Blitzboks

Siviwe Soyizwapi of South Africa scores a try against Zimbabwe during day 1 of the 2018 HSBC Cape Town Sevens at Cape Town Stadium on 8 December 2018 Photo: Ryan Wilkisky/BackpagePix

Blitzboks skipper demands immediate response

Blitzboks captain Siviwe Soyizwapi admitted they had to take the criticism to heart and be honest with themselves.

Blitzboks

Siviwe Soyizwapi of South Africa scores a try against Zimbabwe during day 1 of the 2018 HSBC Cape Town Sevens at Cape Town Stadium on 8 December 2018 Photo: Ryan Wilkisky/BackpagePix

The highs and lows of Blitzboks’ life were illustrated last weekend at the conclusion of the Singapore Sevens, where the Blitzboks lost three consecutive matches after racking up a record streak of 36 wins.

Adding injury to insult the Blitzboks saw three team members ruled out of the tournament and this week’s Vancouver Sevens.

Critics have been quick to point to their winning streak does not include the scalps of Fiji or New Zealand, who were absent for the start of the 2022 World Rugby Sevens Series, but returned to action last weekend.

Blitzboks shoot themselves in the foot

Poor discipline also crippled the Blitzboks. They conceded six penalties in their match against USA, five against Fiji and seven against Argentina (with two yellow cards), in what seemed to be a baffling implosion of such a respected and applauded playing system.

Sevens Series
Siviwe Soyizwapi is tackled by Ngarohi McGarvey-Black during the World Rugby Sevens Series men’s final match between New Zealand and South Africa in Dubai. Photo: EPA/ALI HAIDER

Blitzboks captain Siviwe Soyizwapi on Thursday admitted they had to take the criticism to heart and be honest with themselves on why and what went wrong in Singapore.

The Blitzboks skipper says they did so and now, barely a week later, have another opportunity to reverse those fortunes.

“A week is a long time indeed – last week we enjoyed the humidity of Singapore, on Tuesday we had our training session while it was snowing here in Vancouver,” said Soyizwapi.

“Last week we started the tournament with a good streak, now we are on an unwanted streak. So, things could not be more different.”

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One constant that remains though, is the willingness of each player to own up to their mistakes and there was plenty of that after Singapore.

“Each player accepted his shortcomings from last weekend,” added Soyizwapi.

“We are all in agreement that we never really got going. And that it is now up to us as players to change that and rebound.

“We basically went back to zero and started building from there, not only physically, but mentally. We were in a downward spiral and just have to reverse that here in Canada.”

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Be all they can be

The fact that the players embrace their drive to be the best team they can be, makes such recoveries easy, according to Soyizwapi.

“We know what our standards are and what we can achieve and that is a huge driving factor this weekend.

The skipper also said: “The numbers are telling us that we were not good enough last weekend. We will be back to our best.”

The Blitzboks are the defending champions in Vancouver and won two of the last three Canada Sevens tournaments hosted in BC Place Stadium.