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Samoa

Samoa

Boks seal quarter-final spot

30th September 2011 06:26

Heinrich Brüssow springboks v samoa

Sent off: Samoa's Paul Williams

South Africa remained unbeaten in Pool D and move on to the World Cup quarter-finals after beating Samoa 13-5 at North Harbour Stadium on Friday.

Samoa knew going in that it would be a tough ask to make it into the quarter-finals, but no one ever doubted they would fight until the final whistle.

There was a smidge of 'what might have been' attached to the result though for the islanders as had Mahonri Schwalger grounded a score, who knows what might of happened in the final stages. As it was the reigning champions had enough in the tank to stave off their opponents.

The Springboks came out with intent and quickly set about using their star player of the tournament thus far, Danie Rossouw, to make the metres. Nothing came of their foray after Morne Steyn sliced a drop-goal attempt, but the marker was laid that they weren't going to lose the physical.

South Africa tried for the opening points again moments later when Frans Steyn had a 60-metre penalty shot after good breakdown work from Heinrich Brüssow. That struck the crossbar in what turned out to only be delaying the inevitable as the Bok power soon shone through. They attacked down the left via Schalk Burger, who used his backline, which allowed Bryan Habana to cross in the corner. Morne Steyn's conversion made it 7-0 on ten minutes.

Samoa needed to up the ante and subsequently played to their strengths, with carrying from George Stowers and Seilala Mapusua making ground. That passage certainly let the Boks know they were not going to have it all their own way in Albany as slowly but surely Samoa gained momentum, being willed on by their passionate supporters. It was also apparent South Africa were not going to enjoy a similar score of their triumphs in 2007 and 2003.

That was not to say the Boks were struggling to make their presence felt, and with Frans Steyn sending over a 65-metre penalty on 25 minutes, they knew territory was not going to be a problem. That three was promptly doubled by namesake Morne two minutes later too as Samoa were penalised at scrum-time. 13-0 it was with barely half-an-hour played as Samoa's hopes looked to be getting even slimmer. Wales' fate was also almost known.

North Harbour Stadium was treated to a pulsating finish to the half when Kahn Fotuali'i broke down the right wing before handing on to Mapusua, but the ex-Exiles centre's Hail Mary pass failed to find its man, sending the teams in at 13-0 in favour of the Springboks.

It was a bumper 29,734 crowd on Friday that while packed into an open stadium, did not lack in atmosphere with the vocal Bok fans met by the islanders. And the former were soon to be silenced by a mass of noise from those waving blue and red as a lovely dummy and run from Tusi Pisi unlocked the defence. His offload to Mapusua was then recycled for Stowers to crash in. Pisi missed the kick that would have brought them within one score.

South Africa could have blamed that swing in momentum on the fact they had lost duo Habana and Rossouw, who later returned, to injuries minutes earlier. However, that is doing a disservice to Samoa who were turning up the heat on their rivals during the opening 20 minutes of the second stanza. The Boks needed to some fresh legs and Peter de Villiers oblidged, throwing on forwards Gurthrö Steenkamp and Willem Alberts for the last quarter.

It did little disarm the Samoan assault though as they kept on coming, mixing power up front with stepping wider out until Schwalger came within touching distance of the line before fumbling. Was that to be the moment that would haunt his outfit in the morning?

That it proved to be as an ill-tempered finish that saw Paul Williams sent-off for pushing Brüssow in the face and then John Smit shown yellow after a deliberate slap-down, ultimately ended Samoa's 2011. South Africa are now set to face the Wallabies.

Man of the match: Although on the losing side, Tusi Pisi again showed that he had a big future leading Samoa. The fly-half was light on his feet throughout and marshalled well, finding holes on more than one occasion. Mentions too for Bok props Tendai Mtawarira and Jannie du Plessis at scrum-time and also flanker Schalk Burger, who was a genuine nuisance to Maurie Fa'asavalu and George Stowers. David Lemi was also very impressive.

Moment of the match: Had captain Mahonri Schwalger managed to hold onto the ball when reaching out on 66 minutes, maybe the Samoans were on the verge of something historic. But it was not meant to be as even with John Smit going to the sin-bin soon after, South Africa held on to top the Pool and set up a probable last-eight clash with Australia.

Villain of the match: It was played hard but fair until Paul Williams pushed/punched Heinrich Brüssow after being held at a breakdown. Williams will be upset with how he ended the tournament as the frustration got the better of him.

The scorers:

For South Africa:
Try: Habana
Con: M Steyn
Pens: F Steyn, M Steyn

For Samoa:
Try: Stowers

Red card: Paul Williams, 67 mins (Samoa, punching)
Yellow card: John Smit, 70 mins (SA, killing the ball)

Samoa: 15 Paul Williams, 14 David Lemi, 13 Seilala Mapusua, 12 Eliota Fuimaono-Sapolu, 11 Alesana Tuilagi, 10 Tusi Pisi, 9 Kahn Fotuali'i, 8 George Stowers, 7 Maurie Faasavalu, 6 Taiasina Tuifua, 5 Kane Thompson, 4 Daniel Leo, 3 Census Johnston, 2 Mahonri Schwalger (c), 1 Sakaria Taulafo.
Replacements: 16 Ole Avei, 17 Anthony Perenise, 18 Logovi'i Mulipola, 19 Ofisa Treviranus, 20 Filipo Lavea Levi, 21 Junior Poluleuligaga, 22 George Pisi.

South Africa: 15 Pat Lambie, 14 JP Pietersen, 13 Jaque Fourie, 12 Frans Steyn, 11 Bryan Habana, 10 Morné Steyn, 9 Fourie Du Preez, 8 Pierre Spies, 7 Schalk Burger, 6 Heinrich Brüssow, 5 Victor Matfield (c), 4 Danie Rossouw, 3 Jannie Du Plessis, 2 Bismarck Du Plessis, 1 Tendai Mtawarira.
Replacements: 16 John Smit, 17 Gurthrö Steenkamp, 18 CJ van der Linde, 19 Willem Alberts, 20 Francois Louw, 21 Francois Hougaard, 22 Jean De Villiers.

Referee: Nigel Owens

By Adam Kyriacou at North Harbour Stadium

Comments

BokRocker says...

Great game. Samoa looked like they could break through so many times only to be stopped by great defense or poor passing and handling, a side which has made great strides and looking more like a top notch rugby team. They allowed themselves to get frustrated explaining the negative play but the Boks were brilliant in the breakdowns with Schalk playing one of the best games as expected from a flank of his class.

Good to see Brian back to his old form but sad that we still kick the ball away so much, one of the main reasons the Samoans put us under pressure in the second half. Swing the ball, that should be the call and up and unders are more of a gamble the ball winning percentages not being favorable. Teams expect this from the Boks and it hurts our game,

Boks looking like a better every week, noticed Rassie was very active in the Box.?

Go all the way Bokke.

Posted 13:27 30th September 2011

vaizpatu2011 says...

"poefie says...

I used to have gr8 respect for Samoa and the contest between our 2 nations always used to be legendary but today I lost all respect for Samoa.

I think its because before your nation always win big...but today your nation almost lost....hahaha! Thats why you lost all respect to the Samoans.. dont be like that.

Posted 13:08 30th September 2011

CanesNo1Fan says...

sirjona says...

"Dream over for another four years eh Samoa maybe if you can manage to stop a few of your players wandering over to the AB`s then you will be in with a better shout when you come to England."

Let me rephrase that for you,

Dream over for another four years eh Samoa maybe if you can manage to pilfer a few more players from New Zealand & pressure them to not wander over to the AB`s then you will be in with a better shout when you come to England.

Who in this New Zealand WRC squad were you referring to: Keven Mealamu (born in Tokoroa & brought up in NZ); John Afoa (from Auckland); Victor Vito (from Wellington & great MSP man); Ma¿a Nonu (from Wellington & 1 of the great Rongotai College teams); Sonny Bill Williams (from Auckland); which leaves Jerome Kaino (not from W. Samoa but American Samoa & has been in Auckland since he was 4) & Mils Muliaina (from Samoa but been in NZ since the age of 2) & Isaia Toeava (not sure how old he was when he moved to NZ but went to De La Salle College=high school in NZ). So only player close to 'an import' in Toeava though many kiwis would prefer the Maori Hosea Gear in his place

So you're talking nonsense & by the way, my dad is from Apia & I am a vociferous Manu Samoa supporter.

Posted 13:03 30th September 2011

rugbylover11 says...

@zandman!!

i hope you are not asking me!!! the bok players are no angels at all. i saw it myself in this game. history as well testifies against the bok in that area incase you want to bring it on. be happy your team has won and salute the samoans for your narrow win. a fatigue team and minow pushing a world champion like that deserves some compliments.

Posted 13:00 30th September 2011

Voice says...

Another 1 in the bag and that is what counts! It does seem as if Samoa always save their best for the Bokke - not 30 rugby players but 30 big strong men trying to break each other. Pity that Samoa`s discipline does let them down and I think are the new thugs of world rugby.

Anyway Quaters and whoever is the next hurdle - am confident that the Boks wil go all the way!

Posted 12:59 30th September 2011

exdigger says...

Can't wait for Wobblies to beat these old African men...

Posted 12:54 30th September 2011

martinmarais78 says...

@daibok, stick to your computer job of classes, objects and polymorphism!!! The breakdown decisions will never make sense to a sharkie fish head!

Posted 12:52 30th September 2011

gooseberry says...

Are you people blind? Brussouw did not strike Williams in the head, he was striking his arms to try and free himself as Williams was cynically holding onto him long after the ball had gone to prevent him from getting to the next ruck! Williams then punched (not pushed) him in the face with the heel of his hand when he was completely blindsided. Red card well deserved. The Samoans got away with a lot.

Posted 12:51 30th September 2011

lawynd says...

@ManWarrior - I counted at least half a dozen head-height tackles from Bok players in the first twenty minutes that weren't picked up - it seems high tackles are ok if they're from behind!? You also had Jannie du Plessis wrestling someone out of a rolling maul with a headlock, which had been specifically prohibited in the run-up to the tournament. I won't claim that Samoa were clean in this area, but they only gave as good as they got, and Owens clearly bottled it.

Posted 12:51 30th September 2011

coronach says...

Ignoring he outcome, I'd like to present the award for The Sheila of the Day - Heinrich Brussow - thought I was watching the round-ball game his dive after an open palm slap was so dramatic.

Posted 12:44 30th September 2011

Azanwizard says...

Samoa cried like babies after losing to Wales! They have known the fixtures for months and said nothing before they lost. They blamed 1 little training game against Namibia for losing against Wales! Get rid of your inferior complex Samoa and stop the crying!

Posted 12:44 30th September 2011

Fred91 says...

Good game soiled by a racist refs....he did it against Samoa when they played against Wales, can the refs be changed, why the bloody same same ref??

Posted 12:43 30th September 2011

rugbylover11 says...

@Dylbull

hehehehe!!! the Bok's were extremely nervous my friend. Don't forget you were playing against a tier 2 team. And above all, it was a manu samoa B because of the short turn around as everyone knows hahahaha!!!! THE BOK WAS A FULL STRENGTH TEAM. Had a great vacation inbetween games while the samoans nursing their soars hehehe!!! TAKE YOUR HAT OFF to CONGRATULATE A MINOW FOR GIVING YOU GUYS A GREAT TEST THIS EVENING.

If you deny what the samoans did tonight then you are no lover of the game.

Posted 12:33 30th September 2011

Sasquatch says...

@Brianph:

The Samoans needed a bonus point win to make the quarters so the red card in the last ten minutes did not cost them. It was pretty much a done deal by that stage(as far as progressing).

Posted 12:28 30th September 2011

bloemboy says...

@powerplay, your comments are very amusing calling the Boks and their fans Chumps. Fact is Samoa played their hearts out and did everything they could to get the result. Sure there were some dodgy tackles and there were a few handbags swung at dawn, by both sides. The refereeing was very substandard, though not biased. I for one have respect for the Samoan team and most of their supporters. Your comments however force me to point out that us "chumps" are still in the tournament, and are defending RWC Champions regardless of your little tirade. Get real dude!

Posted 12:26 30th September 2011

atg77 says...

"South Africa are now set to face the Wallabies in the last-eight at Wellington Regional Stadium" A little bit of hubris there is it not? Ireland have yet to play Italy, and are far from gaurenteed from victory. Just remember what happened in the six nations. Come on Italy!

Posted 12:20 30th September 2011

rugbylover11 says...

@sirjona

after a good match your language shows that you are worst than a holligan hehehe!!!

Posted 12:16 30th September 2011

ruggaluva says...

SA could have and probably should have won that game easily... they had total control and the kicking was of an acceptable level but as the game went on they completely lost the plot and decided to disrespect the fact that you need to retain possession and not kick it away to a Samoa team that finally realised that they were given the chance to play and RUN. From there on there was only really one team in it.... SA will not be able to continually hold up defensively under pressure from better teams. Samoa deserved more for their effort and SA probably have not learned their lesson. They will lose against Aus if they keep this game plan.

Posted 12:13 30th September 2011

TVaddict says...

Great game, and Samoa played brilliantly! Why weren't they playing this 15 against Wales, they probably would have beaten them!

It is sad they didn't even get a point from this game, the number of times they were at the Springbok lines! I guess it's the difference between the bigger teams. The fact of the matter is the Springboks created very few chances, but pretty much every time got points on the board. The Samoan created loads of chances, but failed to get the points when it mattered.

Next time I hope Samoa at least get into the Quarter finals, they deserve it for everything they bring to the game. The country that punches above it's weight more than any other.

Posted 12:13 30th September 2011

objetive says...

I know the Boks are not popular outside of SA because they win too much and bruise too many egos with their physical, but perfectly legal, play (I'm quite happy to be unpopular for those reasons), but can you all just open up your eyes and see what a bunch of mindless thugs these islanders are? They were blatently and willfully transgressing for the entire 80 mins. It took an exasperated apepal by Brussow to the touch judge to finally have one of them sent off. I, for one, am delighted to see the back of that team of thugs. It is disgraceful that the coach/captain has clearly not even tried to teach them to play within the rules of the game. I have lost all respect for you, Samoa. Go home and learn some manners and some respect.

Posted 12:12 30th September 2011

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  • Samoa Fixtures
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Pool D
World Cup Table
PosTeamPPts
1South Africa418
2Wales415
3Samoa410
4Fiji45
5Namibia40