Wallabies stun Springboks 24-20 in Rugby Championship thriller
Tevita Kuridrani scores last-minute winner as Australia put on late show to overhaul South Africa
Please click on the link for a selection of photos from the first round of the 2015 Rugby Championship.
Tevita Kuridrani scored a last-gasp try to give Australia a dramatic 24-20 victory over South Africa in their Rugby Championship opener in Brisbane on Saturday.
The centre crashed over the line in a scrum of bodies after the hooter had sounded and it fell to the television match official to adjudge that he had grounded the ball.
The Springboks had looked like securing a win on the back of a brilliant defensive effort and tries from lock Eben Etzebeth and debutant centre Jesse Kriel as well as 10 points from the boot of fly-half Handre Pollard.
Australia stayed in the contest with a first half try from winger Adam Ashley-Cooper, and flanker Michael Hooper got them within range of the victory with another just six minutes from time.
It was a first win in four tests for Australia and will give Wallabies fans hope that coach Michael Cheika can construct a competitive side for the World Cup in England later this year.
"To me rugby's all about attitude and we kept playing after the 80th and in the end it came down to a blade of grass," Cheika said.
The experimental Springbok back row of Schalk Burger, Francois Louw and Marcell Coetzee was outstanding, defending manfully and forcing turnover after turnover at the breakdown.
"Really heart-breaking, lots of injuries, lots of youngsters, and losing our captain," said coach Heyneke Meyer.
"Everybody wrote us off, it would have been sweet."
The visitors looked assured and well organised from the start and although Pollard hit the upright with his first penalty attempt, he made no mistake with the next two to give them a 6-0 lead in the 25th minute.
The Wallabies were finding holes in the defensive line but were struggling to exploit them as the South African loose forwards were that much quicker to the ball.
Pollard converted to send the Springboks into the break 13-7 in front and they moved further ahead four minutes after the restart when Kriel weaved his way through three defenders to score in the left corner.
Flanker David Pocock then came onto the pitch for his first test in three years to join Michael Hooper in the back row and the Wallabies were immediately more competitive in the tackle area.
Fly-half Quade Cooper missed a penalty with a poor kick after the Wallabies pack had won a rare decision at the scrum, however, and the Springboks continued to defend fiercely and contest every breakdown.
The Wallabies continued to hammer away at the wall of green shirts and finally found a way through six minutes from time when Hooper barged over the line to set up the dramatic finale.