Lusanda Dumke knew the Springbok Women will not go down without a fight when they were trailing the Kenya Lionesses 22-17 with 10 minutes to play in Stellenbosch on Monday, because they are not a team who will ever throw in the towel.
Dumke, who led South Africa in the series win over Kenya, was ecstatic after a dramatic 29-22 win over the Kenyans in the second Test, with a try by Libbie Janse van Rensburg levelling the scores before the Springbok Women’s captain scored the match winner in the last minutes.
“This team have a lot of desire and fight; I am so proud of them as they never wanted to give up,” said Dumke.
“It was such a privilege to play in a team that responded like this. It is the most rewarding feeling to be able to play these games and to be able to display what we are capable of as a team. We believed in our structures and believed it would pull us through."
The South Africans outscored their opponents 16 tries to three and won the series with an average score of 48-11 thanks to a 66-0 victory in the first Test, but a much-improved Kenyan outfit forced the home side into a number of unforced errors, and they had to dig deep into their character and desire to win.
“You have to give credit to Kenya, they really played well,” said Dumke.
“They did their homework after the last match and came at us with a better plan. They were very physical and showed very good improvement from last week. It was tough playing two matches in five days, but we coped well, although the bodies are sore.”
Dumke feels the extended Women’s Premier Division, played over two rounds and won by the Border Ladies, helped most of the players in the national squad to become battle hardened.
“It certainly hardened us up and that helped us to cope today,” she said.
“This is another step-up with international competition and the short turn-around, but we pulled it through and for that I am very grateful.”
Dumke also captained the Border team who won the Premier Division and to take over the captaincy of the national side was another huge honour, she said.
“I was very humbled to have won the national title with Border and to now lead my country,” said Dumke.
“One must always strive for more. I took a conscious decision this season to do some self-improvement, mentally and physically and not wait for others to do things for you. I worked on a number of things, and it is paying off.”
Selected statistics:
Most points
26: Zintle Mpupha (Springbok Women)
12: Grace Adhiambo (Kenya)
10: Eloise Webb, Lusanda Dumke, Sizo Solontsi, Jakkie Cilliers (all Springbok Women)
Most tries
4: Zintle Mpupha (Springbok Women)
2: Eloise Webb, Lusanda Dumke, Sizo Solontsi (all Springbok Women)
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