It seems a lifetime since Brand SA brought us its stirring
“Alive with Possibility” PSA. The ad built
a reasonably convincing and emotive case for why South Africans should believe
in the future. And even though one prominent economist told
me at the time that he was only “cautiously optimistic” about our chances – the ad persuaded me.
Fast forward to September 2016. South Africa had just lost to Australia in a
terrible display of rugby in Brisbane and there was much gnashing of teeth. In particular, Twitter seethed with vitriol. “What's the big deal?” an American friend
said to me with a shrug, “where I come from it’s rare to see your team win as
often as people expect the Springboks to win”.
I could have slapped him but thought better of it – we were, after all,
preparing to go into a meeting. Perhaps another
day.
But that’s just the point.
The Springboks ARE expected to win every game even though the stats
suggest that despite two World Cups and a sprinkling of Tri Nations titles,
they are likely to win less than 7 games out of 10 – a lot less in fact. There's no logic to it.
It’s a bizarre fixation when you consider that while our
great rugby crisis is unfolding, our universities are burning (and may never
recover) and that as many as 5 million children will go to bed hungry tonight –
many within a 10km radius of where you live.
To say nothing of Nkandla, the EFF and the NPA. We are becoming, it would seem, the land of
impossibility yet the state of a national sports team ranks right up there with
other national emergencies.
This is not uncharted territory for us. In the grim twilight of apartheid, we were literally an obscure nation – known only for the wrong things. But no matter. We had a legendary rugby team and test
matches were our middle finger to the world.
“Slap all the sanctions you want on us but we will prevail – and should
you be so unfortunate as to meet us on the Rugby field we will crush you”. In this sense, rugby (more precisely winning test
rugby) was, in the words of Von Clausewitz, a continuation of politics by other
means.
But that was then – what about now? We are no longer the pariah state we once
were. There’s been a reasonably
satisfying flow of success on the rugby field since readmission. So why do we spend sleepless nights
excruciating about the recent developments in rugby? “It’s like they’ve taken something away from
us,” lamented one fan at my local country club after the Wallabies won in
Brisbane. Who he meant by “they” I can
only guess but he resembled someone who had just lost something of great importance.
Enter the Springboks.
A test win – no matter how ground out – is the middle finger
to “them” – who are doing all “they” can to blot out the future – to hijack our
way of life. For many whites the Springboks are, quite
literally, the “Thin Green Line” that patrols and defends the meniscus of hope
that remains in our land. About the only
force that comes closer to defending the pride and hope of a nation would be
the Marines or the Navy Seals.
In Greek mythology there is a tale of one Sisyphus who,
punished by the Gods for his self aggrandisement and deceitfulness was forced
to roll an immense boulder up a hill, only to watch it come back and hit him,
repeating this action for eternity. Nothing
describes the burden our national team better.
There’s a picture I really enjoy, taken moments after Japan
beat South Africa in the 2015 World Cup opening rounds. It presents a very different supporters mindset. One that is as secure in the destiny of his country as he is in the destiny of his team - though he loves rugby, he seems to see the bigger picture. That guy really has it. If only I could be like that guy.
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