Sacha Feinberg-Mngomezulu lights up South Africa’s nine-try rout of Japan

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A dark, wet evening in Brent is a long way from the sun and sea of Brighton. And, boy, there were not many echoes here of rugby’s greatest upset – quite possibly sport’s – bar the names of the teams and the inimitable fellow sitting in Japan’s coaching box, Eddie Jones. South Africa were 43-point favourites in 2015 and a mere 37 this time, but the reality of lopsided rugby was all too formidably asserted.

Instead it was Wembley that echoed, the lower tier around two-thirds full. South Africa, nine of whose squad play club rugby in Japan, wanted to organise this run-out to bring together their squad from around the world before the big one next weekend against France. As an exercise it worked well enough, the Springboks utterly dominant from start to finish, notching up nine tries in the process.

South Africa are indisputably the best team in the world at the moment while Japan are some way shy of where they were 10 years ago. Michael Leitch the talisman of 2015, is still there in the back row, aged 37. At full-back, Japan fielded Yoshitaka Yazaki, an amateur, who went over for Japan’s solitary try, 10 minutes or so after the break, a tap and dart from a penalty during a rare phase of Japanese pressure. Alas, they were 33-0 down at that point.

But that was it for romance. South Africa opened with a standard lineout and drive for their first try after three minutes, finished by their captain, Siya Kolisi. Then up stepped the latest star of South African rugby.

Let us not reach for any hyperboles just yet. Sacha Feinberg-Mngomezulu has been mentioned in the same breath as Dan Carter more than a few times, but we will settle for saying he is really quite good. He took the record for points in a Test match earlier in the year, with 37 against as formidable an opponent as Argentina, so was always likely to look comfortable against Japan.

He weighed in with two tries, both individualist and brilliant, not dissimilar to You Know Who, who was the same age, 23, when he turned in a performance for the ages against the Lions in 2005. Certainly, this bears no comparison to that masterclass, but, having converted Kolisi’s try, he followed up his own up-and-under to score South Africa’s second 10 minutes later, before showing off his running skills for another five minutes after that.

South Africa’s Wilco Louw celebrates scoring a try against Japan.
Wilco Louw is swamped by teammates after scoring South Africa’s fifth try. Photograph: Cat Goryn/Action Images/Reuters

Running on an arc, he dummied inside Dylan Riley and beat the grasping Jack Cornelsen to canter to the posts in imperious style. All right, this was a friendly against overpowered opposition, but he will be around for some time. And it is not as if they don’t already have Handré Pollard, sitting in the stands for this. The Springboks’ depth is the envy of the world.

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South Africa Kolbe; Hooker (Reinach 71), Kriel, De Allende, Arendse; Feinberg-Mngomezulu (Libbok 54), Reinach (G Williams 54); Nche (Steenekamp 19), Marx (Grobbelaar 45), Porthen (Louw 45), Snyman, De Jager (Nortje 69), Kolisi (capt; Esterhuizen 45), Mostert, Wiese (Smith 45)

Tries Kolisi, Feinberg-Mngomezulu 2, penalty, Louw, Arendse 2, Esterhuizen, Kriel Cons Mngomezulu 3, Libbok 4

Japan Yazaki; Ishida, Riley, Lawrence (Costley 54), Osada; Lee (Greene 69), Fujiwara (Fukuda 66); Kobayashi (Iwaihara 65), Sato (Hirao 66), Takeuchi (Tamefusa 65), Cornelsen, Dearns (capt). Gunter, Shimokawa (Paul 62), Leitch (Makisi 48)

Yellow cards Takeuchi 36, Gunter 46
Try Yazaki Con Lee

Referee Eoghan Cross (Ireland)

Att 23,243

The new term these days is “hybrid player”, and these two coaches are just the type to peddle its use. Japan had Tiennan Costley on their bench, a back-row forward who came on as a wing. But South Africa boast the prototype in Kwagga Smith. Now they add to their armoury André Esterhuizen, until recently Quins’ beloved giant in the centre. He came on to play in the back row – seems only natural – and thought he had one try from a lineout, which was chalked off, before powering over round the fringes for another, which stood.

That was South Africa’s seventh. Either side of it, Kurt-Lee Arendse, one of who knows how many electric runners the Springboks have at their disposal, scored a brace. He picked up when Yazaki spilled an up-and-under and coasted home, before a Cheslin Kolbe – there’s another one – break put him over for his second.

Both sides enjoyed a lap of the pitch afterwards. But the match itself will not live on like its more famous iteration 10 years ago.

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