1995 World Cup winner Japie Mulder says he never imagined his daughter would take up rugby, but has expressed pride in her decision to play the game.
Japie Mulder's daughter follows father onto the rugby field
Japie Mulder, part of South Africa's 1995 World Cup-winning squad, says he never envisaged his daughter following him into rugby but is proud she has done so. No further details are currently available.
Blackadder sees overseas stints as inevitable — but warns NZ against following Rassie's open-door model
Blackadder predicts overseas stints will become standard between World Cups but argues NZ should adopt a Giteau-style caps threshold rather than follow South Africa's unrestricted eligibility model.
Lions launch 'Beyond29' project to explore tours outside traditional SANZAAR rotation
The British and Irish Lions have launched a formal 'Beyond29' project to investigate touring destinations and commercial models outside their traditional South Africa, Australia and New Zealand rotation. France, Japan and the Americas are among the territories being assessed, with consultancies asked to evaluate host nation allocation models including scrapping or extending the current 12-year cycle. The move is driven by an acknowledgement that the existing rotation may be approaching its commercial ceiling.
Springbok front-rowers break silence on brutal 2019 World Cup camp behind viral photo
Three Springbok front-rowers have opened up about the punishing pre-2019 World Cup training camp behind a viral photo that sparked unfounded doping accusations, calling the experience 'madness'. The players' accounts shed light on the physical preparation that preceded South Africa's World Cup victory in Japan.
Why NZ's talent bleed between World Cups is here to stay
Todd Blackadder says NZR can't realistically stop its stars chasing overseas money between World Cups — and the implications for southern hemisphere rugby are significant.
The 2019 Pre-RWC Camp That Sparked Doping Accusations Was Even More Brutal Than It Looked
Kitshoff, Mbonambi, and Nyakane revisit the 2019 pre-RWC camp that sparked doping accusations — shedding light on just how brutal it really was, and why they believe it forged the win-obsessed culture behind the Boks' back-to-back titles.