JOHANNESBURG — South Africa Women delivered a masterclass in first-half execution to secure a historic 34-21 victory over the USA Women’s Eagles at Ellis Park on Saturday afternoon. The stunning result marks South Africa’s first win over the Americans in 15 years, snapping a drought that dates back to 2011.
Head coach Swys de Bruin’s charges flew out of the blocks, marrying brutal physicality with set-piece innovation to completely suffocate the visitors in the opening 40 minutes.
A green wall of defence forced numerous early errors from the USA, allowing South Africa to set up camp in enemy territory. The pressure paid off in just the sixth minute when a dominant scrum and a powerful carry from Vainah Ubisi opened up space for outside centre Ayanda Malinga to tear up the left wing and cross the whitewash.
From there, the floodgates opened. Unam Tose sliced through for a second try in the 12th minute, followed closely by a patient finish from Babalwa Latsha midway through the half. The visitors simply had no answer for South Africa’s relentless phase play and ingenuity, highlighted by clever two-person lineouts and aggressive mauling straight off the scrum.
Logan Welman, entering the match with only three caps to her name, proved to be a revelation. The young number eight powered over for a blistering brace of tries from attacking scrums in the final 10 minutes of the first half, sending South Africa into the sheds with an imposing 29-0 lead.
The hosts picked up exactly where they left off immediately after the restart. Following a period of sustained pressure, the standout Ubisi battered her way over the line to push the advantage to a staggering 34-0.
However, the intensity eventually caught up with the home side. A slew of unforced errors, substitutions, and creeping indiscipline allowed the Eagles a way back into the contest. Finding their rhythm around the hour mark, the USA finally breached the South African line through a Freda Tafuna crash-ball.
Momentum shifted further as debutant Ashley Cowdrey scored next to the posts following a line break by Tessa Hann. With four minutes remaining, Elizabeth Cook wormed her way over from a series of pick-and-drives, cutting the final deficit to 13 points.
While a messy final quarter and a rising penalty count will give De Bruin’s coaching staff plenty to review ahead of their second Test next week at Loftus Versfeld, the sheer brilliance of their first-half execution ensured this famous victory was never truly in doubt.
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