Pleasure. You did not mention the 1981 Springbok match vs Waikato. That match made me a MooLoo supporter. I was impressed with the way the rugby supporters got stuck into the betogers. sadly the chainsaw man was absent.This is pretty much what I was looking for. Thanks very much mate.
Dont worry mate, you'll never understand this.Yeh great idea. I don't even know how South Africa are second ATM. The wallabies have had the meat over them for quite a while now. Surly the Anzac rivalry is much bigger then the saffas.
Pleasure. You did not mention the 1981 Springbok match vs Waikato. That match made me a MooLoo supporter. I was impressed with the way the rugby supporters got stuck into the betogers. sadly the chainsaw man was absent.
Did you know at the hight of Apartheid in 1978 Soweto had 115 Football fields, 3 Rugby fields, 4 athletic tracks, 11 Cricket fields, 2 Golf courses, 47 Tennis courts, 7 swimming pools built to Olympic standards, 5 Bowling alleys, 81 Netball fields, 39 children play parks, and countless civic halls, movie houses and clubhouses. In addition to this, Soweto had 300 churches, 365 schools, 2 Technical Colleges, 8 clinics, 63 child day care centres, 11 Post Offices, and its own fruit and vegetable market. There were 2300 registered companies that belonged to black businessmen, about 1000 private taxi companies. 3% of the 50,000 vehicle owners in 1978 were Mercedes Benz owners. Soweto alone had more cars, taxis, schools, churches and sport facilities than most independent countries in AfricaIt's still a relatively raw wound if you talk to certain people about it and I couldn't imagine how things could be for South Africans, so personally I tried to keep Politics and Rugby apart here.
My late Grandfather was at the match and up until I last spoke to him he felt the right result was 'played out' on that day. He did get out of Rugby Park bloody quickly after it was called off though.
It is absolutely no way down playing the Wallabies and the rivalry between Wllabies/ABs Shiggins, and as I have said some younger posters may have the ANZAC rivalry ahead, but most real rugby people who have followed the game for awhile would consider SA the main rival. Maybe as Paarl says you may never understand.Yeh great idea. I don't even know how South Africa are second ATM. The wallabies have had the meat over them for quite a while now. Surly the Anzac rivalry is much bigger then the saffas.
Was it the ABs vs wales?, when after a try (or game) the crowd were singing 'jolly good fellow' or something. In THOSE days I doubt there were fantastic numbers of kiwis following the team (a la the lions) so the conclusion is that the opposition crowd were singing the praises of the touring team, a wonderful moment (which puts the modern style of booing a player into perspective)
Of course, me being basically ignorant of rugby history, I get the commentator Stu Wilson mixed up with the player in THAT tackle from Gregan!
He bagged the aussies from doing the rounds with the bled when they won it, heck I want to see the wobs do THREE laps next year when we win it back!
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terry, haven't watched doco, but singing for he's a jolly good fellow was probably in Barbarians game, it was Wilson Whineray's last game as All Black skipper and he had just scored a try in the famous willie away movement named after him (I think). An aside if I recall rightly only points scored for baabaas that day was by one of ABs, as they used to invite one of them to play for them.......different days indeed!
As for Stu Wilson bagging Aussie for doing laps, once again in those days it was seen as a bit soccerish, and a winning team should just humbly accept cup and leave field, hell if anyone scored a try a pat on back was considered about as emotive as you should get
If the title of the thread was who do I most not like to see the AB's beaten by..
Enlgand.