South Africa captured its third Rugby World Cup
Championship defeating a favored England team 32-12 and extending the dominance
of teams from the Southern Hemisphere in the tournament.
The South Africans broke open a tight defensive
struggle late in the second half behind tries by Makazole Mapimpi and Cheslin
Kolbe. South Africa also won the title in 1995 and 2007; it is the only country
to win every Rugby World Cup final it has contested.
The first half was a battle of attrition, with
both teams delivering punishing tackles and several players leaving the game
early with injuries. But it was the powerful South African forward pack that
set the tone, forcing England into several penalties during scrums, which
contributed to a 12-6 South Africa lead at halftime on four penalty goals from
flyhalf Handre Pollard.
The England captain, Owen Farrell, converted
two penalty goals for the English. Six minutes into the second half, South
Africa won another penalty at the scrum, and Pollard converted a long-range
kick to make it 15-6. But England turned the tables with another kick by
Farrell made it 15-9, and for a moment the English appeared to seize
momentum.
But South Africa held off the English, and then
Mapimpi broke free on the left-wing in the 67th minute, delivering a kick pass
along the ground to a charging Lukhanyo Am, the outside center. Am scooped up
the ball and immediately shoveled it back to Mapimpi, who took it over for the
game’s first try.
Kolbe sealed the victory in the 74th minute,
getting the ball on the right-wing some 40 yards out and dancing around several
defenders for the try that put the game out of reach. Pollard’s conversion
produced the final 32-12 score. South Africa became the first team to win the
World Cup despite losing a match in the pool stage. The Springboks, as the team
is known, were defeated by New Zealand, the two-time defending champion, in
their opening game in Japan.
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