South Africa 37 Fiji 20
South Africa progressed to the Rugby World Cup semi-finals in
Marseille on Sunday in a hard-fought 37-20 victory over Fiji in a
brutal, enthralling game.
With some monumental hits exchanged between two immensely physical
sides, it was the Springboks' superior forward nous and power that
finally ground down a Fiji side that were only 13-3 behind at the
interval.
But South Africa, the bookies' firm tournament favourites with both
Australia and New Zealand eliminated in the quarter-finals, were
given the fright of their lives when Fiji scored two tries in two
minutes when down to 14 men halfway through the second-half.
After going through extended periods of struggling to contend with
the jinking Fijian runners, South Africa fell back on their more
cohesive forward unit to outgun a Fiji pack well beaten in the
scrum.
But while the Fijian all seemed capable of beating the first-up
Springbok tackles, they were also guilty of losing the ball in the
contact area when the second wave of defence arrived.
"All I asked of the boys was to give it their all and I am so proud
of the way they played," said Fiji skipper Mosese Rauluni.
"We came here with nothing to lose and they had all the pressure on
them and we forced them to make mistakes.
"We had two upset results yesterday and we were hoping for another
one today but it wasn't to be."
His Springbok counterpart John Smit said it had been a tough match
with the Fijians showing all their skills.
"They certainly came at us and we certainly didn't defend as well
as we should have," he said.
In a cracking start, Montgomery missed an easy penalty after the
Fiji scrum buckled under the experience of the Bok front-row of Os
du Randt, captain Smit and Jannie du Plessis, a late call-up for
the injured C.J. van der Linde.
But Steyn made amends with a 53-metre penalty after Fiji
transgressed at a ruck.
After a charged down clearance kick, the Boks were on the rack but
Fiji hooker Sunia Koto spilled the ball with attackers out wide and
the line beckoning.
Showing ambition, Boks spurned their next kickable penalty chance
and kicked to touch. From the ensuing ruck, Fourie du Preez fired
out an inch-perfect pass for centre Jacque Fourie to cross
unmolested in the corner.
But Fiji were far from out of it, with Koto, impressive No.8 Sisa
Koyamaibole and Gloucester-bound openside flanker Akapusi Qera
popping up everywhere, led with aplomb by effervescent scrum-half
and Rauluni.
Koyamaibole also did a great job at the back of a scrum that
retreated at every set, picking up quickly and making hard yards to
take the pressure off his fellow forwards.
With Bok openside Juan Smith lucky to get away with just a caution
from Irish referee Alan Lewis for a cheap head shot on lock
Ifereimi Rawaqa, Fiji also issued a few big hits of their own, the
best coming on giant flanker Schalk Burger by Vilimoni Delasau and
Qera.
Smit was the beneficiary of South Africa's powerful driving maul
when he was driven over for a try in the 35th minute.
Bai kicked his second penalty early in the second-half after Bryan
Habana was caught in possession, but the Boks responded
immediately.
Lock Victor Matfield held off a tackler to offload to Pietersen for
a simple run-in. To make matters worse for Fiji, centre Seru Rabeni
saw yellow for a high tackle on Butch James.
But just as Fiji seemed to lose their shape, an isolated Delasau
spotted a half-chance, chipped ahead, and with Montgomery nowhere
to be seen, pounced on his own kick for a try Bai converted.
Two minutes later, the irrepressible Rauluni broke the line to find
Sireli Bobo steaming up in support and the winger had enough power
to ride Fourie's tackle for a try Bai again converted to draw the
scores level at 20-20.
Despite Montgomery hitting a penalty, Fiji had the chance to take
the game from South Africa in the final quarter, but Seru Rabeni
knocked on over the line and Pietersen came up with a magnificent
try-saving tackle on Rawaqa in the corner.
The Boks made sure of the win with two late tries from Smit, who
crashed over from a well-drilled rolling maul, and Butch James to
break Fijian hearts of making the semi-finals for the first
time.
AFP
Boks on the road to semis



