CAPE TOWN – When everything is on the line, true character is revealed. After a grueling start to the IIHF Division III Group A World Championship—featuring a heartbreaking overtime loss, a tough battle against Thailand, and an unrelenting fixture against group favorites Türkiye—the South African national team arrived at the Grand West Casino Ice Station on Thursday night with one simple, uncompromising objective: survival.
In a match defined by a blistering start, a nerve-wracking collapse, and a heroic third-period redemption, the Rhinos secured a monumental 5-3 victory over Turkmenistan, keeping their Division III Group A hopes alive in front of a roaring home crowd.
A Dream Start Turns into a Dogfight
Knowing that a loss would all but guarantee relegation, the Rhinos exploded out of the gates. The home crowd was sent into an absolute frenzy just 37 seconds after the puck drop when Luke Carelse, assisted by Captain Uthman Samaai and Jean-Michel van Doesburgh, slotted home the opening goal.
The momentum was entirely South African. Jacob Bate doubled the lead at the 11:51 mark, and less than two minutes later, Duvan van der Merwe made it 3-0. It seemed the Rhinos were cruising toward a comfortable, much-needed victory.
However, Turkmenistan, fighting their own desperate relegation battle, refused to roll over. A late first-period powerplay goal from Dovrangeldi Bayjayev gave the visitors life. In the second period, the South African defense began to fracture under sustained pressure. Bayjayev netted his second of the night, and just a minute later, Novruz Bayhanov found the equalizer.
Suddenly, a 3-0 lead had evaporated into a 3-3 deadlock heading into the second intermission. The tension inside the Ice Station was palpable.
Deep Chats and Third Period Heroics
In the locker room, with twenty minutes left to save their tournament, the Rhinos had to dig deep.
“Oh, now you’re getting into the deep conversations,” goaltender Ryan Boyd reflected after the match. “We were just talking about how much we want this and just talking about the hunger that we need to strive and get these kinds of results. It was a lot of deep chats.”
Defenseman Dion Phakathi, who was named Player of the Match for his towering presence on the blue line, echoed the sentiment. “The only anthem we wanted to hear was our anthem. It’s just a matter of time. We knew that we had to respect ourselves, respect each other. We’ve worked 12 months for this, and this is what it’s come to.”
Samaai Strikes Late as Boyd Shuts the Door
The third period was a war of attrition. Turkmenistan threw everything at the South African net, but goaltender Ryan Boyd delivered a masterclass between the pipes. Facing a staggering 45 shots on the night, Boyd made 42 crucial saves (a 93.33% save percentage), anchoring the defense when they needed him most.
“I don’t really have words to describe it; honestly, it feels extraordinary,” Boyd said of his performance. “It comes down to communication, but it also comes down to just pure grit. Backing these boys is just something else. We have a team full of passion.”
That passion finally broke the deadlock with just over a minute left in regulation. At 58:55, Captain Uthman Samaai found the back of the net off an assist from Denzil Verwey, blowing the roof off the Ice Station. Desperate to equalize, Turkmenistan pulled goaltender Keremli Charyyev, but Samaai punished the gamble, securing the game with an empty-net goal at 59:45 to finalize the 5-3 victory.
Key Match Stats:
- Shots on Goal: Turkmenistan 45 – 37 South Africa
- Standout Performer (RSA): Uthman Samaai (2 Goals, 1 Assist)
- Goaltending: Ryan Boyd (RSA) saved 42 of 45 shots (93.33 SV%).
“This is for South Africa”
For a team that has endured a brutal schedule, the victory was pure catharsis.
“It had to happen at some point,” an emotional Phakathi said post-match. “Today we had like double the people in the stands. So we knew from warm-up that we couldn’t disappoint. It’s not a one-man sport, but I’m grateful that I got to deliver when it mattered the most. To hear your national anthem at the end… there’s absolutely nothing better. I feel like out of everything, this matters more than my life at the moment. This is for South Africa.”
With relegation fears temporarily eased, the Rhinos now have a day to recover before closing out their World Championship campaign on tonight against a formidable Bosnia and Herzegovina side. But for now, the ice belongs to South Africa.
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