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Why South Africa feel 'so proud' despite gutting loss to France

By Ian Cameron
PARIS, FRANCE - JULY 27: Team South Africa pose with their bronze medal during the medal ceremony for the Rugby Sevens - Olympic Games Paris 2024 on Day 1 at Stade de France on July 27, 2024 in Paris, France. (Photo by Daniela Porcelli/Eurasia Sport Images/Getty Images)

The Springbok Sevens team coach says that securing a bronze medal for South Africa at the Paris Olympics is a testament to the players after a gutting semi-final loss to eventual winners France.

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The Blitzboks’ bronze is the first medal for South Africa at the 2024 Paris Games.

This marks their second podium finish in three Olympic Games, demonstrating their consistent performance on the international stage.

The team, led by coach Philip Snyman and captain Selvyn Davids, displayed no little resilience following the loss to Antoine Dupont’s France, rallying to defeat Australia in the bronze medal match at the Stade de France.

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Coach Philip Snyman – who previously won a medal as a player in the 2016 Rugby Sevens debut – downplayed his role in the team’s success, emphasizing the players’ massive contribution.

“We have a great management, and this win was also for those back in South Africa, but the moment belongs to the players – I am so proud of them and what they achieved here today,” said Snyman.

“We had our ups and downs, especially on the first day, but the way the team came back on the next two competition days made me so proud.

“We had our lapses and could have been in the final, but all that matters will be the bronze medals they earned today. It is so deserved to a group of guys who never stopped working and playing for their country.

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“We were gutted after the France defeat, but the players showed huge courage to come out and fight for that bronze medal against Australia. I am so proud of them, as I am sure South Africa will be for their first medal at the Paris Games.”

For Blitzbok captain Selvyn Davids said: “We had to come such a long way, and needed to qualify through the repechage tournament just to get to Paris, and we were the last team in.

“We were almost down and out earlier in the year, but what a comeback and what a fight by this group. It is so satisfying to see us playing to our potential and be proud Olympic medallists.

“We are proud of this medal and achievement and to know that we have done our system justice and hopefully gave South Africa something to smile about is really a great feeling,” added Davids.

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Rosko Specman, who became the first rugby player to earn two medals at the Olympics, the second meant as much as the first achieved in Rio in 2016.

“What a journey it has been for me, to earn two medals eight years apart – that is special,” said Specman.

“But even more special is the journey we had to get to this point. From the dark moments in Harare, where we missed out on qualification, to Monaco, where we used our final chance.

“We may have been the last team in, but we are bronze medallists. Well done to the coaches and management who got this group to believe it is possible. And on a personal note, I would like to thank God who gave me this chance to earn a second medal in the Olympics.”

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1 Comment
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CR 41 days ago

Proud of the boys. Coming from almost not qualifying to knocking the Suzie boys over is truly remarkable.

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Hellhound 51 minutes ago
Scott Robertson reflects on the All Blacks’ Freedom Cup loss to Springboks

It's not doom and gloom. I don't look at one season. I look from when SA left Super rugby. The statistics will tell you everything. I don't want the AB's weak. The Boks need them as much as the AB's need the Boks. Our rivalry and respect is what makes rugby great. It's the 2 games of the year everyone world wide watches. When other teams play, only their fans watch. With these 2 EVERYONE watch, not just the Bok and AB's fans. I'm not slamming the AB's. Don't be blind and only look to the AB team. They do what they are told. They follow the game plan. NZ rugby is in decay, and Australia was the same. They didn't notice the rot until it was too late. Not acknowledging there is problems is doing no one any favours. It won't hurt other teams, only the AB's and the Boks. The AB's is the reason why the Boks is so fierce. A weak AB's will effect the Boks in the long run. NZ have plenty of talent sure, but that talent is drifting away to other countries. Or other sporting codes. They just don't have any competition in SRP and it's affecting them internationally. The curve down is slow and almost unnoticed. You would think impossible. It's there. Don't be blind, be aware, because the once great Wallabies is now ruined. That can happen to any team. Look only as far back as 2017 I think when the AB's crushed the Boks by over 50 points. If Rassie didn't rescue the Boks in 2018, rugby may well have died a slow death in the country. We would have been the Aussies. The rot in SARU was rooted out, and we have reached new heights. The AB's are as integral to rugby as the Boks. It's the hype. It's the Rivalry. It's everything in rugby. France and Ireland may claim the world wanted to see them in the WC final, but the truth is that it's the AB's and the Boks everyone wants to see time and again

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Flankly 1 hour ago
Springboks reclaim Freedom Cup in titanic All Blacks clash

1. The Boks allowed zero tries this week, vs four last week. They made adjustments that neutralized the NZ attack.


2. The bomb squad upped the pressure, as usual, and SA finished stronger again. The 5-3 split worked fine, although Am did not deliver the expected impact.


3. Lineouts and scrums were not great. But with the second row absentees the set pieces were never going to be the best.


4. Linebreaks were encouraging, with Kolbe, Sacha, Wiese and others breaching the line. Great to see.


5. The TB attack is still not clicking. Moments of brilliance are inevitably followed by imprecision and errors. No interception tries this week, but lots of incomplete passes.


6. Cut out the yellow cards. It's hard to avoid cards completely, but you have to do everything possible to do so. I thought the ref was inconsistent on off-the-ball tackles, with Wiese getting carded but a later OTB tackle on Ox being ignored. Nonetheless, cards lose games.


7. Goal kicking needs to be a real focus. A good vs bad day with the kicking tee can easily swing the score by 5-10 points.


8. Sacha needs game time, especially against top teams. It's great to see his talent at 10, but he needs practice against elite line speed.


9. Moodie also needs lots of game time. He has plenty of talent and athleticism, but he needs match practice, with guidance from eg Kriel.


10. Too many turnovers. Ruck play was good, but the AB jacklers should not have been allowed so much success.


11. They should have a clock on the 5-seconds post "use it". The Boks were penalized but NZ were not.

174 Go to comments
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Hellhound 1 hour ago
Springboks reclaim Freedom Cup in titanic All Blacks clash

Exactly my point. We need at least a 95% win ratio. Blow out or close doesn't matter, as long as we win. Who can argue against the Boks as the best ever if they claim the top spot in everything? Until then these Boks are just the CURRENT best team. That's like "Almost", and "Almost" is not good enough. It's 2nd best. This team, or both Bok teams if you will, have that potential to break records and collect accolades galore. These Bok teams can collect another 2 to 3 WC trophies. They can take over the RC and rule it like NZ did and still do. They can take the Freedom Cup each year. They can go on a world record run of wins and weeks as number 1 in the world. These Bok teams can become invincible and etch their names in the history books, and they can be legends. These Bok teams have everything. South African rugby is in disgustingly rude health and is starting to pump out x factor stars like crazy. Not to even mention hybrids. The rugby system from grassroots may not be the best in the world, but the coaches involved in the kids up through high school and beyond shows what quality coaches SA have throughout. They got the message. They bought in to Rassie and his vision. The game management skills, the rugby IQ of the youngsters coming through is like players in their prime. Way ahead of the rest. Those coming through will strengthen the Boks and ensure a strong team even after Rassie is gone. These Bok teams have the potential to garner everything the rugby world has to offer and will offer in the future. I love my Boks, but they are very average currently for what they are and can be. Maybe I'm a bit harsh because they seem to have set out on this road already, wanting to win every game. They have shown how calm they are under pressure, how to change a game plan mid game to ensure victory by all means. They have that winning mentality and never die attitude. All of these things takes time to plan, cultivate and implement. They need refinement at most. That would give them the continuety they lack. The flashes of brilliance can become a 80 min thing. How glorious would that be to watch.

174 Go to comments
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