'Quite magical' Blitzboks

Neil Powell believes that avoiding injuries will be key for the Blitzboks in their bid to defend their Cape Town Sevens title. BackpagePix

Neil Powell believes that avoiding injuries will be key for the Blitzboks in their bid to defend their Cape Town Sevens title. BackpagePix

Published Dec 5, 2016

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Cape Town - He scored 11 tries to win the player-of-the-tournament award, but Seabelo Senatla credits his “magical” Blitzbok teammates for much of his success in winning the Dubai Sevens title.

The Springbok Sevens trounced Olympic champions Fiji 26-14 with an intense mix of vigorous defence and deadly attack as they besieged the islanders into mistakes and took their own chances to run in four tries to two.

Senatla, who was picked in the Dubai Dream Team along with Werner Kok, grabbed the final touchdown following a kick ahead by Rosko Specman to finish things off in style, and will look to complete his Sevens duties in the same manner at the Cape Town Sevens this weekend before joining the Stormers for Super Rugby.

“It’s quite incredible to play with the guys that I do - they’re quite magical. And as a flyer, that’s all you need people to put you into space, and we’re playing to a plan. So, hats off to the boys as they always putting me in space and doing the hard work on my inside to make sure that I have space on the outside,” the World Sevens Player of the Year said.

Springbok Sevens keen to continue Dubai form in Cape Town says @snymanphilip https://t.co/phFBHksABy @SteinhoffRugby @CapeTown7s #BlitzBOOM pic.twitter.com/h8oHGCJt8T

— Springbok Sevens (@Blitzboks) December 4, 2016

“It’s always nice to get one over Fiji as we knew we had the potential at the Olympics.

“We all know that it’s a whole lot of pressure, especially after winning three or four times in a row at your home tournament. But we take it as it comes - we all know that putting on the Springbok jumper is massive pressure, but we try to make everything internal. We know if we can do all the small things well, everything will blossom for us (in Cape Town).”

Senatla won the World Player award after scoring 66 tries and starring at the Rio Olympics, before a wrist injury picked up in the quarter-final against Australia ruled him out of the rest of the tournament.

Perhaps the hurt of ending with a bronze medal instead of gold inspired the Blitzboks in Dubai, and the 23-year-old speedster is pushing himself further too. “That was a pretty big honour for me, to be the World Player of the Year. But I knew that coming to the new season, nothing that I did (before) was going to help me,” he said.

Welcome back to our SA Rugby Sevens Academy team! Well done winning silver in Dubai @Steinhoffrugby pic.twitter.com/EWu3cHqfJr

— Springbok Sevens (@Blitzboks) December 4, 2016

“For me, it was all about starting over and building the foundation of doing hard work for the team. We are comfortable with being uncomfortable, and it was all about starting again, and not clinging on to what happened last season.”

The Blitzboks have been drawn in a tough Pool A with Australia, USA and Russia for South Africa’s home leg on Saturday and Sunday at the Cape Town Stadium.

Coach Neil Powell says the Dubai triumph over Fiji will help “create the belief that we can beat them on any day”, and added that avoiding injuries will be vital in trying to defend their Cape Town Sevens title.

“Credit to the guys for sticking to the game plan - they implemented exactly what we asked of them - and the result came by itself,” he said. “They can only really produce offloads and be dangerous if they get momentum. We tried to be in their faces and take their space away, and the guys really did that well and almost kept them playing backwards all the time.

The Blitzboks arrived back home early Sunday evening. The 2016 @dubai7s Champions the first into the city ahead of the @capetown7s .

A video posted by SA Rugby (@bokrugby) on Dec 4, 2016 at 11:14am PST

“We had quite a bit of success against Fiji last season as well, beating them three times and losing twice. It’s key for us to keep putting one over Fiji and create the belief that we can beat them on any day and at any time.

“(But) Nothing that we did in this (Dubai) tournament will help us in Cape Town. We need to put down the foundation again and build the momentum, and hopefully finish it off on day two. And we hope to go through that tournament without injuries, like we did here.”

Cape Argus

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