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Siya Kolisi calls the Springbok/All Blacks rivalry “the biggest sporting rivalry in history”. Picture: David Rogers/Getty Images
Siya Kolisi calls the Springbok/All Blacks rivalry “the biggest sporting rivalry in history”. Picture: David Rogers/Getty Images

For New Zealand and SA there is no bigger challenge than what both consider rugby’s greatest rivalry and the World Cup final on Saturday will be among their most significant clashes with each team seeking a record fourth global title.

The rich history of this 102-year-old fixture has seen political turmoil, countless bruising battles, a previous World Cup final and even a 0-0 draw.

New Zealand have a sizeable lead in the head-to-head with 62 wins to SA’s 39 in 105 matches and are the only nation the Springboks have a negative win-loss ratio against.

Conversely, however, New Zealand’s lowest win percentage versus any opponents (59%) is against the Springboks.

SA captain Siya Kolisi calls it “the biggest sporting rivalry in history” while former New Zealand winger Jeff Wilson believes it is a thread that connects the two nations.

“It is such an important part of the two countries and how they are connected,” Wilson said. “It is competitive on the field, but you can see off it there is a healthy respect.”

They first met in 1921 when SA embarked on a tour of Australia and New Zealand, with a three-match Test series drawn, the third game finishing 0-0.

That last match was played in horrendous conditions but the tour would be the start of a love-hate relationship that endures.

Tours controversially continued through the apartheid era until 1981, when SA visited New Zealand for a series of three Tests that were interrupted by protesters.

SA’s presence in New Zealand split opinion in a mix of politics and sport, even as the Springboks relaxed their all-white selection policy to include a single Black player in flyhalf Errol Tobias.

New Zealand won the series 2-1, claiming the third Test 25-22 as flour bombs were dropped onto the field and violence erupted outside the stadium.

A selection of New Zealand players dubbed the “Cavaliers” toured SA in 1986, sporting an all-black kit, albeit with a yellow trim.

An official tour had been planned for 1985 but was called off after a legal challenge in New Zealand, and of the 30 players who were to be on that trip, 28 were part of the Cavaliers.

SA won the unofficial Test series 3-1 with both teams at near full-strength.

The Springboks returned to the international fold in 1992 and faced New Zealand in the World Cup final in Johannesburg three years later.

The home side, inspired by the presence of president Nelson Mandela, completed an epic 15-12 extra-time victory over the more fancied All Blacks thanks to a winning drop-goal from flyhalf Joel Stransky.

They have met five times at the World Cup, with New Zealand claiming three victories to two for the Springboks.

SA have won three of the past five clashes, including inflicting a record Test defeat on their great rivals with a 35-7 victory in London in August.

Reuters

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