/>

Rugby World Cup 2019: South Africa hammers Canada to make quarters

Cobus Reinach scored a hat-trick inside 20 minutes as South Africa thumped Canada 66-7 to reach the quarterfinals at the 2019 Rugby World Cup.

Published : Oct 08, 2019 19:06 IST

South Africa thrashed Canada 66-7 to book its place in the Rugby World Cup 2019 quarterfinals in style.
South Africa thrashed Canada 66-7 to book its place in the Rugby World Cup 2019 quarterfinals in style.
lightbox-info

South Africa thrashed Canada 66-7 to book its place in the Rugby World Cup 2019 quarterfinals in style.

South Africa delivered a statement of intent as it thrashed Canada 66-7 to book its place in the Rugby World Cup 2019 quarterfinals in style.

Rassie Erasmus insisted there would be no drop off in quality for his Springboks side despite a raft of changes, and his expectations were met as South Africa ran riot in Kobe.

READ| Rugby World Cup 2019: France 23-21 Tonga

An 11th-minute hat-trick by Cobus Reinach - the earliest in World Cup history - was the highlight of a sensational first-half performance, with the Springboks' evening made easier when Canada had Josh Larsen sent off as South Africa held a 47-0 lead at half-time.

Matt Heaton grabbed a consolation as Canada managed to stem the green-and-gold tide despite its numerical disadvantage in the second half, though South Africa still capped off a successful Pool B campaign.

South Africa started as it meant to go on, RG Snyman's breakthrough paving the way for Damian De Allende, one of two players to retain their place for the Springboks, to barge over in the third minute, with Elton Jantjies adding the extras.

S'Busiso Nkosi's wicked turn of pace did for Canada's defence, before Reinach displayed brilliant skill to latch onto his own kick and race over for a third Springboks try with less than 10 minutes played.

Reinach dived in for a second moments later, following another Snyman break, and he became the fifth South African player to score a World Cup hat-trick when he burst in from the right in the 20th minute.

South Africa's scrum-half turned provider for his team's sixth try, powering away to find De Allende, whose quick pass was pounced on by Warrick Gelant.

Canada's misery was compounded before the break - substitute Larsen seeing red for an illegal shoulder charge just short of South Africa's line - before Frans Steyn, a World Cup winner in 2007, went over following an interception on the stroke of half-time.

Against the odds, Canada got on the scoresheet six minutes after the restart, Heaton bundling over to restore some pride.

Veteran Schalk Brits nosed South Africa above 50, though his match - potentially his final Springboks appearance - was ended through injury soon after.

Damian Willemse strolled in for his first international try with 14 minutes to go and Frans Malherbe rounded off a supreme display as South Africa moved top of Pool B.

ALSO READ| Rugby World Cup 2019: New Zealand 71-9 Namibia

Reinach runs riot

The scrum-half surely did enough to secure his place in Erasmus' side for the quarterfinals with an exhilarating individual display.

His first try was the pick of the bunch as, having picked a gap in Canada's ragged line, the 29-year-old lobbed a perfect kick over the last defender before taking it on the bounce and cruising over next to the posts.

Erasmus' back-up brigade stakes its claim

South Africa's coach had no concerns about trusting his fringe players for Tuesday's encounter and his faith was rewarded in emphatic fashion.

While the Springboks will be presented with a much tougher opponent in the last eight, Erasmus will have plenty of food for thought when it comes to his team selection.

 

What's next?

South Africa's victory will not be enough to see them top Pool B if, as expected, New Zealand beat Italy on Saturday, though it is still up in the air as to whether it will be Japan, Ireland or Scotland which awaits the Springboks in the last eight.

Canada ends its campaign against Namibia on Sunday.

Sign in to unlock all user benefits
  • Get notified on top games and events
  • Save stories to read later
  • Access to comment on every story
  • Sign up / manage to our newsletters with a single click
  • Get notified by email for early bird access to discounts & offers to our products
Sign in

Comments

Comments have to be in English, and in full sentences. They cannot be abusive or personal. Please abide to our community guidelines for posting your comment