Jan 28 2010

Springbok flanker Ruben Kruger has passed away at the age of 39.

Kruger was forced to retire from rugby in 2000 due to a brain tumour. He has been fighting its effects for some time, and unfortunately lost the battle to this cancer.

It’s the only battle I’ve ever seen him lose. Kruger is one of my top 10 players of all time and a Springbok legend.

Kruger was born on the 30th March 1970 in Vrede.

He was educated at Grey College in Bloemfontein (one of a long list who have gone on to become Springboks from this great school) before attending Free State University and played for Shimlas and the Free State Cheetahs, before a long and distinguished career for the Bulls and South Africa.

Kruger was the 596th Springbok, and made his debut in 1993 against a South Australian invitational XV, before his test debut against Argentina in the same year. His last test was as a replacement against New Zealand at the 1999 Rugby World Cup.

During his 36 test matches for South Africa, Kruger scored 7 tries (35 points). My favourite was the try in the opening minutes of the 1997 test at Eden Park, during which Kruger unfortunately broke his ankle. It was typical Kruger, hard, uncompromising flank play, following up close to the ball and burrowing over.

He unfortunately was never awarded what I thought was a fair try in the 1995 Rugby World Cup final when he was driven over the line but the ref did not award it. That could have been one of the most important tries ever for the Springboks, but perhaps it wasn’t awarded to add to the drama that later unfolded.

Nicknamed the ‘silent assassin’ by coach Kitch Christie, Kruger was fittingly named South African Rugby Football Union’s player of the year in 1995. He started in 5 matches, only missing the game against Canada in Port Elizabeth. He scored a try against France in the Durban semi-final and only admitted years later that it was not a legitimate try.

Kruger was one of the rocks which the 1995 Springbok Rugby World Cup campaign was built around. Together with Springbok captain Francois Pienaar, he formed the hardest, most uncompromising flank combination I have ever seen. If ever I wanted to go into battle with anyone, those two guys would be the first names I’d ever put down.

Kruger was also selected for the 1999 Rugby World Cup, although not a regular starting member of the side.

Kruger also represented the Bulls (formerly Northern Transvaal) and led the side on occasion. As was his trademark, he led from the front, always playing hard and never giving up. I don’t think I’ve ever seen a player with such tenacity as Kruger, and the other key attribute he possessed was his stamina. He was a superbly fit individual and worked terribly hard to be the best in the game.

After his rugby career he became a camera salesman and owned a Minolta franchise in Pretoria.

What impressed me most about Kruger was not just his determination, dedication and never say die attitude. It was his demeanour as a person. He was not just a legend of the game, but a role model for all South Africans and a damn good oke.

My condolences to the Kruger family, all his teammates, and the many many people he influenced over the years.

RIP Ruben.

Rugby stats:

Status: LEGEND

Teams: Springboks, Bulls (Northern Transvaal), Free State Cheetahs, Grey College (Bloemfontein)
Springbok debut: 1993 v South Australia Invitation XV
Test debut: 1993 v Argentina
Test matches: 36
Tries: 7
Rugby World Cups: 1995 (South Africa), 1999 (UK)

One Response

  1. Neil Engelbrecht Says:

    Ruben will be sorely missed, our prayers are with his family in this hard time… RIP

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