Rugby | Habana, World Cup winner & Springbok record-holder, retiring

Bryan Habana (center) South Africa’s Bryan Habana (center) and teammates wave after receiving their bronze medal Rugby World Cup at the Olympic Stadium, London, in 2015

Bryan Habana, the lightning-fast South Africa wing and World Cup winner with an insatiable hunger for scoring tries —  a record 67 for the Springboks — announced yesterday he will retire from rugby at the end of the season.

The 34-year-old Habana, who played 124 tests for South Africa and whose try tally is the second-most by a player in international rugby, made the announcement on his Twitter and Instagram accounts.

Habana wrote that he would officially retire at the end of the season but conceded that after battling a knee injury for over a year he probably won’t get the chance to play one more time for his French club Toulon.

“It’s been more than a year of hoping, trying, pushing and willing to get back on the field for one last time, to taste the sweet victory or encounter that gut-wrenching despair,” Habana wrote on his social media post. “To hear the roar of the crowd or grab the pill out of the air. To make that last bone crunching tackle or score that last game winning try.

“But it’s unfortunately just not to be. I, like most, would have liked my career to have ended differently, but sometimes things don’t turn out quite the way we hope for.”

Habana continued: “So at the end of this season, it’s time to say goodbye and thank you to the game I so dearly love.”

Despite not being able to finish the way he wanted, Habana won just about everything a South African could: The World Cup, a Tri-Nations title and a series against the British and Irish Lions with the Springboks. At club level in South Africa, he collected two Super Rugby titles and two Currie Cups and, in Europe, the Heineken Cup and France’s Top 14 league title with Toulon.

He was world player of the year in 2007, the year he won the World Cup with the Springboks.

Habana’s career was in many ways defined by the number of tries he scored: His national record of 67 for the Boks is the most by any player from a top-tier nation and second only to Japanese winger Daisuke Ohata’s 69.

He scored a try on his test debut against England at Twickenham and also in his 124th and last test against Italy in Florence in 2016. Ironically, both games ended up being losses for South Africa. But in between them, Habana’s lethal finishing helped the Springboks to win the 2007 World Cup, the 2009 southern hemisphere title, and a 2009 series over the Lions.

He also helped the Pretoria- based Bulls become the first South African team to win the southern hempishere’s Super Rugby club title.

In that 2007 World Cup triumph with South Africa, Habana scored eight tries, equaling the record for one World Cup by the late, great Jonah Lomu of New Zealand. Habana also later equaled Lomu’s record of 15 career tries at World Cups.

Yet Habana had more than just his “jet shoes,” a term used by an Australian TV commentator early in the South African’s career when he came to prominence with two blistering length-of-the-field tries against the Wallabies in 2005.

Habana, only 5-foot-11 and small for a rugby player, had bags of courage in defense. He would often pull off try-saving tackles or put his body on the line to help his team hold out the opposition. He was also ultra-professional and seldom injured in his 16-year career, despite the knee struggles at the end.

“We have been privileged to have witnessed the career of Bryan Habana, who will undoubtedly be remembered as one of the great legends of Springbok rugby,” said South African rugby president Mark Alexander. “During a career that spanned more than a decade and a half, he stood out as one of the most professional players ever to don the Springbok jersey, and over the years Bryan has been central to many of the most memorable occasions in the era of professional rugby.

“We will never forget every time he delighted us by crossing the try-line or putting in yet another bone-crunching tackle, but those close to him will also remember the Bryan that was a true professional, always going about his task giving 100%.” Gerald Imray, AP

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