Sports

All Blacks accept South Africa apology for Haka disruption

The All Blacks on Tuesday accepted an apology from South Africa after fireworks, music and a jet fly-over partly drowned out New Zealand’s Haka before last weekend’s Test match.

The closing moments of the Haka — a traditional Maori war dance — were affected as the pre-match schedule went awry at Ellis Park in Johannesburg on Saturday.

The South African Rugby Union wrote to their New Zealand counterparts to apologise, but the All Blacks camp said the noisy disruptions were not taken as a sign of disrespect.

“In all honesty, you sometimes get a bit of chaos around that (the Haka),” All Blacks assistant coach Jason Ryan told New Zealand media in Cape Town.

“The South African players themselves stood there and respected it as they always do, it’s probably the officials are the ones who need the uppercut,” he joked.

“They’ve made the apology, it’s fine.”

The Springboks came from behind to win 31-27, cementing their place at the top of the Rugby Championship table, eight points ahead of second-placed New Zealand, the title-holders.

The Haka, which dates back to the ‘Original All Blacks’ tour to Europe in 1905, is performed by New Zealand after the national anthems and before kick-off in each international they play.

Rian Oberholzer, chief executive of SA Rugby, said the deafening jet fly-over, loud music and fireworks had simply been bad timing.

A sound engineer mistakenly interpreted the cheering of the capacity 62,000 crowd as a sign that the Haka had finished and restarted the music programme.

“It was never the intention to schedule any activities that would coincide with such an iconic moment of any Test match against the All Blacks,” Oberholzer said in a statement.

“That it occurred was a result of timekeeping challenges and simple human error.”

SA Rugby will ensure there is no repeat when the teams meet again in Cape Town on Saturday, Oberholzer added.

All Blacks loose forward Ethan Blackadder said they appreciated that South Africa had said sorry, pointing out that “it’s pretty hard to get the timings right for an aeroplane”.

“Personally I didn’t notice it,” he added. “We were all just eyeing up our opponents.”

Related Posts

Cristiano Ronaldo não controla o Al Nassr – CEO Fienga

O jogador de 39 anos é o nome principal do clube, mas isso não lhe dá uma influência prejudicial, diz Fienga O CEO do Al Nassr, Guido Fienga,…

NBA Fans React to Kawhi Leonard’s Offseason Appearance With Celebrity

LA Clippers star Kawhi Leonard is enjoying his NBA offseason. LA Clippers forward Kawhi Leonard is one of the most low-key stars in the NBA. With none of…

Phil Mickelson laments short game, mulls LIV’s future

If you needed another reminder of professional golf’s new chapter, on Wednesday Phil Mickelson joined a conference call previewing LIV Golf’s upcoming Illinois event and the first question…

Tiger Woods Has Another Surgery On Lower Back To Relieve Pinched Nerves

Tiger Woods had yet another surgery on his lower back on Friday morning. This one he hopes will relieve some of the spasms he experienced this year. It…

ชอบใจ “อลิสสัน” เผย 1 สิ่งที่ “เคียซา” ทำตลอดเวลานับตั้งแต่ย้ายมา “ลิเวอร์พูล”

อลิสสัน เบ็คเกอร์ ออกมาเปิดเผยว่าใบหน้าของ เฟเดริโก เคียซา เปี่ยมไปด้วยรอยยิ้มแห่งความสุขตลอดเวลา นับตั้งแต่วันแรกที่ได้ย้ายเข้ามาร่วมทีม ลิเวอร์พูล วันที่ 17 กันยายน 2567 อลิสสัน เบ็คเกอร์ ออกมาให้สัมภาษณ์ก่อนเกมที่ ลิเวอร์พูล จะบุกไปเยือน เอซี มิลาน สังกัดยักษ์ใหญ่จากเวที กัลโช่ เซเรียอา อิตาลี ในการแข่งขันฟุตบอล ยูฟ่า แชมเปียนส์ลีก รอบลีกเฟส นัดแรก…

Kiwi UFC star Carlos Ulberg KOs opponent in just 12 seconds: ‘What a freaking beast’

Kiwi knockout artist Carlos Ulberg needed just 12 seconds to finish his UFC fight on Sunday, producing a stunning KO of Alonzo Menifield that will go down in the record…

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *