
Canada women win again but face tougher task in downing Springboks in rugby test
South Africa trailed 14-5 before the second-ranked Canadians, frustrated by handling errors and penalties, padded the scoreline with tries by Carissa Norsten (in the 55th minute), stand-in captain Tyson Beukeboom (74th, with South Africa down a player) and Krissy Scurfield (78th).
The win improved Canada's record against South Africa to 6-0-0. The Canadians had scored 50 points or more in every meeting except the inaugural encounter in 2009, which they won 35-17.
Canada captain Sophie de Goede, returning to action after a 13-month injury absence, came off the bench with 20 minutes remaining.
The 26-year-old from Victoria last played in May 2024, in Canada's 22-19 win over World Cup champion New Zealand in the Pacific Four Series finale. De Goede tore her anterior cruciate ligament on June 21, 2024, in a non-contact scrimmage against the U.S. on the last day of a Canada sevens camp in Chula Vista, Calif.
Norsten, the 2024 HSBC SVNS Rookie of the Year, was named player of the match in her 15s debut starting on the wing.
Brittany Kassil and Gillian Boag also scored tries for Canada, which led 14-0 after a scrappy first half played in the early-afternoon sunshine at Nelson Mandela Stadium. Julia Schell and Maddy Grant each kicked two conversions.
Ayanda Malinga scored the lone South African try.
For the second week in a row, the women took the field ahead of the men's match between the top-ranked Springboks and No. 10 Italy. The South African men won 42-24 in Pretoria.
The Canada victory may have come at a cost. Prop Rori Wood was taken off the field on a cart in the 30th minute after suffering an apparent leg injury. That meant a first cap for Taylor McKnight off the bench.
Lock Laetitia Royer, one of three Canadians named to World Rugby's Women's 15s Dream Team in 2024, had to come off in the 32nd minute, favouring her shoulder.
Canada moved the ball quickly at the breakdown from the get-go, often creating overlaps in the backline as a result. But a string of penalties slowed the game as the half progressed and Canada lost two players to the sin-bin before the break.
Kassil opened the scoring for Canada in the fifth minute, crashing over from close-range for her first international try in her 46th appearance.
A spate of Canadian penalties drew a warning just 16 minutes in from Zimbabwean referee Precious Pazani. And flanker Pam Buisa was sin-binned two minutes later for head contact in tackling Babalwa Latsha.
Prop Olivia DeMarchant followed her in the 24th minute as Canada, backed up to its try-line after several infractions, was dinged for its seventh penalty of the half.
With Canada still a player down, Boag dove over in the 32nd minute on a quick-tap penalty for a converted try and 14-0 lead.
The two teams combined for 14 penalties, with eight against Canada, in the first 40 minutes.
Helped by several penalties, South Africa scored in the 45th minute with Malinga touching down in the corner to cut the lead to 14-5. Springboks winger Jakkie Cilliers was sin-binned in the 74rd minute for a deliberate knockdown of a pass.
Only Boag, Royer, Schell and No. 8 Gabrielle Senft retained their place in the Canadian starting 15, as coach Kevin Rouet looked to give everyone in the tour roster a run out.
South Africa made two personnel and two positional changes to last week's team.
With stand-in skipper Alex Tessier not part of the matchday squad, Beukeboom led Canada out for her record 76th cap.
Canada improved to 14-5-1 since finishing fourth at the last World Cup. Four of the losses were to top-ranked England, with the other to No. 3 New Zealand. Canada and New Zealand played to a 27-27 tie in May in Pacific Four Series play.
The Canadian women have just two games left before the World Cup kicks off Aug. 22 in England. Canada plays the ninth-ranked U.S., on Aug. 1 in Ottawa before facing No. 5 Ireland on Aug. 9 in Dublin. The Canadians open World Cup play against No. 15 Fiji on Aug. 23 in York, then face No. 10 Wales on Aug. 30 in Manchester and No. 7 Scotland on Sept. 6 in Exeter.
South Africa, which will play out of Group D with No. 4 France, No. 8 Italy and No. 28 Brazil, hosts No. 3 New Zealand on July 26 July and Aug. 2 in its final tune-ups. Earlier Saturday, New Zealand defeated No. 6 Australia 37-12 in Wellington.
This report by The Canadian Press was first published July 12, 2025.
Hashtags

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


Hamilton Spectator
32 minutes ago
- Hamilton Spectator
Reigning champion Colton Herta takes pole at Ontario Honda Dealers Indy Toronto
TORONTO - There will be a couple of familiar faces in the grid's front row when the green flag drops at the Ontario Honda Dealers Indy Toronto on Sunday. Defending champion Colton Herta earned pole position in the only IndyCar Series race outside of the United States. Alex Palou, who has a comfortable lead atop the open-wheel circuit's points list, will be right beside Herta at the starting line at Exhibition Place. Herta held pole position in three of the past four races in Toronto, but only won in 2024. 'I think it's just what this team is capable of around here for the street courses,' said Herta on Andretti Global's reputation for strong showings on street courses like Toronto. 'We continue to be a dominant force in the league for that style of racing. 'It was a stressful one, though. Really close to being knocked out in the first round.' Herta clocked the 11-turn, 2.874-kilometre course around Toronto's fairgrounds — also home to the CFL's Argonauts, Major League Soccer's Toronto FC, the American Hockey League's Marlies, the Professional Women's Hockey League's Sceptres, and starting in 2026, the WNBA's Tempo — in 59.8320 seconds. It was Herta's first pole of the season and he's winless so far, although he does have three top-five finishes. 'We want to do well. We're striving to do better every weekend,' said Herta as his news conference wound down and Palou walked in to the media centre to do his. 'It's a tough sport, so any little thing that we drop the ball on, it creates a big impact. 'Just need to be heads-up on Sunday and not give this (expletive) a win.' Palou chuckled before getting to the microphone. He has dominated IndyCar this season with seven wins, four poles, 10 top fives and 11 top 10s, leading for a total of 442 laps. He has 515 points to put him well ahead of No. 2 Pato O'Ward's 386. Despite the quality of his season, Palou said that starting second would be a tough assignment Sunday. 'It's never easy to start second,' said Palou, whose best qualifying lap was 0.2758 seconds behind Herta's. 'If the person in third is awake, they're usually able to pass the person on the outside. 'We'll see what we can do. It's not easy to be around the outside in Turn 1. Honestly, it's still great. As long as we're in the top four or five by Lap 1, it's where we want to be. We can race from there.' Marcus Armstrong and Will Power were third and fourth respectively. Scott Dixon, a four-time champion in Toronto, was 11th in qualifying but IndyCar announced Friday that he'd earned a six-position starting grid penalty for an unapproved engine change following last week's race at Iowa Speedway. Dixon is second only to all-time great Michael Andretti's seven wins around Exhibition Place. Toronto's Devlin DeFrancesco, the only Canadian on the grid, was 26th. Several drivers complained after Friday's practice about a large bump on Lake Shore Boulevard, just before the braking zone heading into Turn 3. Race officials repaved the area overnight with mixed reviews from Herta and Palou. 'It's much better. Yeah, it was pretty brutal yesterday,' said Herta. 'I didn't really mind it because I think it adds character and whatnot. But it was on the limit. It was very aggressive. 'I thought IndyCar did a good job. I think there's no problems at all with it.' Palou was less positive. '(The patch) didn't really make any difference for us. I guess they tried hard,' he said. 'The good thing is we brake past that, so it's just uncomfortable when you drive through there. 'But it was not any smoother. You were still hitting very, very hard.' This report by The Canadian Press was first published July 19, 2025. Error! Sorry, there was an error processing your request. There was a problem with the recaptcha. Please try again. You may unsubscribe at any time. By signing up, you agree to our terms of use and privacy policy . This site is protected by reCAPTCHA and the Google privacy policy and terms of service apply. Want more of the latest from us? Sign up for more at our newsletter page .


San Francisco Chronicle
44 minutes ago
- San Francisco Chronicle
Germany beats France on penalties to reach Euro 2025 semifinals despite early red card
BASEL, Switzerland (AP) — Germany overcame France on penalties and reached the semifinals of the Women's European Championship despite playing almost the entire match — and extra time — with 10 players. A drama-filled match finished 1-1 on Saturday, then Germany won the shootout 6-5 thanks to the heroics of Ann-Katrin Berger, who saved two as well as dispatching her own spot kick. Germany will face World Cup winner Spain in Zurich on Wednesday. That seemed improbable after less than 13 minutes when Germany midfielder Kathrin Hendrich pulled the hair of France captain Griedge Mbock and issued a straight red card. Grace Geyoro converted the resulting penalty but Sjoeke Nüsken headed her team level just 10 minutes later. Despite being at a numerical disadvantage, Germany could have taken the lead with a penalty of its own in the second half but France goalkeeper Pauline Peyraud-Magnin saved Nüsken's spot kick.


Fox Sports
44 minutes ago
- Fox Sports
15-year-old Aphrodite Deng becomes first Canadian winner in US Girls' Junior history
Associated Press JOHNS CREEK, Ga. (AP) — Aphrodite Deng became the first Canadian winner in U.S. Girls' Junior history, beating Xingtong Chen of Singapore 2 and 1 on Saturday in the 36-hole final at Atlanta Athletic Club. The 15-year-old Deng won her third junior major title of the year, following the Junior Invitational at Sage Valley in April and the Mizuho Americas Open in May. She earned a spot in the 2026 U.S. Women's Open at Riviera. 'It really means a lot. I just can't believe that I won,' Deng said. 'I didn't really think about the end result because I knew there were a lot of good players here. I just tried to win each match.' Deng had a 4-up lead over the 16-year-old Chen — the first player from Singapore to reach the championship match — after 18 holes. Chen cut the deficit to two twice on the second 18, the last with a par win on the 34th. Deng ended it on the 35th by matching Chen's par. 'I think I stayed in the moment throughout the whole match,' Deng said. 'I did get a little tired at the end. I learned that I'm pretty consistent and I'm pretty good, and I think that I stay pretty calm in front of a crowd and cameras.' ___ AP golf: in this topic