22 September 2015
Five of South Africa's rugby legends have been inducted into the World Rugby
Hall of Fame. Springbok legends Naas Botha, Danie Gerber, Hennie Muller, Morné
du Plessis and Joost van der Westhuizen were honoured at a special presentation
held in the Spirit of Rugby Lounge at Wembly Stadium in London, England.
The newest group of 25 players were being honoured for shaping the image of
rugby and inspiring generations of fans. Between them they have three centuries of
playing time and includes eighteen national team captains. The "voice of rugby",
commentator Bill McLaren and coaching guru Carwyn James were the only two not
honoured for playing careers.
To be eligible for induction into the Rugby Hall of Fame this years class - 7
Welshmen, 5 South Africans, 3 Englishmen, Scots and Irish and a pair of Wallabies
and Frenchmen - had to follow certain criteria.
- Retired from playing and coaching international Rugby for at
least three
years
- Made an outstanding contribution to the Game of Rugby
- Demonstrated Rugby's core values are Passion, Integrity, Solidarity,
Discipline and Respect both on and off the field.
Joost van der Westhuizen was inducted into the Hall in 2007 in recognition of
his playing career. Voted the greatest scrum half to have appeared at the Rugby
World Cup - 1995, 1999 and 2003 - and remains the only Springbok to have
captained both the 15 man national team and the Sevens.
His 2015 induction recognizes the courage he has shown since being diagnosed
with motor neuron disease in 2011. As the Hall of Fame site states, "Earlier this
year a wheelchair-bound Van der Westhuizen defied the debilitating effects of the
disease to revisit Ellis Park in Johannesburg to attend the 20th anniversary
celebration of South Africa's RWC 1995 win against the All Blacks, arguably his –
and his country's – finest hour."
Handing over the framed to those
being honoured, or family members, World
Rugby Chairman Bernard Lapasset explained that the Hall honoured those who had
left an indelible mark on the game of rugby.
They were all real legends who had shaped the image of rugby and inspired
generations of fans. These men had contributed to the enjoyment fans experienced,
"through feats on the field of play, displays of great character or through their
tireless and inspirational work in driving forward our great game.
Chris Rea and Pablo Mamone, who form the World Rugby Hall of Fame panel
along with Henri Garcia, Nigel Starmer-Smith and secretary Chris Thau, were also
in attendance in this special presentation held ahead of the eagerly-awaited RWC
2015 Pool C match between New Zealand and Argentina.
The full list of inductees into the World Rugby Hall of Fame (in alphabetical
order) is:
Phil Bennett (Wales), Naas Botha (South Africa), Gordon Brown (Scotland),
Marcel Communeau (France), Gerald
Davies (Wales), Mervyn Davies (Wales), Danie
Gerber (South Africa), Tim Horan (Australia), Andy Irvine (Scotland), Carwyn James
(Wales), Barry John (Wales), Tom Kiernan (Ireland), Gwyn Nicholls (Wales), Basil
Maclear (Ireland), Bill McLaren (Scotland), Edgar Mobbs (England), Hennie Muller
(South Africa), Morné du Plessis (South Africa), Ronald Poulton-Palmer (England),
Tom Richards (Australia), Jean-Pierre Rives (France), Fergus Slattery (Ireland),
Wavell Wakefield (England), Joost van der Westhuizen (South Africa) and John
Lewis Williams (Wales).
Watch the Samoan rugby team honouring Joost Van der Westhuizen with a
hymn Fa'afetai i le atua (Thank you, God, our Creator) sung in Brighton, England:
For more information on the Hall of Fame visit, the site
here.Source: News24
Wire
Joost van der Westhuizen, the former South African rugby union player who played as a scrum-half for the national team, is one of five men inducted for the World Rugby Hall of Fame. He represented South Africa in 89 test matches, scoring 38 tries, and was a member of the victorious South African rugby team at the 1995 World Cup. (Image: Rugby Legends South Africa)