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Wednesday, September 12, 2018

South Africa national rugby union team - Wikiwand
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The 1965 Argentina rugby union tour of South Africa and Rhodesia was a series of sixteen matches played by the Argentina national team in May and June 1965 in Rhodesia and South Africa. Argentina played a total of 16 matches within two months of tour.

That tour was meaningful relevant for Argentine rugby due to the nickname Pumas (that has identified the national team since then) was born in South Africa, more precisely after the victory v. the Junior Springboks at Ellis Park, considered historical not only for Argentine rugby but for the sport in the country.


Video 1965 Argentina rugby union tour of Rhodesia and South Africa



The tour

In 1959, the Junior Springboks had toured to Argentina, where they played a series of friendly matches. The South Africans were impressed by the rugby environment in the country and their visit paved the way for the trip of the Argentine team. As a result, in 1964 the South African Rugby Union sent an invitation to the UAR to sent a representative team there. The SARU wanted a foreign team to play there with the purpose of spreading the practise of rugby in South Africa.

South African Danny Craven served as adviser for the team to prepare the tour, while the SA Union sent Izak van Heerden to help the Argentine Rugby Union to prepare the tour and collaborate with coaches Alberto Camardón (main coach) and Angel Guastella (second coach).

The national team played a series of preparatory games before the tour, facing local clubs and provincial representatives such as Universitario (LP) Obras Sanitarias, Alumni, Newman, Córdoba RU, Rosario RU, Duendes and Old Georgian

The first two matches in South Africa were extremely hard for the Argentine squad, in disadvantage on the physical power and the tough play by their rivals. Nevertheless, Argentine players vowed themselves to change the history from then on. The "key game" of the tour was the match v. Southern Universities won by Argentina 22-6. The local media entitled "Argentina shattered the craddle of South African rugby" after that match.

Nevertheless, Argentina's most relevant victory was against the Junior Springboks -the South African second national team- to whom they defeated 11-6 at Ellis Park. Argentina lineup for that match was Cazenave, Neri, Pascual, Rodríguez Jurado, España; Poggi, Etchegaray; Loyola, Silva, Scharenberg; Schmidt, Otaño; Foster, González del Solar y García Yáñez. The photo showing centre Marcelo Pascual diving to the rival ingoal became iconic for Argentine rugby.

The Pumas nickname is the result of an error made by Carl Kohler, a journalist for the Die Transvaler newspaper in South Africa, while following the team during the tour. He tried to devise a catchy nickname for the team similar to existing international team nicknames such as All Blacks, Springboks, and Wallabies. Kohler was aware that the Americas had pumas, and as he was under pressure to submit his article, made a guess and called them "the Pumas", instead of the actual jaguar (which original name in Argentina is "yaguareté" but he refused to use that word as he was unable to utter it correctly).

The mistake stuck, and was eventually adopted by the Argentines themselves (although the UAR crest still depicts a jaguar).


Maps 1965 Argentina rugby union tour of Rhodesia and South Africa



Touring team

A total of 26 players were selected for the tour:


1928 New Zealand rugby union tour of South Africa - Wikiwand
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Match summary

Complete list of matches played by Argentine in South Africa:

     Test matches

Notes

Wales national rugby union team - Wikiwand
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Test details


The McLook rugby collection - OFS and Rhodesia
src: springbokrugby.webs.com


Aftermath

The tour is considered the birth of the modern "Pumas" because of the national team had not achieved great results until then. The victory v the Junior Springboks was widely covered by the Argentine media and it is considered a turning point for the national team.

In an interview for the 50th anniversary of the tour, Héctor Silva stated:

About the first matches, Heriberto Handley said in the same interview:

"Coco Benzi" added:


Argentina at the Rugby World Cup - Wikipedia
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Bibliography

  • Vivian Jenkins, ed. (1979). Rothmans Rugby Yearbook 1979-80. Queen Anne Press. pp. 47-51. ISBN 0-354-09087-9. 

Argentina at the Rugby World Cup - Wikipedia
src: upload.wikimedia.org


References

Source of article : Wikipedia