It was a victory of “sheer physicality” as the 14-man South Africa battered and bruised France into submission, claiming a 32-17 comeback win. Despite Lood de Jager’s red card, the Springboks “overwhelmed Les Bleus” in a “bruising” second half, turning a 14-6 deficit into a dominant win fueled by “iron discipline” and raw power.
France had started the match seeking revenge, and Damian Penaud delivered, scoring two tries to become the nation’s top try-scorer. With De Jager off, France seemed “in full control.”
But the Springboks are masters of attrition. They absorbed the pressure and then imposed their will. France “cracked,” their discipline “disintegrating” under the relentless assault. A “costly yellow card” to Louis Bielle-Biarrey was the opening the Boks needed.
They were “ruthless.” André Esterhuizen was driven over from a maul, and Grant Williams exploited a “splintered” defence. The Boks “punished every mistake” from a “rattled” French side.
Sacha Feinberg-Mngomezulu, who kicked perfectly, added a late try to complete the rout. The win was a testament to the Boks’ “wiser, calmer” approach, proving that power and composure beat flair and chaos.
‘Sheer Physicality’: 14-Man Boks Batter and Bruise France into Submission
It was a victory of “sheer physicality” as the 14-man South Africa battered and bruised France into submission, claiming a 32-17 comeback win. Despite Lood de Jager’s red card, the Springboks “overwhelmed Les Bleus” in a “bruising” second half, turning a 14-6 deficit into a dominant win fueled by “iron discipline” and raw power.
France had started the match seeking revenge, and Damian Penaud delivered, scoring two tries to become the nation’s top try-scorer. With De Jager off, France seemed “in full control.”
But the Springboks are masters of attrition. They absorbed the pressure and then imposed their will. France “cracked,” their discipline “disintegrating” under the relentless assault. A “costly yellow card” to Louis Bielle-Biarrey was the opening the Boks needed.
They were “ruthless.” André Esterhuizen was driven over from a maul, and Grant Williams exploited a “splintered” defence. The Boks “punished every mistake” from a “rattled” French side.
Sacha Feinberg-Mngomezulu, who kicked perfectly, added a late try to complete the rout. The win was a testament to the Boks’ “wiser, calmer” approach, proving that power and composure beat flair and chaos.