Jean de Villiers, second from right, ran through Australia's defence for a pair of tries as South Africa rallied to defeat the Wallabies in their Rugby Championship 2match at Newlands Stadium in Cape Town, South Africa on September 27, 2014. NIC BOTHMA / EPA
Jean de Villiers, second from right, ran through Australia's defence for a pair of tries as South Africa rallied to defeat the Wallabies in their Rugby Championship 2match at Newlands Stadium in Cape Show more

Bonus-point win for South Africa thanks to late burst



CAPE TOWN // South Africa captain Jean de Villiers hailed his side’s composure in the last 10 minutes as they scored three late tries to defeat Australia 28-10 on Saturday at Newlands stadium in Cape Town.

Centre De Villiers crossed the try-line twice as the Springboks turned a 10-5 half-time deficit into an ultimately convincing, bonus-point victory.

It was a hard scoreline for the Wallabies to accept as they led 10-8 with 10 minutes left only to fade as De Villiers twice and replacement fly-half Patrick Lambie scored tries.

Victory moved South Africa within one point of New Zealand, who were playing Argentina last night at La Plata.

It was the seventh consecutive Australian loss at Newlands stadium since winning 26-3 in 1992.

“We never lost our belief and the final 10 minutes was unbelievable,” said De Villiers. “I don’t score two tries in a game very often so I will take them.

“I was impressed with the composure of the side against a top-quality Australian team and very proud of the performance.”

Wallabies skipper and flanker Michael Hooper said: “After working so hard for 70 minutes we were not good enough in the end.

“Our goal was to keep the crowd quiet and we succeeded for a long time, but it’s back to the drawing board now before facing Argentina next weekend.”

The Springboks spent the first three minutes in a 17-phase assault against the Wallabies before surrendering possession.

When South Africa went ahead on 12 minutes, it was through a driving maul much favoured by the team in green.

A line-out was won and a surge took the ball over the try-line with flanker Marcell Coetzee touching down.

Fly-half Handre Pollard failed to convert.

Scrum-half Francois Hougaard made two brave tackles to halt the Wallabies before the visitors got on the scoreboard after 25 minutes when fly-half Bernard Foley potted a penalty.

Australia forged ahead just a minute later as centre Tevita Kuridrani broke clear in midfield and set up right-wing Adam Ashley-Cooper to dive over in the corner. Foley converted and Australia were 10-5 ahead as they sought a season double over South Africa having won 24-23 in Perth this month.

Left-wing Bryan Habana, who suffered a blow to the head in the build-up to the Wallabies’ try, was forced to retire at half-time with fellow veteran JP Pietersen coming on.

Pollard kicked a penalty four minutes into the second half after a ruck offence and just two points separated the teams.

South Africa made an anticipated change on 55 minutes with veteran flanker Schalk Burger coming off the bench to replace debutant Teboho “Oupa” Mohojo.

Concerns about Mohojo being rusty having last played two months ago proved unfounded as he made a telling contribution.

In an increasingly attritional battle, the Springboks had a chance to take the lead just past the hour mark but Lambie surprisingly missed a penalty kick.

The reserve fly-half atoned 10 minutes from time by dropping a goal to reward a 29-phase surge that featured more outstanding Australian defending. Within two minutes a one-point lead stretched to six as De Villiers completed a dazzling attack by dotting down for a try.

Centre Jan Serfontein broke, right-wing Cornal Hendricks carried the move forward by weaving in and out, and replacement hooker Bismarck du Plessis delivered the scoring pass.

Further tries from Lambie and De Villiers, one of which Lambie converted, completed a stirring finish by the home team.

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