Select Edition

Northern Northern
Southern Southern
Global Global
NZ NZ

Four-try haul for Tambwe as Lions batter Stormers

By Peter Hanson
Madosh Tambwe celebrates for Lions

Madosh Tambwe enjoyed an outing to remember as he scored four tries in the Lions’ 52-31 battering of the Stormers in Johannesburg.

ADVERTISEMENT

The young winger had crossed three times inside a devastating opening 15 minutes, before going over early again in the second half as South Africa Conference leaders the Lions made it five wins and three defeats in Super Rugby.

The Lions had lost three of their previous four, but Tambwe scored his first on the counter-attack inside the first minute and had a second after some neat recycling work by the Stormers’ line.

Andries Coetzee’s chip-kick played in Tambwe for his third and, although Wilco Louw put Stormers on the board, Lionel Mapoe and Kwagga Smith dotted down as the Lions led 31-10 at the break.

Franco Mostert stretched the lead early in the second half and Tambwe scored his fourth by collecting Elton Jantjies’ kick and racing to the line.

Damian Willemse and Paul de Wet scored either side of Ruan Combrinck’s touchdown for the Lions and a late penalty try at least brought some respectability for the Stormers, but it did little to dampen a dominant Lions win.

LIONS 52 (Tambwe 4, Mapoe, K. Smith, Mostert, Combrinck tries, Jantjies 6 cons) STORMERS 31 (Louw, Willemse, de Wet tries, penalty try; Marais 2 cons, pen, Willemse con)

ADVERTISEMENT
ADVERTISEMENT

Join free

Chasing The Sun | Series 1 Episode 1

Fresh Starts | Episode 1 | Will Skelton

ABBIE WARD: A BUMP IN THE ROAD

Aotearoa Rugby Podcast | Episode 9

James Cook | The Big Jim Show | Full Episode

New Zealand victorious in TENSE final | Cathay/HSBC Sevens Day Three Men's Highlights

New Zealand crowned BACK-TO-BACK champions | Cathay/HSBC Sevens Day Three Women's Highlights

Japan Rugby League One | Bravelupus v Steelers | Full Match Replay

Trending on RugbyPass

Comments

Join free and tell us what you really think!

Sign up for free
ADVERTISEMENT

Latest Features

Comments on RugbyPass

N
Nickers 5 hours ago
All Blacks sabbaticals ‘damage Super Rugby Pacific when it is fighting for survival’

Sabbaticals have helped keep NZ’s very best talent in the country on long term deals - this fact has been left out of this article. Much like the articles calling to allow overseas players to be selected, yet can only name one player currently not signed to NZR who would be selected for the ABs. And in the entire history of NZ players leaving to play overseas, literally only 4 or 5 have left in their prime as current ABs. (Piatau, Evans, Hayman, Mo’unga,?) Yes Carter got an injury while playing in France 16 years ago, but he also got a tournament ending injury at the 2011 World Cup while taking mid-week practice kicks at goal. Maybe Jordie gets a season-ending injury while playing in Ireland, maybe he gets one next week against the Brumbies. NZR have many shortcomings, but keeping the very best players in the country and/or available for ABs selection is not one of them. Likewise for workload management - players missing 2 games out of 14 is hardly a big deal in the grand scheme of things. Again let’s use some facts - did it stop the Crusaders winning SR so many times consecutively when during any given week they would be missing 2 of their best players? The whole idea of the sabbatical is to reward your best players who are willing to sign very long term deals with some time to do whatever they want. They are not handed out willy-nilly, and at nowhere near the levels that would somehow devalue Super Rugby. In this particular example JB is locked in with NZR for what will probably (hopefully) be the best years of his career, hard to imagine him not sticking around for a couple more after for a Lions tour and one more world cup. He has the potential to become the most capped AB of all time. A much better outcome than him leaving NZ for a minimum of 3 years at the age of 27, unlikely to ever play for the ABs again, which would be the likely alternative.

3 Go to comments
FEATURE
FEATURE How Leinster neutralised 'long-in-the-tooth' La Rochelle How Leinster neutralised 'long-in-the-tooth' La Rochelle
Search