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Third-highest capped Springbok of all time to join Major League Rugby's Old Glory DC

Mbongeni Mbonambi, Tendai Mtawarira and captain Siya Kolisi celebrate after the Rugby World Cup 2019 win over Wales. (Photo by Stu Forster/Getty Images)

World Cup-winning Springbok prop Tendai Mtawarira has decided to continue playing, but in the fledgeling United States Major League Rugby competition.

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Mtawarira, affectionately known as ‘The Beast’, confirmed the move on social media.

Mtawarira, South Africa’s third-most capped player of all time – with 117 Tests, behind Victor Matfield (127) and Bryan Habana (124) – was a key member of the Bok team that beat England 32-12 in the World Cup Final in Yokohama, Japan, last month.

Mtawarira is his country’s most capped prop.

He played his first Test on 14 June 2008, age 22, in a 37-21 win over Wales at Loftus Versfeld, Pretoria.

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After his demolition job on the English scrum in Japan, the 34-year-old announced his retirement from international rugby.

Born in Harare, Zimbabwe, Mtawarira has spent his professional career playing for the Durban-based Sharks – for whom he made more than 200 appearances in Super Rugby and the Currie Cup.

His appearances for the South African national team included taking on the British and Irish Lions on their 2009 tour.

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The Old Glory franchise said they placed as much value on Mtawarira’s character as they did on his on-field performances.

https://www.instagram.com/p/B5pTgHUA0mW/

“It’s exciting to have one of the worlds best players here at Old Glory,” the franchise’s coach Andrew Douglas said in a statement on the team’s website.

“As a coach, not only am I excited about what Tendai brings to the pitch, but also what he brings to our environment.

“He is an excellent professional and the values and character he brings will be important in raising the bar for the whole squad.

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“To have a guy who has played 117 test matches yet is still so hard-working and humble can only be beneficial for us. The signing takes the league to another level.”

Mtawarira said he wants to “thank the whole Old Glory organization” for making the move possible.

“I can’t wait to make an impact on and off the field and help to contribute to making Old Glory the best team in this league.”

https://www.instagram.com/p/B5TPVorAu8L/

Gary Gold, head coach of the US national men’s team, the Eagles, and a native of South Africa, said: “The news that Tendai Mtawariri has signed to play his rugby at Old Glory in Washington is an incredibly strong message that the MLR competition is now a league that top players are starting to take seriously.

“To have a player of Tendai’s ability, and in his current form, as we saw in the recent RWC final, is a testament to the work that has been put in over recent years to form a sustainable competitive competition in the USA, that can attract players of the quality of Tendai. I know Beastie well and I know what incredible value he will bring to the Old Glory team and the MLR.”

Old Glory’s signing of Mtawarira marks a recurrence of the unexpected connections between the MLR expansion team and South Africa.

– Rugby365 with Old Glory DC

The Springboks enjoyed a mammoth homecoming tour after returning from the World Cup as champions:

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Flankly 10 minutes ago
Bulls become first South African URC team to beat Munster at Thomond Park

Have you ever played front row?

Yes. But thats not the point.


There are plenty of ways you could formulate the laws so that injury on team does not benefit them.


Let’s start with the fact that injuries, while always undesirable, generally have a negative impact on the players team. And we are all OK with that. If you lose a first choice player, in any position, through injury, you replace them with a sub that is usually not as good. And the Laws don’t require that your opponents also replace their corresponding player, or do anything else that weakens them. The net result of an injury sub is generally that the team subbing that player is weakened. And it’s like that in most team sports.


But with scrums the principle is different (and wrong). If a team suffers one or two scrum injuries you get subs, and the usual situation applies. Generally the substitutes are less capable and the opponents benefit by now scrumming against a weaker set of forwards. That’s all good.


However, a few more injuries magically flip the script. When the injured team runs out of front-row-qualified subs they get rewarded by simply removing scrums from the game. We just get 16 players to sit down in a circle and sing kumbaya (strumming not scrumming), while guaranteeing possession (and no possibility of penalties) to the putting-in side.


Do we do that for kickers? “Please sir, all of our kickers have injured their big toes, so can you just give us the points for the conversion/penalty/dropped goal anyway?”. Do we do it for lineouts? Or for literally anything else in the game? We do not.


Of course there is a substantial danger element which means that the solution cannot be to put a random player in as a TH prop. But that is not the only alternative. We already have one idea that applies in certain cases, namely to require the injured team to play with one less player. But there are other creative ways to ensure that these kinds of injuries harm the injured team more than they harm the non-injured team.


Random ideas: 1/ move the spot for every uncontested scrum 15 metres towards the goal line that the injured team is defending, or 2/ require that the 8 forwards on the injured team remain out of the game (eg off their feet at the scrum location) for 5 seconds after every uncontested scrum, or 3/ award the non-injured team a penalty in a standard field location (“penalty spot”) for every third scrum in which they have the put-in.


I am not the right person to solve this, but its obvious that there are solutions. Wherever possible, the principle should be upheld that injury to your team should not be rewarded with competitive advantage.

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