Bomb Squad powers Springboks past spirited Scotland

By Adnaan Mohamed

Championship-winning teams often reveal their true character when momentum hangs in the balance. The Springboks did exactly that on Saturday, producing a clinical second-half display to defeat Scotland 42-28 in a gripping Nations Championship Test at Loftus Versfeld.

With the scores locked at 14-14 at halftime, South Africa leaned on the qualities that have become synonymous with the world champions. Physicality, depth and composure gradually wore down a fearless Scottish outfit that refused to surrender until the final whistle.

The Springboks crossed for six tries to Scotland’s four, although head coach Rassie Erasmus, who marked his record-breaking 55th Test in charge of the national side, will know there is still room for refinement.

South Africa’s defensive system leaked opportunities throughout the contest, allowing Scotland to build confidence with ball in hand. Gregor Townsend’s side arrived intent on playing ambitious rugby, keeping possession through multiple phases while stretching the Springbok defence from touchline to touchline.

Much of that enterprise stemmed from the influential partnership of Finn Russell and captain Sione Tuipulotu. Russell controlled the tempo with trademark vision and precision, while Tuipulotu consistently won the gainline and inspired the visitors with an outstanding all-round display.

The Springboks struck first through scrumhalf Embrose Papier. Making his first Test appearance in eight years, the Bulls playmaker spotted space around the ruck before skipping through for a memorable try in the 17th minute.

South Africa doubled their advantage moments later. Lock Cobus Wiese launched a powerful charge from the restart before No 8 Evan Roos finished the movement with authority. Handré Pollard converted both tries to establish what appeared to be a comfortable 14-0 lead.

Scotland’s response reflected the resilience that has become a hallmark of Townsend’s side.

Tighthead prop Zander Fagerson powered over after sustained pressure close to the line before Russell and Tuipulotu combined brilliantly to create space for fullback Kyle Rowe. Russell’s conversion levelled the scores as the halftime siren sounded.

The turning point arrived shortly after the restart.

Replacement lock Ben-Jason Dixon received a yellow card for dangerous head contact, leaving South Africa temporarily reduced to 14 players. Erasmus responded by introducing his renowned Bomb Squad earlier than anticipated.

The impact was immediate.

The Springbok pack tightened its grip through relentless carries and dominant set-piece play. Replacement loose forward Elrigh Louw crashed over before Damian Willemse finished a flowing attack following excellent interplay with Edwill van der Merwe.

Young prop Zachary Porthen then celebrated a dream Test debut by powering over for his maiden international try, underlining South Africa’s remarkable production line of forward talent.

Scotland continued to fight with admirable determination. Russell sparked another attacking wave that produced quickfire tries from Josh Bayliss and Ben White, briefly reducing the deficit to seven points and ensuring a tense finale.

The Springboks, however, responded like champions.

Centre Jesse Kriel crossed for the decisive sixth try, allowing South Africa to close out another important Test victory in front of an appreciative Pretoria crowd.

Pollard added five conversions before Quan Horn completed the scoring.

The result extended South Africa’s winning momentum while highlighting both the squad’s enviable depth and its appetite for improvement. The Bomb Squad once again demonstrated why it remains one of the most influential tactical weapons in international rugby, transforming a finely balanced contest into another memorable Springbok triumph.

Point Scorers

South Africa 42 (14): Tries: Embrose Papier, Evan Roos, Elrigh Louw, Damian Willemse, Zachary Porthen, Jesse Kriel. Conversions: Handré Pollard (5), Quan Horn.

Scotland 28 (14): Tries: Zander Fagerson, Kyle Rowe, Josh Bayliss, Ben White. Conversions: Finn Russell (4).

Eight years later, Papier gets his Scottish sequel

There are few better storytellers than rugby. Eight years after making his first Springbok start against Scotland on a wet Murrayfield evening, Embrose Papier is preparing to face the same opponents again. This time, the stage is Loftus Versfeld. The jersey still carries the same weight. The man wearing it has changed completely.

The Clanwilliam-born scrumhalf returns to the Springbok starting line-up carrying far more than seven Test caps. He brings eight seasons of perseverance, frustration and relentless self-belief after watching South Africa conquer the rugby world from the outside.

When Papier burst onto the international scene in 2018 as a fearless 21-year-old, he appeared destined to become the Boks’ long-term No 9. Rugby, however, had other ideas.

A conveyor belt of elite scrumhalves, including Faf de Klerk, Cobus Reinach and Jaden Hendrikse, kept the Bulls playmaker waiting while the Springboks collected back-to-back Rugby World Cup titles.

Instead of fading into the background, Papier rebuilt his game.

His outstanding United Rugby Championship campaign left Rassie Erasmus with little choice. Twelve tries, six assists, 15 clean breaks, 27 defenders beaten and more than 500 metres gained transformed him from an outside contender into an irresistible selection.

The timing could hardly be more fitting.

Papier will reunite with Handre Pollard, his halfback partner on that memorable Murrayfield night when South Africa defeated Scotland 26-20.

Handre Pollard and Embrose Papier will start for the Boks against Scotland again on Saturday at Loftus after eight years. Photo: Springboks

“I think there are always nerves before a Test match, but I’m super excited for the opportunity,” Papier said this week.

We all know Handre has a lot of experience. We’ve spent a lot of time together on the pitch and I’m excited to go into this game with him.

“We need to pitch up on the day and give it everything.”

His familiarity with Scotland stretches beyond international rugby.

After five United Rugby Championship seasons with the Bulls, Papier knows many of Scotland’s players through bruising encounters with Glasgow Warriors and Edinburgh. He even crossed for a crucial try against Glasgow in last season’s URC semi-final.

For Erasmus, the recall is built on form rather than sentiment.

“Firstly, I thought he played really well this season,” the Springbok coach said.

“Sometimes it’s not because the player is not playing well enough or is not Springbok class. There are other players performing really well.

“He gathered form and now gets the opportunity at home with Handre, where they’ve played a lot of rugby.”

Paper occasionally writes the perfect ending.

Papier still has to do that himself.

Saturday offers more than another Test appearance. It is an opportunity to show that careers are rarely defined by the doors that close, but by the courage to keep knocking until one opens again.

Images: x.com/springboks

Bulls and Stormers secure home URC playoffs as Lions limp into quarters

By Adnaan Mohamed

The Vodacom United Rugby Championship (URC) playoffs will feature three South African teams after a dramatic final round delivered a cocktail of celebration and frustration for the country’s franchises.

The Vodacom Bulls and DHL Stormers earned prized home URC quarter-finals with emphatic statements in Pretoria and despite defeat in Cardiff respectively, while the Fidelity SecureDrive Lions scraped into the playoffs after stumbling in Limerick. The Hollywoodbets Sharks ended their campaign with a fireworks display in Durban.

The Bulls charged like a runaway scrum at Loftus Versfeld, flattening Benetton Rugby 45-19 to secure fourth place and a home quarter-final against Munster Rugby. Johan Ackermann’s men crossed for seven tries and stretched their winning streak to six matches.

Sergeal Petersen bagged a brace, while Willie le Roux, Johan Grobbelaar, Cobus Wiese, Celimpilo Gumede and Ruan Nortje also powered over. Handre Pollard added five conversions with the precision of a metronome steering a backline orchestra.

Benetton’s resistance came through Louis Lynagh’s double and a try by Rhyno Smith, though the visitors spent most of the evening chasing shadows across the Highveld turf.

In Wales, Cardiff slammed the brakes on the Stormers’ hopes of a top-two finish with a gritty 22-16 victory at Cardiff Arms Park. The Cape side burst from the blocks like sprinters off the starter’s gun, but Cardiff’s defence became a brick wall around the tryline.

Adre Smith scored early for the Stormers, while Sacha Feinberg-Mngomezulu added a conversion and three penalties. Cardiff struck through Jacob Beetham’s brace, Tom Bowen and Ioan Lloyd to seal a quarter-final rematch in Cape Town.

The Lions, meanwhile, slipped to a 24-17 defeat against Munster in Limerick, leaving them with the daunting challenge of facing defending champions Leinster Rugby in Dublin.

Down in Durban, the Sharks signed off in style by crushing Zebre Parma 54-19. Siya Kolisi produced a captain’s farewell worthy of a stadium ovation with two tries, while Jaco Williams, Zekethelo Siyaya, Vusi Moyo, Emmanuel Tshituka, Le Roux Malan and Ross Braude also crossed the whitewash.

The result secured 10th place for the Sharks and offered a glimpse of a side beginning to sharpen its claws for future campaigns.

Vodacom URC quarter-finals

Friday, 29 May
Glasgow Warriors v Connacht – Scotstoun Stadium, Glasgow (20:45 SA time)

Saturday, 30 May
Vodacom Bulls v Munster – Loftus Versfeld, Pretoria (13:00)
DHL Stormers v Cardiff – DHL Stadium, Cape Town (15:30)
Leinster v Fidelity SecureDrive Lions – Aviva Stadium, Dublin (21:00)