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Here comes trouble — big trouble — as in, “Come in Houston we have a problem.”

You remember the Sports Indaba in Durban three weeks ago and then the brouhaha about the Springbok and who owns the trademark, which caught SA Rugby napping and which gave rise to such high-pitched shrill screaming from both sides?

The screaming might have died down, but there is a sequel to all of this and it looks like it is going to be a series, a horror series of note, unless there is a rapid intervention.

In the yellow corner I see the government girding their loins, saying “the end of the Bok is nigh” and going for it big time, and in the “my-bloed-is-groen” corner I see a deer caught in the headlights on a highway.

On Friday, the Ministry of Sport pumped out a document of the resolutions taken at the Sports Indaba. (sport_indaba_report_11.pdf.)

The edict embedded in the document that has struck a cord and will be the siren call is:

“A single emblem must be used by all national teams on the left-hand side of the shirt/jersey. This is the King Protea.

“The public and sports people should be educated to do away with anything that symbolises oppression and apartheid.
Sascoc will inform all national federations accordingly within a week.

“The Springbok emblem used by SA Rugby, being a symbol of apartheid and oppression, must be removed with immediate effect.

“Due recognition is given to the allowance made for the period surrounding the 1995 Rugby World Cup. However, it is no longer supported by the South African masses as a unifying symbol.

“Sascoc will engage with SA Rugby to effect the change.

“The national football teams will also abide by the regulation that only the King Protea will be worn on the left-hand side of the shirt/jersey.

“Both Safa and SA Rugby may choose to have their own logo worn on the right-hand side. Sascoc will engage with Safa in this regard”.

You would have thought that SA Rugby would have pre-empted debate and discussion with an initiative and rolled out a scientific research study that would be a publicly transparent participation process. A referendum of sorts, but a research study that would factor out the emotion and hysteria.

They didn’t, so having experience in previously changing the airline of the old South Africa (SAA & SAL), to the flag-carrier of the new South Africa (South African Airways), I called upon Research Surveys — the agency that measured the old airline identity of SAA, to three new South African Airways variations of a new identity against three global competitors — and to respond with a proposal to do this quickly.

Mark Molenaar of TNS Research Surveys responded in two days with a cracker-jack proposal ready to hit the market and have results in a few weeks to once and for all establish the value of, or toxicity of, the Springbok. None of this cacophony of who can shout the loudest or produce the most expensive phalanx of attorneys, just a pure indication of South African sentiment from the people, represented by 1 000 interviews.

What’s the issue?
One of the most newsworthy topics at the moment is the Springbok emblem. It has been proposed to do away with it, causing huge uproar, especially among the rugby fraternity. The 102-year-old Springbok emblem is the symbol of South African rugby and has a lot of heritage, commercial value and emotion attached to it.

While arguments have been put forward that the emblem should be replaced with the Protea in order to have one consistent emblem across all sporting codes, the main question about the emblem is really whether it is divisive, representing our apartheid past, and thus perpetuating anger and resentment among some groups of the population (and hence, an obstacle to the growth and development of rugby in SA according to the vision of SA Rugby) … or whether it is unifying, symbolising our country’s ability to move beyond the challenges of the past in the spirit of a new an “winning” nation (such as demonstrated in the 1995 and 2007 Rugby World Cup victories).

The ANC has indicated that it will first consider the views of the South African public before making a decision on the emblem, and the Research Surveys proposal sets out to provide such a measure.

In considering people’s views, there are a number of stakeholder groups whose views need to be considered:.
Rugby supporters — the views of supporters are very important as this is the stakeholder group who the Springbok emblem will matter to the most. They may have a lot of sentimental value and strong emotional attachment to the emblem.

The broader sports-watching public — it needs to be established whether the Springbok emblem and its connotations with the apartheid era is, in fact, a barrier for support for the game of rugby, especially among black sport followers.

Clubs, main sponsors of the Springboks such as Absa, Vodacom, Sasol, SAB and SuperSport, as well as the 14 rugby unions and their players, the government and SA Rugby’s president’s council — this is a diverse group of stakeholders, but all parties have a commercial or political stake in the Springbok emblem.

In addition to measuring views on the current Springbok emblem, research is required to test perceptions of an alternative, or updated emblem, and the role of the South African flag.

What’s our solution?
Due to the nature of the stakeholder groups of interest, two methodologies are proposed:

1. Quantitative research via face-to-face interviews:

In order to accurately measure sentiment towards the Springbok emblem, a large quantitative study is needed that covers different population and interest groups and is broadly representative of sport supporters in South Africa. It is therefore proposed that 1 000 face-to-face interviews are conducted with rugby supporters and the broader sports-watching public. The sample should be representative of the South African population that support sport by watching it on TV, watching the game live, following it on the radio or participating in sport itself. For purposes of this study it is not necessary to interview people with no interest in sport.

In the interests of costs and time, Research Surveys proposes limiting the study to major metropolitan areas. (This is, however, open to discussion with client.) Interviews will be conducted in the seven major metropolitan areas of South Africa including Johannesburg, Pretoria, Durban, Bloemfontein, Cape Town, East London and Port Elizabeth.

Respondents will be selected via random suburb sampling in order to ensure the race and other demographic profiles are representative of the population of interest. They propose an interview duration of a maximum of 20 minutes.

2. Qualitative research via in-depth telephonic interviews:

In order to get the views of the main sporting, commercial and political stakeholders relating to the Springbok emblem, Research Surveys proposes a qualitative approach whereby stakeholders can freely express their views, rather than just completing a questionnaire. Due to the geographical spread of individuals and given the urgency of this study it is proposed that in-depth telephonic interviews are conducted with individuals representing the clubs, 14 unions, players, main sponsors and government.

A discussion outline will be used to explore perceptions of the Springbok emblem and related issues, ensuring all issues of relevance to SA Rugby are covered in the discussion.

SA Rugby would be asked to provide assistance in getting cooperation to participate in the in-depth interviews.

All interviews will be conducted in English. They propose that the duration of the in-depths do not exceed 30 minutes each.

Draft questionnaire and discussion-guide design –proposed flow:

  • Screening questions including sports supported;
  • Spontaneous associations with certain sport types. This will be an open-ended question where respondents will be asked if anything in particular comes to mind when they think of the three main sports, rugby, cricket and soccer;
  • Reasons for not watching certain sports. Rugby, cricket and soccer will be included in order to disguise that we are interested in rugby in particular;
  • Various possible reasons for not watching each of these sports will be listed as well as an option
  • .

    You get the gist of how this goes to the market and the information is processed.

    Another idea for public participation, is to include a blank rugby jersey as an insert into four main national newspapers like the Mail & Guardian, Rapport, Sunday Times and Sowetan and ask readers to submit their version of a design for a rugby jersey for South Africa.

    The submissions received are just incredible and reveal a passion and commitment from the people that count. The fans.

    They become school projects, from the poorest of the poor to graduate school of business case studies and one receives thousands upon thousands of them, all willing to showcase their version of the national South African rugby Team. We did this for South African Airways and the response was overwhelming and enabled the people to “speak” out and showcase how they see their version of their team.

    There should be a national outpouring and demonstration of South Africans sentiment for their national rugby team and a public submission like this, proves beyond a questionable doubt, of what the country wants.

    The best of these submissions from the public can then be set up in a walk through exhibition stand by SA Rugby, that then goes on a road show to say twenty shopping malls around the country, for people to comment, approve or criticize the direction that their National Rugby Team has to go in the future. This is a broad based inclusive and transparent process that SA Rugby are obligated to take if they are serious about positioning themselves for the future.

    Now that I have shared all of this, so what? I also shared this with Oregan Hoskins, president of SA Rugby, on Thursday last week. Will he or won’t he launch this study?

    What this research survey is is a course of action that makes SA Rugby proactive and scientifically showcases South Africa’s feelings towards rugby, its national team and the Springbok, for whatever it represents.

    Whether SA Rugby goes with the suggestion or not, there is a sequel brewing for next week and the week after that, and this time it will be on the international stage.




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    23 Responses to “Bok emblem: here comes trouble”

    let us have a ‘tache as our emblem :-)

    (Report abuse)

    siyabonga ntshingila on November 2nd, 2008 at 9:17 pm

    While JZ can find legal advise to get him out of trouble and/or postpone any trouble for years at taxpayers cost, there should be enough legal brains in SA Rugby to challenge this one sided, divisive communique from a government in distress for some time (till after elections??).

    If SARU cannot find them, one of the prominent clubs could always consult mr Louis Luyt.

    What a pathetic way by the exiting and otherwise useless sports ministry to place their mark on SA sports.

    Electioneering strategy on a high note: the more we p..ss of the whites, the more black votes we will get????? This calls for widespread civil disobedience.

    Suggestion: put white nipple caps on your shirts.

    (Report abuse)

    BenzoL on November 2nd, 2008 at 10:44 pm

    If any “social scientist” thinks that a series of 1000 face-to-face interviews is QUANTITATIVE research for a country of 45 million, he or she is a complete blithering idiot.

    Especially if they also think that a series of phone interviews is, by contrast, qualitative research!

    Did they get their research “qualifications” in a lucky packet from a bush college?

    (Report abuse)

    Jon on November 3rd, 2008 at 5:35 am

    Jon- hard as it is to believe even the Gallup Polls in the US on Presidential elections use a sampling smaller than this and they have a population of 300 million.

    (Report abuse)

    Tony McKeever on November 3rd, 2008 at 7:01 am

    Sounds good… BUT as a Springbok supporter… if only ONE other South African REALLY and TRULY has a gripe against the Springbok badge…I’m for canning it ! Lets move on… don’t be afraid of evolution and expend the time and energy(+money) on greater priorities

    (Report abuse)

    thevoice on November 3rd, 2008 at 8:15 am

    I find it ironic that the springbok emblem is regarded as “being a symbol of apartheid and oppression”, since it has been around before the beginning or apartheid.

    In addition the springbok emlbem is owned by SARU, not the goverment, and has a huge commercial value.

    In addition, the protea simply does not inspire me, as a symbol. Surely something else could be proposed?

    And then lastly, if all teams are required to wear that boring protea, then please do away with ‘bafana bafana’ also. They must also be required to use the logo.

    (Report abuse)

    Janet on November 3rd, 2008 at 9:15 am

    Janet - A ‘for instance’ could be the Springbok used by 6SAI (the 6th South African Infantry Division) during apartheid - the 6SAI badge is a Springbok, and so were many other military units, commando’s, police regiments etc. Many of these fella’s were running around townships with Springboks emblazened ALL over themselves during a horrid period of our past… I’m sure you could see that SOME might have a TRUE problem with it … the SPRINGBOK represented nationhood in South Africa in a terrible time - it could offend people who see it as a reminder… rugby and its role in the history of South Africa, have little to do with it really - I’m a Springbok fan, but believe this is an opportunity ONCE AGAIN, to show we South Africans can do the right thing… we did it when WE voted the National Party out, we did it when WE pressured for the release of Nelson Mandela and all the other things others forget to give us some credit for…I love the Springbok, but its a great thing to sacrifice something you really care about for the sake of reconciliation and consensus… dump it and move on…called the pink petunia’s they’d still be OUR team, probably only with more in the OUR group !

    (Report abuse)

    thevoice on November 3rd, 2008 at 2:18 pm

    Make some springbok biltong so we can chew on it for a while longer .. eish! but then the bok is dead.

    Really what are the British and Irish Lions going to feed on - does anyone believe that the Lions are vegatarians?

    We do need a name that has a bit more omph than the protea. Imagine calling the Sharks the Dolphins like their cricket counterparts.

    (Report abuse)

    owen on November 3rd, 2008 at 5:34 pm

    Also do we keep the offensive colours green and gold?

    (Report abuse)

    owen on November 3rd, 2008 at 5:38 pm

    Don’t worry… looking at the political landscape at the minute… WHEN the ANC is booted out by the NEW (soon-to-be) ruling party, the PROTEA will get the bullet like the Springbok did… and we’ll go through this ALL over again… fortunately SA has an abundance of fauna and flora… lets go for a BIRD this time… and really give the ANC ‘the bird’–> New Zealand are the KIWI’s we can be the OSTRICHES… remember Zibby !!! Then when they’re OUT of parliment… A FISH !? The Mighty Mudsuckers ? An so-on… till we’re known as the Great Confused Chameleons !

    (Report abuse)

    thevoice on November 4th, 2008 at 8:17 am

    thevoice - it is best to look at the symbols of South Africa, in a clinical manner and then you will see that there is no conflict of interest, but cool calm rationale extolling the virtues of South Africa.

    Springbok - Blue Crane - Protea - Galjoen - Yellowwood all are our countries national symbols.

    Celebrate these and you celebrate the country South Africa and out the window goes any argument that even starts to hint at 1906, Paul Roos, apartheid, No6, 1995, 2007, divisive, unity, etc etc

    However, in the matter of the rugby Springbok there is just stupid dogmatic, stubborn, illogical arguments for and against.

    Here is snap run down of South Africa’s symbols:

    South Africa’s coat of arms, or state emblem, is the highest visual symbol of the state. Its central image is a secretary bird with uplifted wings, a sun rising above it. Below the bird is the protea, an indigenous South African flower, representing the aesthetic harmony of all cultures and the country flowering as a nation.
    The ears of wheat are emblems of the fertility of the land, while the tusks of the African elephant symbolise wisdom, steadfastness and strength.

    At the centre stands a shield signifying the protection of South Africans, above which are a spear and knobkierie. These assert the defence of peace rather than a posture of war.

    Within the shield are images of the Khoisan people, the first inhabitants of the land. The figures are derived from images on the Linton Stone, a world-famous example of South African rock art. The motto of the coat of arms - !ke e:/xarra//ke - is in the Khoisan language of the /Xam people, and means “diverse people unite”, or “people who are different joining together”.

    National animal

    The country’s national animal is the springbok, which also gives its name to the South African rugby team - fondly known as “the Boks”.
    The springbok (Antidorcas marsupialis) gets its common name from its characteristic jumping display - pronk in Afrikaans. The animal stands 75cm high and weigh about 40kg.

    Both sexes have horns, but those of the ram are thicker and rougher. The species has adapted to dry, barren areas and open grass plains, and so is found in the Free State, North West and Karoo up to the west coast.
    National bird

    The national bird of South Africa is the blue crane (Anthropoides paradisia), the distribution of which is almost entirely restricted to the country. Standing about a metre tall, the bird is a light blue-grey, with a long neck supporting a rather bulbous head, long legs and elegant wing plumes which sweep to the ground.
    Blue cranes lay their eggs in the bare veld, often close to water. They are common in the Karoo, but are also seen in the grasslands of KwaZulu-Natal and the highveld, usually in pairs or small family parties. Although usually quiet, the blue crane can emit a distinctive high-pitched and rattling croak which can be heard from some distance.

    National flower

    The giant or king protea (Protea cynaroides) is widely distributed in the south-western and southern areas of the Western Cape, from the Cedarberg up to just east of Grahamstown. South Africa’s national flower is the largest of the proteas, which make up an important part of the Cape Floral Region, a major global biodiversity hotspot and a Unesco World Heritage site. The proteas also give their name to South Africa’s national cricket team.

    National fish

    South Africa’s national fish is the galjoen (Coracinus capensis), which is only found along the South African coast. It keeps to mostly shallow water, often found in rough surf and sometimes right next to the shore, and is known to every angler as a game fighter. Near rocks, the colour of the galjoen is almost completely black, while in sandy areas the colour is silver-bronze.

    National tree

    The yellowwood family is ancient, having grown in this part of Africa for over 100-million years. The real yellowwood (Podocarpus latifolius), South Africa’s national tree, is found from Table Mountain, along the southern and eastern Cape coast, in the ravines of the Drakensberg up to the Soutpansberg and the Blouberg in Limpopo.
    In forests, the trees can grow up to 40m in height with the base of the trunk sometimes up to 3m in diameter. But trees that grow in unsheltered places such as mountain slopes are often short, bushy and gnarled. The bark of the real yellowwood is khaki-coloured to grey when it is old, deeply split and peels off in strips. The crown is relatively small in relation to its height and is often covered with grey lichen.

    And there you have it. Celebrate our country, via our sports, using the countries National Symbols.

    (Report abuse)

    Tony McKeever on November 4th, 2008 at 8:44 am

    One more thing - of all the South African rugby symbols from the Bulls, Falcons, Leopards, Pumas, Eagles, Elephants, Bulldogs, WP, Cavaliers, Griffons, Griquas, Cheetahs, Sharks to the Wildebeest, the Spears are South African rugby’s only entity with a symbol linked to the South African Coat of Arms and national symbols.

    (Report abuse)

    Tony McKeever on November 4th, 2008 at 8:54 am

    However, it is no longer supported by the South African masses as a unifying symbol.

    Which masses, i’d really like to meet these masses who keep approving everything in my absense

    (Report abuse)

    Mandrake on November 4th, 2008 at 2:13 pm

    Hmmm, what would another replacement

    A Rhino!!!

    shit no, because we’d have to vote on the Black Rhino or White Rhino. And then the Coloured Rhino would feel left out…and the chinese. and the indian

    This country is insane, but i love it anyway

    (Report abuse)

    Mandrake on November 4th, 2008 at 2:15 pm

    Mandrake - keep a cool head like your namesake.

    (Report abuse)

    Tony McKeever on November 4th, 2008 at 4:24 pm

    Hear, hear… a mad country, but a lovable one, none-the-less ! Nice homework Tony ! ;)

    (Report abuse)

    thevoice on November 4th, 2008 at 6:26 pm

    thevoice - next week Russian Roulette with a full chamber.

    (Report abuse)

    Tony McKeever on November 4th, 2008 at 10:30 pm

    Just a joke i heard Tony. Canned myself because you should have seen the facial expressions of the comedian.

    i just think this whole thing is a massive farce. Too much stupid last minute policies. Some might say i’m spluttering conspiracies but i think this is a whole lot of smoke-and-mirrors.

    Now lemme find my Springbok beermug and go do something useful.

    (Report abuse)

    Mandrake on November 5th, 2008 at 11:13 am

    Mandrake - fast forward to the 8 November - what a day for international rugby viewers - a potent line up - so start making yourself useful from Sat am with your Springbok beermug!

    (Report abuse)

    Tony McKeever on November 5th, 2008 at 11:28 am

    Tony, has anyone told our minister of sport and Hoskins that the springbok is part of our national symbols endorsed I presume by the ANC?

    (Report abuse)

    owen on November 6th, 2008 at 4:08 am

    Owen - my point exactly. As much as the Protea is a symbol, so is the Springbok - both National South African symbols.

    (Report abuse)

    Tony McKeever on November 6th, 2008 at 7:03 am

    A Lion in Springbok Clothing - from Scotland

    09 November 2008

    LIFE AT the top of the international game is not an easy one. No sooner have New Zealand left town than the Springboks pitch up to Murrayfield next weekend and, with just 28 players to choose from, Peter de Villiers couldn’t pick a second XV if he wanted to.

    South Africa’s first non-white coach took over from one of the country’s most successful and it is one of the oddities of international sport that Jake White, the man who led the Springboks to the ultimate prize in rugby, should be reduced to an advisory role with the University of Cape Town while Graham Henry, the man who led New Zealand to their earliest ever World Cup exit, remains in situ.

    “To be fair New Zealand had tried sacking coaches after the World Cup and it hasn’t worked,” says White. “They got rid of John Hart and they got rid of John Mitchell and it hadn’t helped their cause. I applaud the NZRFU for keeping Henry because it showed that they had learnt from their mistakes. Despite losing a whole raft of players to Europe – Carl Hayman, Byron Kelleher, Chris Jack – Henry bounced back and won the Tri- Nations.”

    Not that White has been taking things easy since that famous night in Paris. First of all he was fending off feelers from the likes of Ireland, Wales and Italy – “I wasn’t ready to go back to international rugby” – and secondly he was helping to write his biography, In Black And White: The Jake White Story.

    The book has been sitting atop the South Africa best sellers list for months now and deservedly so. It shines a welcome light into the murky world of South African rugby, where politics’ poisonous brew is always bubbling just below the surface. In the book, White calls the political interference he suffered “diabolical” but he seems to have mellowed a little in the intervening months and he now prefers more moderate language: “I would say that the circumstances of the South African coach are unique.”

    White claims to be apolitical but he must have the survival instincts of a cockroach because he was the first Springbok coach to last four whole seasons in the snake pit that is the South African Rugby Union. He is quite open about what he calls “transformation”, acknowledging that the days of an all-white South African team are long gone and boasting that he selected a non-white player in every position in the starting line up except fly-half.

    For all that, White is a traditionalist at heart, preferring the formal gold-trimmed Springbok blazer to a tracksuit on match days, and it is no surprise to hear that he vehemently disagrees with SARU’s move to downsize the famous Springbok emblem on the shirt and replace it with a King Protea flower.

    “You must understand that the Springbok was never a symbol of apartheid, it was a symbol of excellence. We even had people from the townships telling us this. England’s cricketers have a different badge to their rugby players, the All Blacks have their haka, Argentina are known as the Pumas, I don’t think it would look right to get rid of the Springbok emblem.”

    Whatever they are called, White’s former team have enjoyed something of a rollercoaster ride of late. De Villiers coached them to a win in New Zealand, something his predecessor never managed, but back-to-back losses on home soil saw the knives being sharpened for the new coach. His team’s response was an emphatic 53-8 hammering of the Wallabies which saw a welcome return to the sort of no-frills rugby that is indelibly associated with the Boks at their best.

    The new man had been accused of trying to play too much expansive stuff in the early games; De Villiers once promised that Springboks rugby would “never be conservative” while most people defined the Africans in exactly those terms. The players flexed their muscles, with Victor Matfield and skipper John Smit in particular giving pointed interviews about playing “direct rugby”.

    “Peter understandably wanted to stamp his own mark on the team when he took over and that is something that all coaches want to do,” says White, “but you have to be careful. You must never move away from your core strengths. Scotland have always been superb at rucking and New Zealand have always had running backs, especially with the influence of the islanders who have come into the side.

    “South Africa’s own strength is defence, we are one of the few sides that can win the game without the ball. This should not been seen as a negative, instead it’s a massive positive. I always said that defence would win the World Cup, that has been true for the last few tournaments and history has a way of repeating itself. You must never move too far from your core game.” It is a lesson that Frank Hadden should heed. This mantra was illustrated on White’s last visit to Murrayfield ahead of the World Cup. The biggest, beefiest Scottish team ever to take the field had spent long months in the gym and, after demolishing the Irish forwards, there was some hope of doing something similar to the Springboks in the final warm-up match. It was not to be as South Africa ran out easy winners while restricting the home team to one meagre penalty. It proved to White that his team were progressing along the right lines.

    Fast forward 14 months and the world champions are effectively in training for next year’s Lions tour. The team almost picks itself while the biggest problem is where to play the two wunderkinder of South African rugby. Frans Stayn started yesterday’s match against Wales on the substitutes’ bench while the extravagantly gifted Ruan Pienaar filled the No.10 shirt. In the past White has picked Pienaar in both halfback slots, on the wing and at full-back, the shirt his father Gysie filled for the Springboks, so what is Junior’s best position?

    “In a country like ours what you have to do is look where there are established players in place,” says White. “At scrum-half we have Ricky Januarie and Fourie du Preez, who may be the best scrum-half in the world. We have centres like Jean de Villiers and Jaque Fourie and wingers in JP Peterson and Bryan Habana. There are just two positions where we don’t have young established players, 10 and 15, so that is where these two should play. Look forward to the next World Cup and you could have Du Preez, Pienaar, De Villiers, Fourie, JP Peterson, Habana and Steyn. That’s not a bad back line. It’s a little like Chris Paterson. He has played at 10, 15 and 14 but if you want to be the best in the world you must settle on one position.”

    The question still remains, just where will the World Cup-winning coach end up? The immediate answer is bossing the Barbarians with his old friend and rival Eddie Jones when the invitation team plays against the Wallabies at Wembley on December 3. Jones set the precedent of taking up arms against his fellow countrymen when accepting employment from South Africa; might White do the same when the British and Irish Lions tour his own country next year?

    “I have made it clear that I am available to South African rugby to help in any way that I can, but I need to get back into professional rugby and I’d like to put it on the record that as a professional coach I have no problem with getting involved with the Lions.

    “Being the head coach of the Barbarians and perhaps getting involved with the Lions, that’s why you get into coaching and, if the opportunity comes along, I will have a look at it.”

    It is surely the sort of black and white offer that Ian McGeechan cannot refuse.

    Well Ian McGeehan has refused and Peter de Villiers and Jake White seem set to square off regarding the refusal of SA Rugby to allow 6 Springboks to play in a Barbarians game on the 3rd December.

    (Report abuse)

    Tony McKeever on November 10th, 2008 at 7:12 am

    Ah yes TM… wrong again the Bok still lives… much to you’re and your pals Stofile et al’s derision.

    And they, your pals from the EC that have titsed-up yet another RSA sports fiscal year, get to earn some more gravy from the ‘rights’ (ironic word that when forced) SARU has to pay to display the enforced Protea.

    Kudos!

    (Report abuse)

    JustAnotherBEEspiv on November 25th, 2008 at 9:36 am

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    Tony led the change in corporate identity of South African Airways from the airline of the old South Africa to the flag carrier of the new South Africa.
    Before that he was a competitive provincial sportsmen in swimming, diving, waterpolo, lifesaving and white water rafting.
    Rugby was played at Bishops, NW Cape, Maties, van der Stel, UCT, Hamiltons and False Bay.
    Tony singularly authored the blueprint for the establishment of Soccer City Stadium for the PSL which in 2010 hosted the opening and closing ceremonies of the FIFA World Cup and the Finals of the soccer showpiece.
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    By the time you read this, the Springboks would probably have landed in Johannesburg and would be holding a press conference at the OR Tambo Intercont...
    As you read this, Bakkies Botha is probably back in Pretoria leaving behind him New Zealand and the next three games of the Rugby World Cup, which end...
    Dan Carter was to have captained the All Blacks for the first time on Sunday. An honour bestowed on him as a Kiwi legend akin to that of teammate Rich...
    So now that we know Richie McCaw plays the bagpipes, and has Scottish heritage, the Rugby World Cup organisers are being put under pressure from all q...
    The Rugby World Cup commences tomorrow September 9 with the All Blacks vs Tonga match. The flood gates will open for all the 20 team games with 600 pl...
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