Something special

Something special

MIKE GREENAWAY, writing in SA Rugby magazine, says Patrick Lambie is the future of South African rugby.

In the midlands of KwaZulu-Natal, the mink and manure belt of the Garden Province, the favourite sport of Hilton College old boys is to ask their bitter rivals from Michaelhouse how many Springbok rugby players they have produced.

The Balgowan school has spawned war heroes (the flag flown at World War I’s bloody battle of Delville Wood is proudly displayed in one of the eating establishments), politicians, prestigious authors, captains of industry, national cricketers, swimmers and athletes … even Spud Milton (of the John van der Ruit books) went to the stately school modelled so closely on the posh English public schools, but so far the eight rugby fields on the sprawling estate have yet to produce a rugby Springbok.

Perhaps the most genuine indication that the school might at last break its unfortunate duck came in Patrick Lambie’s Grade 11 year. The flyhalf had missed his U16 season because of a serious injury and when he pitched up for training the next year, the flyhalf berth was already secured by the older Guy Cronjé, who was partnered at scrumhalf by his twin brother, Ross (both of whom have gone on to play for the Sharks).

So the coaches asked Pat if he wanted to try fullback. How did he react to changing positions after not having played rugby for a year? By the end of the season he was picked at fullback for SA Schools.

The following year, his matric year, he was in the SA Schools No 15 jersey once more. In fact, he also played KZN Schools rugby and cricket two years in a row, and that elite club can’t have too many members …

As Sharks captain Stefan Terblanche puts it, rather amusingly: ‘The next Michaelhouse old boy who asks me if Pat is going to be their first Springbok, I might have to shoot! But having said that, if he’s not their first Bok, then they will have to wait another 100 years …’

Towards the end of his first year out of school, Lambie made his debut for the Sharks – a 20-minute stint off the bench in a Currie Cup match – and was then drafted into the Super 14 training squad. Midway through the Sharks’ troubled Super 14 tour earlier this year he made his run-on debut.

Lambie took time out from the Sharks to play fullback for the SA U21 team in Argentina and was one of the stand-out performers at   the international tournament, finishing up as the second highest points scorer.

He has been a fixture in the Sharks team ever since the Super 14 tour and the only debate around his continued inclusion has been where best to utilise his talent – fullback, centre or flyhalf.

And this, of course, has brought up the old chestnut of whether the Sharks are going to do a ‘Brent Russell’ and produce another ‘Jack of all trades and master of none’, as has allegedly been the story with Frans Steyn and Ruan Pienaar (although this was more the case at Springbok level).

The good news for South African rugby is that young Lambie is being carefully managed by the ever-cautious John Plumtree.

‘There has been good communication between all relevant parties from the word go and that is very important because wherever Patrick plays, he must be positive about it,’ the Sharks coach says. ‘He is still at the stage of his career where he is enjoying the experience simply of playing at this level. Moving from 15, which he knows well, to 12 and then to 10 has been good for him because it has exposed a few minor weaknesses in his game that he otherwise might not have known about. When the novelty wears off and he wants to settle into a position, we will talk about it.’

Interestingly, Lambie says an inspiration for him at school was Steyn and the impact he made first with the Sharks and then with the Springboks at fullback, flyhalf and centre.

‘I looked up to Frans because he gave us schoolboys hope that we could get a break sooner rather than later and excel at the highest level,’ Lambie says.

The softly-spoken youngster conducts himself in interviews with unfailing politeness and good manners. He is as humble and charming a young man as you could possibly chance to meet. But what are his thoughts on the position he would most like to play?

‘I’ve enjoyed 15, 12 and 10 and I don’t yet know which one I’m best at or which one I enjoy the most. But with a bit more time and experience I’ll be able to decide on a position, put my mind to it and stay there,’ he says.‘At fullback I have always enjoyed taking the high ball – even though I’m not the tallest, I like that bit of pressure – and then also the space you have at the back to read the game.

‘At flyhalf, I like being close to the ball and getting my hands on it as much as possible, as well as being able to make decisions and link with the players around me. The same goes for 12, which also has the added attraction of being a major avenue of attack for the opposition, and I’m happy with that because I enjoy tackling.’

The impressive thing about Lambie’s progression from 15 to 12 and then to 10 is that he has got increasingly better the closer he has got to the ball. He was excellent at fullback and when he was moved to 12 questions were asked about the wisdom of the move, but he responded superbly there, and when he was moved to 10 he again met and then surpassed the challenge.

‘I have honestly enjoyed all three positions,’ he says, ‘and maybe it helped that I played 12 after fullback before moving to 10, but the most important thing is that I’ve played a sequence of games in each position. I haven’t played one game here, one game there, and then gone back to the previous position.’

An avid admirer of Lambie is former Springbok and Maritzburg College flyhalf Joel Stransky, and he feels that consultation with experts in the three positions Lambie has played will help make the decision on where he should ultimately settle.

‘First of all, I’d like to say that I’ve enjoyed watching Patrick play, and what has stood out for me is that old indication of how good a player is – the time he seems to have to make decisions that other players don’t,’ Stransky says. ‘He never gets flustered, he never panics. There’s no hint of alarm about his play. He has brilliant skills, a kicking game, tackles very well and, most importantly, he has a wonderful temperament.’

But Stransky suggests that Plumtree sits down with a fullback specialist such as André Joubert, a renowned centre like Dick Muir and a flyhalf of the calibre of Henry Honiball and ask them for an analysis of where Lambie’s skills set is best suited.

‘Sometimes where the player feels he should play and where he’s best suited are not the same,’ Stransky advises. ‘I’ve seen that with Frans Steyn. He wanted to play 10, then 15, but maybe 12 is his best position?’

But where does Stransky feel Lambie should play? ‘The more I think about it, the more I feel that a kid with his talent has to be as close to the ball as possible. I’d play him at flyhalf.’

And is Lambie ready to tour with the Springboks in November? Stransky certainly believes so but Plumtree would prefer the youngster’s Springbok debut to wait a while.

Stransky says: ‘Good enough is old enough. We have a major issue in this country at Springbok level right now and we need youngsters to come through fast and learn the ropes.’

Plumtree is not so sure: ‘Look, he’s unquestionably an international class player. He’s a natural, he’s a very calm young man with an old head on a young body. To be straightforward, he’s a bloody good kid, and is an absolute pleasure to have in your squad.

‘Personally, I don’t think it’s necessary for him to tour in November. A good Super Rugby campaign will grow his confidence, while this end-of-year tour might not be the happiest and I’d hate to see him take a knock. But if they decide to take half a dozen youngsters and he’s one of them, then good on him.’

The theme of Lambie being cool, calm and collected is a recurring one, going way back to his primary school days. His class teacher and sports coach at Clifton school in Durban, Barry Mezher, says he was a gifted sportsman and natural leader to whom his peers naturally gravitated.

‘It stood out for me that at such a young age here was a kid who always put the needs of his team-mates above his own, led by example and deflected attention and praise to others,’ Mezher says. ‘He was empathetic to his peers and could be innovative in finding ways to get the best out of them.’

Mezher adds that Lambie was also an exceptional cricketer: ‘He had the sweetest of timing as a batsman and as a bowler had the discipline and calmness to bowl line-and-length deliveries that irritated batsmen into submission with his accuracy.’

At Michaelhouse, his school masters soon picked up that the best asset of this brilliant sportsman – he was also a very good swimmer – was his temperament. He never got flustered and the bigger the occasion, the better he reacted to pressure.

Alan Redfern, Lambie’s housemaster, says that perhaps the best way to sum him up is to point out how his peers responded to him.

‘When he was announced as head boy he was the unanimous choice by pupils and staff and was given a spontaneous standing ovation, which is rare.’

At the conclusion of his matric year, Redfern says that Lambie had ‘set a new benchmark for the role of head prefect’.

He was involved positively in a number of cultural and social activities at the school. As well as being a chapel server and senior member of the school’s Christian Representative Council, he was the chairman of the Toastmasters Society and served on the school’s Student Representative Council.

Redfern says Lambie was always ‘quietly at the forefront’, avoiding the limelight where possible but when in it, conducting himself with humility.

The balance between sport and academics has continued after school. Lambie is currently in his second year of a BA degree through Unisa, specialising in environmental management. He says it involves his favourite subjects, geography and economics, and it could qualify him one day to be involved in a passion of his: animals and conservation.

In the meantime, Patrick Lambie is living his dream. It is not that long ago that he was one of the barefoot kids running around the Kings Park outer fields playing touch rugby while his parents braaied.

The Lambie family are true Sharks fans, always have been, going back to the early-80s when dad Ian was a stalwart for Berea Rovers and played a handful of games for Natal before a serious knee injury ended his career, while Pat’s grandfather, Nick Labuschagne (Caz Lambie’s dad) is a former president of the Natal Rugby Union and was intricately involved in the administration of the 1995 World Cup. He also played 50-odd games for Natal and five for England. So the game is very much in Pat’s genes.

‘The rugby background in our family helped me make the decision on whether to choose cricket or rugby as my career,’ he says. ‘It ended up being quite easy, really. I love cricket but rugby is my passion.’

– This article first appeared in the October issue of SA Rugby magazine. The November issue is on sale now.

Click here to subscribe to print edition

Click here to subscribe to digital edition


523 Comments

Pages: « 1 [2] 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 » Show All

  • 51.Transformation: Reply to this comment

    46. gunther(gunther) : no i’m not very rich dude, just comfortable, thanks…more money more problems – notorious BIG

  • 52.Transformation: Reply to this comment

    50. Jeez(Jeez) : yes he is, Bjorn Basson proved it beyond a shadow of doubt

  • 53.Tacitus: Reply to this comment

    Johannesburg – A man apparently chopped his dog’s back legs off because she “stole” food from a neighbour in a squatter camp outside Sabie.

    The female Africanis dog lay helplessly for more than a week behind the hut of her owner, Alfred Maganzi, 65, before residents of the Fok-fok squatter camp called the Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals (SPCA).

    “It made me sick and I was shocked when I saw this animal,” said Sabie SPCA inspector Petro Oosthuizen.

    “She was very weak, dehydrated and completely disorientated when I got to her at the hut.

    “When I asked her owner why he had chopped off her legs, he told me initially to ask the dog.”

    Maganzi later said he chopped off the animal’s legs because he wanted to “punish” her after she had stolen food from his neighbour.

    “Now she can’t run about anymore and she won’t steal anymore,” was what Maganzi, an unemployed Mozambican citizen, apparently told Oosthuizen.

    Put down

    The dog was taken to a vet in Mbombela who decided to put the animal down.

    “The animal was in shock and the wounds to her paws had started becoming septic,” said Estelle de Villiers, SPCA chairperson in Mbombela.

    A charge of animal cruelty was laid against Maganzi with police in Sabie.

    Police confirmed they were investigating the case.

    The SPCA also confiscated Maganzi’s other dog.

    - Beeld

    I swear if I came upon a scene like that I would not be able to control myself. Friggin primitive, barbarric savage.

  • 54.gunther: Reply to this comment

    @Transformation(Transformation) :

    :)

    the simple things in life.

  • 55.Tomatoboy_ralepelle: Reply to this comment

    shocking @ tac …

  • 56.WP Till I Die: Reply to this comment

    @Tacitus(Tacitus) :

    The name of the squatter camp is “Fok-Fok”?

  • 57.Transformation: Reply to this comment

    @Tacitus(Tacitus) : you care more about dogs than people Tac?

  • 58.jacoshark: Reply to this comment

    as a sharks and lambie fan
    id have to say he is something special
    wet under the ears but then the same was said for steyn when he burst onto the scene
    if youre good enough, youre old enough
    he should tour with the boks- not sure id give him much game time but being around the countries elite can only make him a better player
    lambie at fullback would be the best position for him at this stage in his career

  • 59.Nils: Reply to this comment

    @53 Such people should be burned at stake, no matter who they are.

  • 60.Dawn: Reply to this comment

    @Tacitus(Tacitus) :

    What’s this got to do with Lambie?

  • 61.Mighty Horua: Reply to this comment

    I hope you feel the same about Rhinos that are being slaughter by whiteys?

  • 62.Tacitus: Reply to this comment

    @Dawn(Dawn) :

    Nothing whatsoever.

  • 63.Dawn: Reply to this comment

    @Tacitus(Tacitus) :

    Unless …… it’s put here to show how barbaric and uncouth and uncultured black peasants are.

  • 64.Tacitus: Reply to this comment

    @Mighty Horua(Mighty Horua) :

    As a matter of fact I do.

  • 65.Dawn: Reply to this comment

    I was sort of inspired by that moody sunset glowy shot of Lambie until I read the trolling post.

  • 66.Dawn: Reply to this comment

    @Tacitus(Tacitus) :

    Somehow, I don’t believe you.

    You weren’t that quick to post their transgressions here for all to see.

  • 67.gunther: Reply to this comment

    fokadoodledoo..

    fok-fok…

    sounds like skop’s first words..

  • 68.Tacitus: Reply to this comment

    @Dawn(Dawn) :

    You get inspired too easily. If I recall correctly, you also get inspired by, in no particular order:

    Fudge Mabeta’s dreadlocks
    Adriaan Fondse’s who knows what
    Doppies le Grange’s squat, ****** like build
    Some Irishman whose name I forgot

    Did I leave anyone out?

  • 69.gunther: Reply to this comment

    63. Dawn(Dawn)

    black peasants are uncouth and barbaric.

    so are white peasants.

    its the nature of the beast.

  • 70.Dawn: Reply to this comment

    @Tacitus(Tacitus) :

    So what.

  • 71.Transformation: Reply to this comment

    @Mighty Horua(Mighty Horua) : but the guys killing rhinos are not “primitive, barbaric savages” :roll: they are wealthy, sophisticated tax-payers.

  • 72.Tacitus: Reply to this comment

    @Dawn(Dawn) :

    What can I say, my sense of outrage is exponentially greater when man’s best friend is the victim of such disgusting abuse.

  • 73.Dawn: Reply to this comment

    @gunther(gunther) :

    Agreed.

    They are revolting all round.

    Except for a few Russian authors who put them on pedestals.

    Which is also OK.

  • 74.WP Till I Die: Reply to this comment

    Let’s please not turn this into another tedious racial issue.

    Animal abuse, by whosoever perpetrated, is barbaric.

    I’ve often thought I’d much rather kill humans than animals…

  • 75.Transformation: Reply to this comment

    @Tacitus(Tacitus) : you left out Scotsman, Ross Skeate in a kilt, Famous Grouse…oh, anything Scottish sets Dawn off :D

  • 76.gunther: Reply to this comment

    Dawn is easily inspired.

    She should be a painter.

  • 77.Dusky: Reply to this comment

    @Tacitus(Tacitus) : I agree with you Captain Whoopass :-)

  • 78.Tacitus: Reply to this comment

    @Transformation(Transformation) :

    The guys killing rhino’s should rot in jail. They are scum. I have no sypmathy for them, and I’m very glad they were caught.

    It just pisses me off that the guy who chopped his dog’s frigging legs off will not go to jail too, but will instead get a small fine.

    Dogs have become attuned to humans over the course of thousands of years, and most likely have souls.

  • 79.Transformation: Reply to this comment

    @Tacitus(Tacitus) : pisses me off too…

  • 80.stormersboy: Reply to this comment

    Are we saying that White Rhinos are more valuable than Black Rhinos?

    hahahahaha

  • 81.Transformation: Reply to this comment

    @stormersboy(stormersboy) : don’t even start! ;)

  • 82.Tacitus: Reply to this comment

    @stormersboy(stormersboy) :

    Sorry, not one of your best attempts.

  • 83.gunther: Reply to this comment

    stormergarcon

    there are more black rhinos than white rhinos.

    supply and demmand.

  • 84.Atreides: Reply to this comment

    @Tacitus(Tacitus) : Horrible…can’t believe anyone could do that to a loyal trusting animal.

    Unfortunately, because unlike the rhinos it’s not high profile, he’ll get a slap on the wrist

    How do you even punish someone who’s that depraved?

  • 85.Dusky: Reply to this comment

    @WP Till I Die(WP-Forever) : Agreed.

    Cruelty to animals exists in many forms, some of which are often unknowingly supported by the general public. I am unfortunately not a vegetarian, but I make an effort to find out where the meat, eggs and milk came from that I purchase.

    Some people are so uneducated on this topic though, that they dont understand why we should conserve our natural heritage which results in stupid questions like ‘Do you think an animal has more rights than a human’.

    I would say a stupid animal cannot be disciplined by cutting its legs off, but then perhaps thats just my overcivilised opinion.

    These kinds of people cant understand why we shouldn’t slaughter everything with four legs, as long as it feeds or satisfies ‘people’….or savages for that matter.

    Apparently, in this world, for a large number of people – animals have no rights at all already.

  • 86.Transformation: Reply to this comment

    @Atreides(Atreides) : wasn’t too “loyal” stealing the neighbours food was it…

  • 87.Transformation: Reply to this comment

    @Atreides(Atreides) : you send him back to Mozambique!

  • 88.Dusky: Reply to this comment

    @Atreides(Atreides) : A high velocity lead pill in my opinion, because if someone can do that to a dog – I believe they can inflict just as much cruelty on a human being.

  • 89.gunther: Reply to this comment

    84. Atreides(Atreides)

    you impose sharon’s law and chop of their legs.

  • 90.Dusky: Reply to this comment

    @Transformation(Transformation) : You are dumb, and displaying it openly. Unless of course you are joking. I hope its the latter.

  • 91.Atreides: Reply to this comment

    @Transformation(Transformation) : In terms of loyalty to it’s owner as 99,9% of dogs are. Given the clear-cut nature of it;s woner I can guarantee you it was hungry, or are dogs now supposed to display human notions of morality…. or are you being deliberately obtuse? Or do you think that being poor or unemployed gives you some sort of right to mistreat animals?

  • 92.Tacitus: Reply to this comment

    At Dog School – when our dogs were in a particularly unruly mood – the instructor told us to check the next time we see a begger from a squatter camp with his dog on a street corner.

    It is amazing how well behaved those dogs are. The mutt will usually have no leash, but he will lie quietly next to his owner all day long in the sun, and when the beggar walks home, the dog will stick close to him and not run after every new scent like suburban dogs do.

    Well, it is clear why these dogs are so well behaved – if they misbehave, their friggin legs get chopped off!

  • 93.Atreides: Reply to this comment

    @Transformation(Transformation) : Spot on, Bevan

  • 94.Atreides: Reply to this comment

    @Atreides(Atreides) : I realiz ethat was tongue-in-cheek. Sorry

  • 95.John Galt: Reply to this comment

    Sharks Team for Saturday
    15 Ludik
    14 Ndungane
    13 Stef
    12 Strauss
    11 Mvovo
    10 Lambie
    9 Mcleod
    8 Kanko
    7 Alberts
    6 Daniel
    5 Hargreaves
    4 Sykes
    3 Dup
    2 Bissie
    1 Beast

    16 Burden, 17 Van Staden, 18 Breslar, 19 Botes, 20 Kockott, 21 Pretoors, 22 Swannie

  • 96.gunther: Reply to this comment

    86. Transformation(Transformation)

    well he wasn’t stealing his owner’s food.

    anyway the key word is allegedly.

    for all we know the craftyfucker was probably stealing the food and blaming his dog.

    like when people **** and then blame the dog.

    cheeky mozambos.

  • 97.Transformation: Reply to this comment

    @Dusky(Dusky) : hehe i must be “dumb” ;)

  • 98.Atreides: Reply to this comment

    @Dusky(Dusky) : I’d gladly volunteer my towbar and a length of chain to drag the f****r back to Moz!!

  • 99.Transformation: Reply to this comment

    @gunther(gunther) : you mean “Sharon’s Law” and stone them :D

  • 100.Dusky: Reply to this comment

    @gunther(gunther) : Actually, I have got the perfect punishment for such a deed.

    Take the guy, give him the knife he used to cut the dogs legs off with to defend himself with, and put him into a cage with a Bengal Tiger or a Polar bear. Let him feel how it feels to be defenseless against something several times more powerful than you are.

Pages: « 1 [2] 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 » Show All

Keo.co.za has always promoted uncensored views, but has never tolerated racist or crass outbursts. Come on guys and girls. If you can't moderate yourselves or each other then I am going to be forced to regulate the posts and enforce a registration process for comments. The choice is yours.

Have your say

You must be logged in to post a comment.