image description

Springbok Women's Sevens earn mixed bag of results on day one in Los Angeles

The South Africans started slowly at Dignity Health Sports Park against Ireland, but soon warmed to the challenge. A silly error in their red zone handed the Irish an easy converted try to make it 7-0 barely a minute into the Pool B fixture.

Credit to the South Africans though, who stayed calm and started to dominate their opponents with pressing defence and good game management, and it was no surprise when Ayanda Malinga raced 80m to score soon after.

The centre found an outside gap following a good scrum by her teammates and ran in to score under the sticks a minute before the break. Nadine Roos converted to level scores at half-time.

It was Roos who scored the next - and decisive try - for South Africa. Eleven minutes into the match and with both sides looking for the knock-out punch, a brilliant turn-over and pass from Zintle Mpupha gave Roos some real estate to cover and she raced away for a five-pointer 80m downfield.

Credit to Ireland, who kept on attacking, but they could not any gaps in the South African defence, who held out for the perfect start.

Unfortunately, things didn't work out quite the same against China, who were out of the blocks in no time and scored three converted first-half tries to take a commanding 21-0 lead into the break after a sluggish start by the South Africans, and despite a much improved second half, they could not overhaul their Asian opponents, who secured a semi-final spot on day two.

China had all the play in the first half of the match, with South Africa guilty of missed tackles, poor handling and average game management. The injury to team captain Mathrin Simmers, who was ruled out due to an HIA in the Ireland match, was telling as the Bok Women struggled to get into the match and their apathy in the first half proved critical.

The second half was much better, with speed on attack and more precise play with ball in hand, helped by the injection of Alicia Willemse into the game, handing them two tries, by Rights Mkhari and Leigh Fortuin, with the second five-pointer closing the gap to 21-12 with just over a minute to play. China responded well though and raced away for the final points of the match from the restart.

The Bok Women are still in the running for the semi-finals courtesy of their earlier victory over Ireland, and a win over Argentina on Sunday evening at 19h00 (SA time) will see them book a spot in the top four.

Scorers:

South Africa 12 (7) Ireland 7 (7)

South Africa - Tries: Ayanda Malinga, Nadine Roos. Conversion: Roos.

Ireland - Try: Kathy Baker. Conversion: Kate Farrell McCabe.

South Africa 12 (0) China 26 (21)

South Africa - Tries: Rights Mkhari, Leigh Fortuin. Conversion: Nadine Roos.

China - Tries: Chen Can, Wang Wanyu (2), Dou Xinrong. Conversions: Chen Keyi (3).

Related News

News

Blitzbok coach Philip Snyman hails special win in Los Angeles

  • 4 days ago

Springbok Sevens head coach Philip Snyman heaped praise on his squad after going undefeated at the HSBC SVNS World Championship in Los Angeles this weekend.

News

Brilliant Blitzboks go three from three to make Los Angeles semifinals

  • 5 days ago

The Springbok Sevens team qualified for the playoffs of the HSBC SVNS World Championship in Los Angeles after going unbeaten on Saturday.

News

Blitzboks must hit the ground running in Los Angeles, says captain Siviwe Soyizwapi

  • 10 days ago

With the high-stakes SVNS World Championship finale looming in Los Angeles, Blitzboks captain Siviwe Soyizwapi insists there's no room for slow starts or mental lapses.

News

Bok Women 7s off to a flyer on day one in Krakow

  • 28 days ago

Maria Tshiremba's second half brace set up a convincing 29-10 victory for the Springbok Women's Sevens against Poland in Krakow in their opening match of the final World Rugby HSBC Sevens Challenger tournament on Friday.