
The Barbarians arrived in Gqeberha promising a festival of running rugby and left having donated 80 points to the cause of South African happiness. The final read 80โ31, a scoreline so lopsided that the Barbarians' team bus reportedly tried to leave at half-time and was talked back inside by a man holding a clipboard and a promise.
Eighty. Points. That is not a rugby score, that is a phone number. That is a temperature that closes schools. The Boks ran in tries from everywhere โ wings, forwards, men who weren't even on the team sheet but happened to be standing nearby and got swept along by the current. Every time the Barbarians cleared their lines, the ball came back like a boomerang thrown by a champion.
To their credit, the Barbarians scored 31, which is a respectable total in any match that isn't also featuring the world champions playing keepie-uppie with your dignity. Their attacking glimpses were genuinely lovely โ like watching someone do beautiful brushstrokes on a canvas that is, regrettably, on fire.
It was a warm-up. A friendly. A 'festival.' The Springboks treated it the way a great white treats a snorkeling tour: politely, thoroughly, and with witnesses. Next stop, the Nations Championship, where the opponents will, in theory, be allowed to keep their points.

