Key Takeaways
- South Africa records historic 73-0 victory over Wales – the heaviest home defeat in Welsh rugby history
- Springboks score 11 tries with Sacha Feinberg-Mngomezulu contributing 28 points
- Eben Etzebeth receives red card for eye gouging incident in final moments
- Wales field weakened team due to fixture falling outside official Test window
Welsh rugby’s miserable year concluded with unprecedented humiliation as South Africa delivered a record-breaking 73-0 demolition at Cardiff’s Principality Stadium. The Springboks’ dominant performance featured 11 tries while Wales suffered their heaviest-ever home defeat in a match marred by Eben Etzebeth’s late red card for eye gouging.
Springboks Dominate From Start
South Africa established immediate control, surging to a 28-0 halftime lead through tries from Gerhard Steenekamp, Ethan Hooker, Jasper Wiese and Morne van der Berg. The visitors’ scrum dominance set the tone from the opening minutes, with Wales unable to match the world champions’ physicality.
Sacha Feinberg-Mngomezulu, educated at Llandovery College through a Cape Town exchange program, proved instrumental with two tries and nine conversions for a personal 28-point haul. His performance highlighted the gulf between the teams as South Africa surpassed England’s previous record 68-14 Cardiff victory from March.
Second-Half Carnage Continues
The onslaught intensified after halftime with Wilco Louw, Canan Moodie, Andre Esterhuizen, Ruan Nortje and Etzebeth all crossing the try line. South Africa’s “Bomb Squad” bench entered the fray as Wales played 20 minutes with 14 men due to yellow cards for Taine Plumtree and Aaron Wainwright.
Wales’ selection woes proved significant as the match fell outside World Rugby’s official Test window, forcing them to field a weakened side without 13 England and France-based players. Despite also missing club players, South Africa’s bench alone contained more Test caps than Wales’ entire matchday squad.
Etzebeth Incident Mars Victory
The comprehensive victory was overshadowed by Etzebeth’s dismissal for gouging Alex Mann’s eye in the closing stages. The incident ensures the Springboks lock faces a potential lengthy ban despite his team’s commanding performance.
This marks Wales’ second shutout defeat of 2025, following their 43-0 Six Nations loss to France. The result raises serious questions about the Welsh Rugby Union’s decision to schedule this fixture against the world’s top-ranked team during a non-Test window.







