Scotland lose intense scrap with dogged Springboks

Scotland lose intense scrap with dogged Springboks
News Desk

By News Desk


Published: 10/11/2024

Autumn Nations Series: Scotland v South Africa

Scotland (9) 15

Pens: Russell 5

South Africa (19) 32

Tries: Mapimpi 2, Du Toit, Wiese Cons: Pollard
Pens: Pollard 2

South Africa claimed an intense and thrilling victory
over Scotland at a raucous Murrayfield, the 17-point margin at the end doing
nothing to reflect what a tumultuous Test match it was.

The world champions were pushed hard by the ferocious Scots,
who created - but did not take - multiple chances in a pivotal period during
the second half.

Scotland were also forced to play 20 minutes of the opening
half with 14 men when Scott Cummings was given a yellow card which was upgraded
to a red. It looked a desperately harsh call.

Makazole Mapimpi scored two first-half tries for the
Springboks, with Thomas du Toit adding a third and Jasper Wiese a late fourth.

Scotland, who were forced to play catch-up for most of the
day, garnered all of their points from the boot of Finn Russell.

For chunks of the contest, the home side looked outstanding,
but South Africa’s ability to fight their way to survival was astonishing.

The Springboks drew first blood and, given it was so early,
it was a grim beginning for Scotland.

Playing penalty advantage off a five-metre line-out, Handre
Pollard made them pay for a narrow defence with a precise crossfield kick to
Mapimpi, who scored despite Tom Jordan’s efforts.

Things got worse for Scotland soon after when Cummings was
done for dangerous play and was binned.

Another blow arrived with the news that it was upgraded to a
20-minute red card. Murrayfield was incredulous and furious.

Still, as the attrition rose, Scotland prospered, despite
being a man down. Russell put over one penalty, then another and the 14-men led
the world champions.

The Boks were not themselves, missing a couple of line-outs,
dropping a couple of balls. The home crowd had things to get their teeth into -
Ewan Ashman’s big hit on Eben Etzebeth chief among them.

Then, the horror show that was South Africa’s second try
when Franco Mostert fumbled a close-range line-out ball to Du Toit, who
thundered through the gap. Pollard converted and the visitors led again.

Max Williamson came on for Cummings at that point, the 20
minutes ending with a one-point win for the Boks which, in a sense, was a win
for Scotland.

Russell’s sure boot narrowed the gap, but the Boks struck
again almost immediately. Again it was a beautiful kick-pass from right to
left, from Willie Le Roux this time. Again it was Mapimpi with the score.

Pollard’s conversion made it 19-9 to South Africa.

Kitchen sink not enough for Scots

Scotland looked to have broken through when Sione Tuipulotu
and Jordan put Ben White through the Bok defence and all the way to the posts,
but it was brought back for a knock-on earlier on. A tiny one, but it was
enough.

Referee Christophe Ridley felt Murrayfield’s wrath again.

The stadium roared once more early in the new half but this
time it was for another Russell penalty. Seven–point game now.

Rassie Erasmus brought on RG Snyman at the break and then
the other horsemen of the Apocalypse followed within minutes. Enter
Pieter-Steph du Toit, Siya Kolisi, Malcolm Marx, Vincent Koch. Gerhard
Steenekamp. The Bomb Squad had arrived.

Almost as soon as they did, a bit of a scrap broke out
between Zander Fagerson and Etzebeth. It was intense and brutal and compelling.

Scotland took the fight to the Boks. They were relentless in
their physicality, the game turning into a magnificent frenzy.

South Africa survived when Matt Fagerson spilled in the
shadow of the posts and survived again when Huw Jones began another siege, the
upshot within seconds being a yellow card for Mapimpi as he scrambled to stop
the charge.

The Scots had a line-out five metres out, but lost it.
Agony. They went again through Jordan and his cavalry.

The visitors were hanging on, but hang on they did.
Incredibly. Heroically, in a rugby sense.

Scotland had thrown the kitchen sink, the contents of the
living room and half a dozen wardrobes at them and they still did not break.

Russell kicked a goal to narrow it to 19-15, but they needed
more. And more still when Pollard booted over a penalty to make it a
seven-point gap and then another to make it a 10-point lead.

Wiese’s late score put a cruel look on the board for
Scotland.

Line-ups

Scotland: Jordan, Kinghorn, Jones, Tuipulotu (capt)
Van der Merwe, Russell, White; Schoeman, Ashman, Z Fagerson, Gilchrist,
Cummings, M Fagerson, Darge, Dempsey.

Replacements: Richardson, Sutherland, Millar Mills,
Williamson, Bayliss, Ritchie, Dobie, McDowall.

South Africa: Le Roux, Moodie, Am, Esterhuizen,
Mapimpi, Pollard, Hendrikse; Nche, Mbonambi, T du Toit, Etzebeth, Mostert, Van
Staden, Louw, Smith.

Replacements: Marx, Steenekamp, Koch, Snyman, Kolisi,
PS du Toit, Wiese, Williams.















































































Referee: Christophe Ridley

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