Jaco van der Westhuyzen
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Jaco van der Westhuyzen | |||
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Date of birth | April 06, 1978 (age 28) | ||
Place of birth | Groblersdal, Mpumalanga | ||
Height | 1.8 m | ||
Weight | 88 kg | ||
Rugby union career | |||
Position | Fullback Fly-half Wing | ||
Super Rugby | Caps | (points) | |
Bulls | |||
correct as of . | |||
National team(s) | Caps | (points) | |
Springboks | 32 | (25) | |
correct as of . |
Jaco van der Westhuyzen (born 6 April 1978 in Groblersdal, Mpumalanga province, South Africa) is a South African rugby union footballer who plays fly-half or fullback. He is a devout Christian.
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[edit] Early life
Educated at Ben Viljoen High School, Groblersdal, Jaco studied law at UNISA. Van der Westhuyzen has played for South Africa A, U23s and U21s (helping them to the Sanzar title in Argentina in 2000), as well as the South African Barbarians in 2001 and South Africa Schools in 1996.
[edit] Professional rugby career
He made his name with the Natal Sharks as a fly-half, playing in both the Currie Cup (scoring 96 points in 21 games) and then making his Super 12 debut in 1997 as a 19-year-old. He was unable to force his way into the team in Durban and moved north to the Mpumalanga Pumas where he came under the eye of ex-Springbok centre Danie Gerber.
Jaco was first capped for the Springboks in the 2000 Tri Nations tournament against New Zealand as a replacement, but a knee injury after his first two tests curtailed his international career.
Jaco then moved to the Pretoria-based Blue Bulls in 2001 helping them to the Vodacom Cup in his first year then, still playing as a fly-half, claiming the Currie Cup title in 2002. He was named the South African Super 12 Player of the Year following the Bulls’ sixth-place finish in the competition - the highest of any South African team in 2003. He returned to the Bulls in 2006 after stints at Leicester Tigers and NEC Green Rockets. He has been played mainly at fullback since his return; Morné Steyn and Derick Hougaard are currently well-established as the team's fly-halves.
He scored his debut international try against Samoa in Brisbane in the 2003 Rugby World Cup, after he was called into the South African squad as a late replacement.
In 2006, van der Westhuyzen was part of the Springboks side that was thrashed 49-0 by the Wallabies, in their opening Tri Nations match. van der Westhuyzen made many handling errors during the match, leading to Butch James to be brought into the side. One of van der Westhuyzen's errors involved him dropping the ball and after in the bounced, kick it, claiming to the referee that he was attempting a field goal. Later, van der Westhuyzen claimed he "needed to think of something"[a reason].
[edit] Playing overseas
[edit] Leicester Tigers
After the 2003 Rugby World Cup he joined Leicester Tigers, where he initially was brought in as a fullback to replace Tim Stimpson. However, he was soon switched to fly-half, following in the tradition of Joel Stransky. His performances earned him a recall to the Springbok side in 2004.
[edit] NEC Green Rockets
Despite attempts by Leicester to keep him at the club, he decided to honour a contract he had signed with NEC Green Rockets in Japan and spent the 2004-5 season there.
[edit] External links
- Profile at ths Springbok Rugby Hall of Fame
- Profile at sarugby.com
- "Van der Westhuyzen gives up the Yen", planet-rugby.com, 2007-01-24. Retrieved on 2007-01-30.
South Africa squad - 2003 Rugby World Cup | ||
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Forwards: | Bands • Bezuidenhout • Boome • Botha • Burger • Coetzee • Krige (c) • Matfield • van Niekerk • Rautenbach • Rossouw • Santon • Scholtz • Sephaka • Smit • Smith | |
Backs: | Barry • Delport • Fourie • Greeff • Hougaard • de Kock • Koen • Loubscher • Muller • Paulse • Terblanche • van der Westhuizen • van der Westhuyzen • Willemse | |
Coach: | Straeuli |