup will be the eighth campaign for the Wallaroos, with their best finish coming in 2010 when finishing third. Following Samoa, the Wallaroos take on USA on August 31 and top-ranked tournament hosts England on September 6 to complete their pool matches. WALLAROOS: Caitlyn Halse, Maya Stewart, Georgina Friedrichs, Cecilia Smith, Desiree Miller, Faitala Moleka, Samantha Wood, Tabua Tuinakauvadra, Emily Chancellor (co-capt), Piper Duck, Michaela Leonard, Kaitlan Leaney (co-capt), Asoiva Karpani, Katalina Amosa, Faliki Pohiva. Reserves: Adiana Talakai, Brianna Hoy, Bridie O'Gorman, Ashley Fernandez, Ashley Marsters, Layne Morgan, Tia Hinds, Lori Cramer.