Wynona Louw's piece takes direct aim at the Welsh media and fan response to Luke Morgan's post-try dive on Ethan Hooker in the Sharks' narrow loss to Ospreys. The argument is straightforward: South African outrage is entirely justified. Morgan landed on Hooker with no arms and an elbow into his back after Hooker had dotted down — leaving him with a dislocated shoulder and a likely extended absence heading into the international season. The Sharks have since formally requested a citing investigation and submitted medical documentation.
What sharpens Louw's frustration is Morgan's unapologetic response on social media — deleted but not before being screenshotted — in which he argued the tackle was legal because the ball hadn't been grounded yet. Welsh fans piled on in a WalesOnline comments section, framing South African anger as sour grapes and dragging in decades-old accusations of Bok cynicism. Louw isn't having it. The piece is a clean rebuttal of whataboutery, and makes the case that the citing commissioner should do what the TMO didn't: actually look at what Morgan did.