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Monday, August 04, 2008

                                     17 Minutes To Confusion...

                                      Talk about a turnaround...


Jaque Fourie: 'I thought your defence was a strength Josh'

South Africa Pieter de Villiers has wielded the World Cup winning axe by releasing Francois Steyn, Ruan Pienaar, Odwa Ndungane and Guthro Steenkamp from the 28-man squad to take on Tri-Nations hopefuls Argentina on Saturday.

Steyn and Pienaar will feel a little hard done by, especially considering Butch James’ disappointing form at fly-half.

Jaque Fourie is retained, as is scrum-half Fourie du Preez and wing Jongi Nowke.

South African squad:


Forwards: Adriaan Strauss, Andries Bekker, Bakkies Botha, Bismarck du Plessis, Brian Mujati, CJ van der Linde, Joe van Niekerk, Juan Smith, Luke Watson, Pierre Spies, Schalk Burger, Tendai Mtawarira, Victor Matfield (captain).

Backs: Adrian Jacobs, Bryan Habana, Butch James, Conrad Jantjes, Enrico Januarie, Fourie du Preez, Jaque Fourie, Jean de Villiers, Jongi Nokwe, JP Pietersen, Percy Montgomery.


Matt Giteau: 'Check out the new kit'

As an Australian he’s used to big spiders and must’ve copped the odd bite here and there.

A mesmerising whiz kid of the game, Matt Giteau possesses fantastic hands and intelligence.

His reflexes are superior to those of any ordinary human being and instead of webbing, his near-perfect passing and infectious abilities have enabled him to develop his creative skills and become one of the world’s leading fly-halves.

Hardly the biggest animal on the park, Giteau’s sixth sense alerts him to evil dangers and using his equilibrium to swing out of attack and dodge enemy fire.

The Wallaby star’s superhuman strength, speed and agility makes him one of the finest athletes in the game and can adapt to a number of positions, notably at 9,10 and 12.

Considering his size and shape, Giteau’s skin has remarkable resistance to pain and injury.

In his spare time, much like Peter Parker, Giteau is a magnet to the camera, although he is more used to standing in front of them.


Dannie Rossouw: Bottoms up!

Professional rugby has had a fair share of bad press to answer to. Only this summer, the off-field behaviour has been like a lads trip to Benidorm - full of booze, birds and brushes with the law.

No one is innocent. Even the unions who allow players to get themselves in such precarious positions are guilty, but putting a ban on these guilty pleasures is like ordering a prostitute to take a vow of celibacy.

As refreshing as New Zealand Jimmy Cowan’s outstanding performance was in Auckland, he will forever be battling against his bad-boy image as long as he is wearing the All-Black jersey.

Given the monotonous routine of a professional rugby player - play, train, video, gym, train, play, recover - how can the unions or clubs for that matter expect to control players away from the training field?

There is an unwritten law in a professional sportsman’s code of conduct - to peak at game time - and as long as the players don’t turn up nursing a hangover or serving a court writ for a post-match barroom brawl, then we have no problem.

Try telling Ricky Hatton to stay off the big breakfasts, or David Beckham to shed away from the limelight - these stars are adored for their lifestyle and not just their right or left boot.

Three separate charges of disorderly conduct since April, forced Cowan off the booze and while the majority live up to their obligations as role models, are we missing the point of what’s fun about sport?

It’s supposed to be fun isn’t it?

Saturday, August 02, 2008

Ma'a Nonu: 'No you can't have my extensions'

New Zealand 39: Tries: T Woodcock 2, M Nonu 2; Cons: D Carter 2; Pens: D Carter 5
Australia 10: Tries A Ashley-Cooper; Cons: M Giteau Pens: M Giteau

A wounded All-Black is the most dangerous species in the jungle and the ruthless animal rampaged through Eden Park to reclaim their spot as kings of the southern hemisphere.

New Zealand hadn't lost three on the bounce for over a decade and the class of 2008 weren't going to take on such a tag without a fight

It was more like the All-Blacks of old. Clinical execution, brutal in contact and kept their intensity up from the Haka.

Graham Henry's tactics were spot on. The All-Blacks coach left the sporadic, kamikaze stuff back in Sydney and played smart rugby – something Australia obviously forgot to register before leaving the tunnel.

The next time Robbie Deans delivers a message Australia won’t be as complacent. 

The All-Blacks were far more structured, ditching the over-zealous tap penalties inside their own 22, in favour of trusting their abilities and Dan Carter’s majestic boot.

The Richie McCaw factor was huge with the talismanic skipper’s composure belying his customary ferocity. His partners in crime backed him to the hilt.

Just like Australia's scrum, New Zealand's line-out has shared an equal amount of stick in recent years.

Andrew Sheridan’s face gives Australian’s nightmares, but now add Ali Williams’s mug to the list for the athletic second-row reaped all sorts of havoc at the set-piece.

All this nonsense about the Experimental Law Variations depreciating the tactical area was proved wrong once again - only Ma'a Nonu's contentious late score came from open play.

Prop Tony Woodcock became the first All-Black prop since Wilson Whineray to score a brace against Australia. The scrummaging machine popped up onto Rodney So'oialo's pass for the first and four minutes later latched onto an intelligent tap down from Ali Williams in the line-out to charge over.

Had referee Mark Lawrence grasped a proper idea of the new laws then New Zealand would not have been gifted the throw when Adam Ashley-Cooper deliberately put his foot into touch before fielding a clever Jimmy Cowan kick - and Woodcock may not have scored. 

Dan Carter looked noticeably happier with Jimmy Cowan next-door. It was far easier to understand why Henry didn't sling him onto the scrap-heap after such an assured display. His kicking game was superb and didn’t afford any such luxuries for the Wallabies back three to seize momentum.

Ashley-Cooper profited from some incisive trademark Wallaby handling to briefly get the visitors back in the match, but the All-Blacks were in beastly mood and would not be outdone in any facet of the brawl.

Australian hope was savaged when Nonu scored his first try soon after the break.

Another spoiled lineout and more Australian ill discipline saw the juggernaught centre crash over after a nice little one-two with Sitiveni Sivivatu for the pivotal score.

Nonu’s critics have been fierce since bulldozing through England’s Charlie Hodgson but this was more like it.

His second and New Zealand’s fourth saw the All-Blacks return to the summit of the Tri-Nations and will now ensure the trip Cape Town won’t be the same across the Tasman to Sydney.