Leon Schuster recalls his long wait on the bench, facing off (literally) with unshaven opponents in the scrum, and upsetting Naas.
Joost van der Westhuizen talks about Kamp Staaldraad, fame and the media, and being a scrumhalf who can go both ways.
Former Wallaby hooker Phil Kearns chats about cutting his All Black rival down to size, winning the World Cup twice, and tough SA tours.
The much-capped Bok wing tells us about his idyllic childhood, and the two talent spotters who put him on the road to success.
Gary Bailey talks about the lonely life of a Man United bachelor, why he rates Sir Alex, and how he prepared for life after soccer.
Lucas Radebe looks back on a long and singularly clean-living football career that included a couple of unusual honours.
Graeme Smith talks about father-son rivalry, Hansie’s gift to cricket, and staying cool through the inevitable ups and downs.
Terry Paine, veteran of the unlikely World Cup-winning side of ’66, looks back on street footie and putting dirty players in their place — and taking his mum to Buckingham Palace.
Allan Lamb talks about why Imran Khan isn’t on his Christmas card list, why Hansie Cronje didn’t deserve to be forgiven after lying about match-f ixing, and why SA can rightly regard themselves as the …
Syd Nomis, scorer of two famous Bok Test tries, looks back on the days when rugby was rough and even the ref sometimes turned a blind eye.
Clive Rice — captain of a legendary Transvaal team and veteran of the toughest cricket series on the planet — relishes complicated players, and reckons 20/20 is a welcome innovation.