Facebook Pixel MIRACLE-MAN KOLISI PRIMED FOR ANOTHER AMAZING TALE | Evening Standard - newspaper - Read this story on Magzter.com

Try GOLD - Free

MIRACLE-MAN KOLISI PRIMED FOR ANOTHER AMAZING TALE

Evening Standard

|

September 07, 2023

ONE day, Siya Kolisi could be South Africa's president. For the next two months, the Springbok Superman will settle for leading his nation's Rugby World Cup defence.

- Nick Purewal

MIRACLE-MAN KOLISI PRIMED FOR ANOTHER AMAZING TALE

Kolisi became more than a man the moment he hoisted rugby's greatest prize, four years ago in Japan.

Long since a symbol of hope and success for anyone trying to thrive in South Africa's townships, on November 2, 2019, Kolisi shouldered an even greater responsibility.

The Zwide-born back-row forward found a way out of poverty, hunger and danger - through the hardest of graft, enduring love and humility to that 32-12 World Cup Final triumph over England.

The 32-year-old has never let that burden weigh him down. Among all the accolades, the charity foundation, raising his own family and continuing his storied rugby career, perhaps that alone underscores his greatness.

Those without birthright have no use for privilege.

Kolisi is already using his status for good, for change. And a country always conflicted on its future path will doubtless cry out for him to move into politics.

Twickenham erupted in an unmatched roar when Kolisi's face was beamed onto the big screens after South Africa thrashed New Zealand 35-7 in west London last month.

This modern icon long ago transcended rugby. But then he outdid even his great self by recovering from a torn anterior cruciate ligament in four months.

This is preposterous, and yet, has actually happened.

If Kolisi wants any respite from his miracle-man status, the Sharks flanker is going about it all wrong.

A standard hamstring-graft ACL rehabilitation is nine months, while some can stretch to a year.

MORE STORIES FROM Evening Standard

The London Standard

The London Standard

Excuses have run out for Arsenal ahead of red-hot title showdown

His side look spent, but Arteta must find a way to get a statement result in battle with City.

time to read

2 mins

April 16, 2026

The London Standard

The London Standard

The jaw-dropping therapy that made LeAnn Rimes cry...

It was a striking moment that unsurprisingly went viral: the singer LeAnn Rimes receiving “jaw release therapy” and then being overcome with emotion.

time to read

2 mins

April 16, 2026

The London Standard

The London Standard

First Night Garai is a dazzle of nerves as Ibsen's house is rebuiltin modern London

Romola Garai is a fine, fragile Nora in a contemporary London reboot of Ibsen’s drama that reminds me of the BBC's compelling shares 'n’ shagging series Industry.

time to read

2 mins

April 16, 2026

The London Standard

The London Standard

A day in the life Elcella founder Dr Madusha Peiris

The gut scientist keeps things simple and sensible, with early starts, whole foods, mindful movement and plenty of sleep

time to read

2 mins

April 16, 2026

The London Standard

The London Standard

'THE THOUGHT OF WRITING MUSIC MADE ME WANT TO THROW UP'

Bass king and musician's musician Thundercat talks to Craig McLean about the devastating loss of Mac Miller, A$AP Rocky being the male Yoko Ono and Kanye discovering 'accountability is a motherf***er'

time to read

5 mins

April 16, 2026

The London Standard

The London Standard

Singer Rufus Wainwright gets his bling in Cecil Court and has a grand old time at the Delaunay

If I were Mayor, I'd throw a bash in the cast rooms at the V&A and everybody would have to do acid-except if you're under six

time to read

3 mins

April 16, 2026

The London Standard

The London Standard

Chelsea's recruitment strategy under the microscope

With poor results on the pitch and senior players hinting at unhappiness, there are big questions to be answered.

time to read

6 mins

April 16, 2026

The London Standard

The London Standard

HOW TO LONDONMAXX ANIGHT ON THE TILES

There was a notorious Soho pub crawl prevalent in the old days.

time to read

3 mins

April 16, 2026

The London Standard

The London Standard

What it's like for renters at the sharp end of London's housing crisis

Uncertainty, despair, ever-rising rents: now tenants are taking to the streets.

time to read

6 mins

April 16, 2026

The London Standard

The London Standard

One big step... for future missions: what did we learn from Artemis II?

THE MOON MISSION DIDN'T BREAK SCIENTIFIC GROUND - BUT THAT WASN'T THE POINT

time to read

4 mins

April 16, 2026

Translate

Share

-
+

Change font size