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Springboks brush Italy aside despite early Jasper Wiese red

South Africa's wing Edwill van der Merwe (C) celebrates with teammates after scoring a try during the international rugby union Test match between South Africa and Italy at Nelson Mandela Bay Stadium in Gqeberha on July 12, 2025. (Photo by PHILL MAGAKOE / AFP)

South Africa delivered a dominant performance to beat Italy 45-0 in the second Test at Nelson Mandela Bay Stadium on Saturday — their second-biggest win over the Azzurri since 2001 despite being down to 14 players for much of the match following a red card to Jasper Wiese.

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The Springboks made their intentions clear early on with a controversial short kick off to manufacture a scrum, another innovation that may cause a stir in the days to come.

But that was a sign that the much-changed side were looking to improve on a ropey end to their match the week before. Grant Williams scored the opening try after just eight minutes following a strong run from Edwill van der Merwe, and the winger added one of his own soon after thanks to a sharp inside pass from Manie Libbok.

At 10-0 up, South Africa suffered a major setback when Jasper Wiese was red-carded for a headbutt on Italy loosehead Danilo Fischetti in the 21st minute. But the Boks adjusted quickly, bringing on Ox Nché to bolster the scrum after just half an hour. That paid off immediately, with Van der Merwe scoring his second try off a clever kick from new centurion Willie le Roux. Libbok converted for 17-0.

Match Summary

0
Penalty Goals
0
7
Tries
0
5
Conversions
0
0
Drop Goals
0
119
Carries
55
3
Line Breaks
5
12
Turnovers Lost
12
7
Turnovers Won
9

Canan Moodie scored South Africa’s fourth try before the break, showing good strength to power through defenders. Libbok’s second conversion made it 24-0 at half-time.

The Boks continued their dominance in the second half despite Wilco Louw being sin-binned for a high tackle. Italy also lost Fischetti to the bin, and later David Odiase, as they spiralled into ill-discipline.

Malcolm Marx extended the lead with a try from a maul, and the Springboks emptied their bench with debuts for Ethan Hooker, Cobus Wiese and Asenathi Ntlabakanye, though Wiese was unable to play alongside his brother.

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Makazole Mapimpi finished off a slick line-out move to make it 38-0, before Jan-Hendrik Wessels crossed in the final minute. Libbok added both conversions for a final score of 45-0.

South Africa face Georgia next week in Mbombela, while Italy will be left to reflect on a bruising defeat.

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Comments

7 Comments
F
Flankly 27 days ago

It was all about the breakdown. The first test was about Italy disrupting the Boks at ruck time. The Boks reviewed the tape and fixed it for the second test.


It looked like they also ensured the ref was mindful of Italy ruck tactics. There was much stricter monitoring of ball-slowing behaviors, and along with Bok ruck attention this resulted in a lot of quick ball for Williams.

W
WI 28 days ago

Did anyone see flans’ mustache?

R
RedWarrior 29 days ago

This was an absolute disaster for Italy. They were somewhat competitive at 10 down when the red arrived. Then they capitulated. Handing SA several scrums and conceding easy tries to scupper any chance of an upset. Italy had to put scoreboard pressure on SA, force them to narrow up and take it from there. Almost a few backward steps for them.

W
Wayneo 28 days ago

They did their best but it’s very difficult to play against a Bok team that were smelling blood in the water and with their tails up before the whistle is even blown.


Was always going to be a bloodbath after last week’s poor showing, but the intent shown by the Bok’s with the forced scrum from kick off (to scrum the #### out of Italy), is testament to the mood the Bok’s were in.


It obviously had a psychological impact, that and then the Bok backline players all doing their best impression of Andre Esterhuizen with very physical runs, together with the massive tackle fight from all the players put the icing on that cake.

N
Ninjin 29 days ago

With 45-0 against 14 a few backward steps is an understatement.

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