Every time the Springboks looked like they could take a breather, Scotland broke through again. Handré Pollard was the one constant that refused to let them get away with it.
He’d arrived at Loftus under a cloud that had nothing to do with the Boks. Armchair perfectionists had spent weeks picking apart his URC form for the Bulls, decided it wasn’t good enough, and questioned whether he belonged in the run-on side at all. Handré Pollard didn’t argue the point in interviews. He answered it on the field, over eighty minutes in which Scotland kept finding a way back into the contest and he kept finding a way to shut the door.
South Africa raced to 14-0 inside twenty minutes and looked comfortable. Scotland had other ideas, striking twice in quick succession to level it at 14-14 by half-time, and the pattern repeated itself all afternoon: the Boks would pull clear, Scotland would claw back within touching distance, and it was Handré Pollard, more than anyone else in green and gold, who kept steadying the ship.
The iceman tag gets thrown around loosely in sport, but on a day when the players around him were rotated, inexperienced, or simply rattled, Pollard’s temperature never moved.

It wasn’t just about composure under the high ball, though there was plenty of that too, Handré Pollard repeatedly winning aerial exchanges that Scotland had clearly targeted from kickoff. Midway through the second half, his afternoon changed shape entirely. Ethan Hooker failed a head injury assessment and had to leave the field, and rather than simply making way himself, Pollard shifted into the centres to help cover the gap while Quan Horn came on to steer things at flyhalf.
It’s not a role he plays often at Test level, but he adapted to it without missing a beat. His reading of the game in traffic, his distribution, his willingness to get his hands dirty in a position that isn’t his natural home, all of it added up to a Man of the Match display that went well beyond anything he did off the kicking tee. And when it came to the boot, there was nothing left to chance either: five conversions from five attempts, not a miss all day.
JAY | JPS SAYS: “This is exactly why you don’t drop a player like Pollard for one bad Bulls run. Test rugby is a different animal, and he proved it in front of his own union.”
There was a leadership dimension to it too. This was a heavily rotated Springbok side, ten changes from the team that beat England the week before, with Embrose Papier making his first Test appearance since 2018 and Paul de Villiers still finding his feet in only his second cap. Scotland, sensing the inexperience around them, threw everything at Loftus for long periods and were level at the break for their trouble.
It was the old heads, Handré Pollard chief among them, who steadied the ship when it mattered. South Africa’s response came in bursts, two tries inside ninety seconds either side of half-time, and Pollard’s hand was in both the platform and the finishing touches, setting up Jesse Kriel’s late sealing try with a grubber kick that Kriel chased down perfectly.
Handré Pollard was honest afterwards about where the work still needs to happen. All credit to Scotland, he said, calling them a very good side who had the Boks under the pump for long periods, before adding that the character shown in the third quarter was what ultimately got South Africa over the line.
He was equally blunt about the defensive lapses that let Scotland back into a game South Africa should have controlled from the front, promising it would be a focus before the Springboks turn to Wales in Durban.

That honesty matters. It would have been easy for Handré Pollard to let the individual performance do the talking, five from five off the tee, Man of the Match, a statement outing after a rough patch of club form. Instead he pointed straight at the collective problem, twenty-two missed tackles by half-time and more than double that by full time, and made clear the celebration comes with conditions attached.
For a player two years removed from lifting a second World Cup, there’s nothing left to prove individually. What Saturday showed was something else: a squad still finding its settled combinations, blooding new faces in a rotated side, leaning on its most experienced hand to hold the shape together when the pressure came. Handré Pollard did that from first phase to last, kicking tee included, and did it in a position that wasn’t even his by the finish.
South Africa move to Kings Park in Durban next Saturday to face Wales, still unbeaten in this Nations Championship campaign. Scotland return to Murrayfield to host Fiji, still searching for that elusive first win on South African soil after eight attempts. For Pollard, the number that matters most from Saturday isn’t the score. It’s the zero in his miss column.
Images via Gallo Images / SA Rugby / The South African


































