1972 England rugby union tour of South Africa

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1972 England rugby union tour of South Africa
Summary
P W D L
Total
07 06 01 00
Test match
01 01 00 00
Opponent
P W D L
 South Africa
1 1 0 0

This first tour undertaken by England to South Africa was organised with a demanding schedule, although with only one Test Match. Within two weeks and three days, seven matches were to be played, the first four at sea level, and the final three, including the Test Match, at the altitude in the highveld with only two days to acclimatise before a demanding fixture against Northern Transvaal. From the outset, under captain John Pullin and the management of Alec Lewis and John Elders, there was a buoyant and optimistic spirit in the squad, as if they were determined to erase the memories of the last few seasons of undistinguished English performances.[citation needed]

Apartheid backdrop and controversy

The tour took place against the backdrop of widespread condemnation of the apartheid regime. Under pressure from other African nations, the International Olympic Committee had excluded South Africa from competing in the Summer Games since 1964, and there had also been protests against visiting sporting teams from South Africa.

In 1971, an

Olympics, the FIFA World Cup, test cricket, and a host of other sports.[1]

There were protests against the 1972 England rugby tour, including a blockade of their hotel to try to prevent them leaving, in which 14 people were arrested.[2]

Matches

Scores and results list England's points tally first.
Opposing Team For Against Date Venue Status
Natal 19 0 17 May 1972 Durban Tour match
Western Province
9 6 20 May 1972 Cape Town Tour match
SA Rugby Fed XV 11 6 22 May 1972 Cape Town Tour match
SA Leopards
36 3 24 May 1972
Port Elizabeth
Tour match
Northern Transvaal 13 13 27 May 1972 Pretoria Tour match
Giqualand West
60 21 30 May 1972 Kimberley Tour match
South Africa 18 9 3 June 1972 Ellis Park, Johannesburg Test Match

Test Match

Piet Greyling led a combination of Springboks who seemed hopelessly unsure of themselves. Dawie Snyman collected all the South African points with three penalties while England, with unspectacular competence, grabbed every scoring chance. Fullback Sam Doble converted a try by wing Alan Morley and also booted four penalties.[3]

3 June 1972
South Africa 9–18 England
Pen: Snyman 3[4]Try: Morley
Con: Doble
Pen: Doble 4
Ellis Park, Johannesburg
Referee: Justus Moolman (South Africa)
South Africa England
Ray Carlson FB 15 FB Sam Doble
Syd Nomis W 14 W Alan Morley
Tonie Roux C 13 C Jeremy Janion
Joggie Jansen C 12 C Peter Preece
Gert Muller W 11 W Peter Knight
Dawie Snyman FH 10 FH Alan Old
Joggie Viljoen SH 9 SH Jan Webster
Albie Bates N8 8 N8 Andy Ripley
Jan Ellis F 7 F John Watkins
(capt.) Piet Greyling F 6 F Tony Neary
John Williams
L 5 L Chris Ralston
Piet du Plessis L 4 L Peter Larter
Sakkie Sauermann P 3 P Mike Burton
Piston van Wyk H 2 H John Pullin (capt.)
Niek Bezuidenhout P 1 P Stack Stevens
Replacements
Coaches
Johan Claassen South Africa England John Elders

Touring party

Full Backs

  • Moseley
    ) No caps
  • David Whibley (Leicester) No caps

Three-Quarters

Half-Backs

Forwards

See also

References

  1. ^ Pg 99, Douglas Booth, The Race Game: Sport and Politics in South Africa, 1998.
  2. ^ "Anti-Apartheid protesters' historic convictions overturned by Crown Court". Criminal Cases Review Commission. 17 January 2023. Retrieved 28 June 2023.
  3. OCLC 105375255
    .
  4. .