Birthday Tribute | 30 June 2026 | Saracens · Springboks · Rugby
Twickenham, May 2023. The Premiership final. Saracens against Sale. And in the second half, a stocky South African scrumhalf snipes off the back of a ruck, spots the gap nobody else has seen, and dives over the line. Ivan van Zyl, a long way from Pretoria, scoring in a final on the biggest club stage English rugby has to offer.
There are scrumhalves who get handed a career. Ivan van Zyl is one of those who went out and built one, brick by brick, in a country that wasn’t his own. Born on this very day, 30 June 1995, in Pretoria, he turns 31 today.
Happy Birthday, Ivan. The man who found out that a closed door at home can open into a whole new world abroad.
AFFIES AND THE PRETORIA PRODUCTION LINE
Ivan van Zyl is a product of one of the most ruthless rugby nurseries in the country. He came up through Afrikaanse Hoër Seunskool — Affies — the Pretoria school that has churned out Springboks for generations and demands hardness from its boys long before anyone pays them. This is Blue Bulls country, where rugby is not a hobby but an inheritance, and where a small, quick halfback has to be twice as sharp to be noticed at all.
He was noticed early. As far back as 2008 he was running the show at Under-13 Craven Week, still a primary school boy. By 2013 he was at the Under-18 Craven Week in Polokwane, scoring tries and stacking up points. The path from there was the one every Pretoria kid dreams of: the Blue Bulls Academy, the age-group ranks, and the long climb toward the senior jersey.

THE EARLY CAREER: MAKING HIS MARK
His first-class debut came on 6 March 2015, a Vodacom Cup match against the Falcons, and he never looked back at that level. That same year he started all the way through the World Rugby Under-20 Championship in Italy, where the Junior Springboks battled to a third-place finish and Van Zyl ran the team around from nine.
What followed were the years that make a player. Currie Cup campaigns where he played nearly every match. A Super Rugby debut in 2017 off the bench against the Sunwolves. Season on season at Loftus, learning his trade in the toughest domestic competition in the southern hemisphere. By 2018 he was no longer a prospect. He was a scrumhalf the national selectors could no longer ignore.
THE FAF DE KLERK PROBLEM
Here is where the story turns, and where it earns its weight. In June 2018, under a new coach in Rassie Erasmus, Van Zyl got his reward. He made his Springbok debut on 2 June against Wales in Washington, and over that year he earned six caps, against Wales, England, Ireland and France. Six caps. A green and gold jersey. Everything he had worked for since he was a boy at Affies.
And then it stopped.
The problem was not that Van Zyl wasn’t good enough. The problem had a name: Faf de Klerk. Ivan van Zyl arrived at exactly the moment one of the finest scrumhalves of his generation was locking down the Springbok number nine for years to come. There is no shame in being behind De Klerk — half the scrumhalves in the world were — but it meant the door that had opened in 2018 quietly closed. No more caps came. For a lot of players, that is where the story goes flat. A handful of Tests, a few lines in a record book, and a long slow fade at home.
Van Zyl decided that wasn’t going to be his ending.

THE SARACENS YEARS: A SECOND HOME
In February 2021 he left the Bulls and signed for Saracens. It was a gamble. He was leaving the comfort of Pretoria, the system that made him, the place where everyone knew his name, for the cold and the mud of the English Premiership, where he had to prove himself all over again from scratch.
He didn’t just prove himself. He became the man. Ivan van Zyl made himself Saracens’ first-choice scrumhalf and went on to rack up more than 100 appearances for one of the biggest clubs in Europe. He learned the grind of English conditions, the wet-weather kicking game, the week-in week-out attrition of the Premiership. And in 2023 it all paid off in the most fitting way possible, when he scored that try in the final as Saracens beat Sale to lift the title. The kid who couldn’t get past Faf de Klerk had become a Premiership champion on his own terms, in someone else’s country, with his name on the scoresheet when it mattered most.
That is the part of Ivan van Zyl’s story that deserves the most respect. He took the disappointment of a stalled international career and refused to let it define him. He went away and built something bigger.
COMING HOME TO THE SHARKS
Now the wheel turns again. After five seasons and over a century of caps with Saracens, Ivan van Zyl is coming home. He has signed with the Sharks from the 2026/27 season, stepping into the gap left by Grant Williams, bringing all that hard-won European experience back to South African rugby in the URC. At 31 he returns not as the hopeful Pretoria youngster who left, but as a seasoned veteran who has seen everything the game can throw at a number nine and answered it.
For the Sharks, signing a man with his nous and his mileage is a shrewd move, exactly the kind of steadying experience a young backline needs. For Ivan van Zyl, it is the chance to close the circle in the country where it all started.
Happy 31st Birthday, Ivan. From all of us at Just Plain Sport — the door at home may have closed once, but you went and built a second one, and now you’re walking back through the first. Welcome home, and many happy returns. 🎂🏉
📸 Images via Getty Images / Saracens / SA Rugby






































