Schalk Burger

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Schalk Burger
Personal information
Full name Schalk Burger Jr.
Date of birth April 13, 1983 (1983-04-13) (age 25)
Place of birth Flag of South Africa Port Elizabeth, South Africa
Height 1.93 m (6 ft 4 in)
Weight 110 kg (17 st 5 lb)
School Paarl Gimnasium
Rugby union career
Playing career
Position Flanker
Provincial/State sides Caps (points)
2004-06 Western Province 21 (30)
Super Rugby    
2004- Stormers 28 (10)
National team(s)    
2003- South Africa 37 (50)

Schalk ("Schalla") Burger Jr. (born April 13, 1983 in Port Elizabeth) is a South African rugby union player. He plays the position of flanker in the Springbok rugby union team and is regarded as one of the best flankers in the world.

Contents

[edit] Father

His father, also called Schalk Burger, was an international lock, being capped for South Africa during the "isolation years" of the 1980s. Schalk was schooled at Paarl Gimnasium, and enjoyed success in many sports.

[edit] Rugby Career

After playing for the Under 21 Springbok side that won the U21 Rugby World Cup in 2002 and then captaining it in 2003, Schalk was selected for the senior Springbok squad. He made his debut against Georgia in 2003 at the Rugby World Cup and has since carved out a name as one of the best flankers in the world with solid performances in the Super 12, Tri-Nations and Currie Cup. Burger plays for the Vodacom Stormers and Investec Western Province Rugby Union.

Burger's fitness is remarkable. He is rarely rested throughout the Stormers' Super 14 campaigns, South African Test matches or the Currie Cup, whilst playing a major role in forward play and seldom being substituted before the final whistle. Despite these strengths, Burger does have a problem on field with accruing yellow cards and penalties frequently, a problem common to many - if not all - 'fetcher' flankers in world rugby.[citation needed]

[edit] 2004

In 2004, Burger was selected as part of a rejuvenated Springbok squad which, under the guiding hand of new coach Jake White, went on to win the Tri-Nations trophy for the first time since Nick Mallett's team managed the feat in 1998.

He was also awarded the most coveted rugby player's award, the IRB International Player of the Year award in the 2004 season. In addition, he claimed the 2004 ABSA SA Rugby Player of the Year award.

[edit] 2006

After an indifferent 2006 Super 14 season, during which Burger showed only flashes of the brilliance that took him to the peak of world rugby, he was to once again start in his favoured number 6 shirt (openside flanker in South African rugby) in the national team for the upcoming expanded Tri-Nations test series against Australia and New Zealand. However, in the Springboks' Test match against Scotland on June 17th, Burger suffered a serious neck injury. The following day, it was confirmed that he would require cervical fusion surgery and would be out of action for at least the remainder of 2006.[1] The injury and the required surgery were serious enough for White to tell the media, "I don't want to jump to conclusions - but there is a chance he may never play again."[2] Burger's father told a Cape Town radio program that the injury was between his sixth and seventh cervical vertebrae, adding, "Although the operation is difficult the fact that the injury is lower down his neck is good for a future prognosis of making a full recovery."[2] The South African Rugby Union released a statement on 24 June, the date of the surgery, indicating that the surgery was successful and that Burger would undergo six to eight months of rehabilitation with plans to return him to the game.[3]

[edit] 2007 and the Rugby World Cup

Following surgery, Burger returned to the Vodacom Stormers line-up on January 13th 2007, playing 55 minutes as the Stormers lost to the Bulls. Despite the loss, Burger did show flashes of the brilliance that took him to the peak of world rugby in 2004/05.[citation needed] After a shaky start to the 2007 Super 14 season, Burger inspired the Stormers to their first win of the campaign against the Chiefs as the Stormers recorded their first points of the season in a tense 21 - 16 victory at the Newlands Stadium.

In mid-2007 he was picked in the Springboks squad for the 2007 Rugby World Cup. He has been linked with a move to Harlequins of the English Premiership after the cup.[4]

During the Springboks' first match of the Rugby World Cup against Samoa, Burger was cited for a high tackle on Junior Polu, and on 11 September was given a four-match suspension which would have in theory kept him out of the team until the semi-final. However, this was reduced to a two-match suspension on appeal.[5]

Schalk Burger was part of the Rugby World Cup Winning 2007 team to lift the Webb Ellis trophy and brought it back to South Africa for the second time in four attempts.

[edit] 2008

In March 2008 Burger was banned for openly abusing a touch judge in a Super 14 game for the Stormers. The touch judge in question had suggested the referee send Burger to the sin-bin for an offense that the referee hadn't seen. Upon leaving the field, Burger was seen to be gesticulating and shouting at the touch judge, and was promptly booed by both the Stormers and visitng fans. The citing commissioner decided that Burger be banned for 2 weeks for his actions.

[edit] Notes and references

  1. ^ "Burger blow for the Springboks", Planet-Rugby.com, 19 June 2006.
  2. ^ a b "Fears for injured Burger's career", BBC, 19 June 2006.
  3. ^ "Schalk Burger jnr operation successful", South African Rugby Union, 24 June 2006.
  4. ^ Cain, Nick. "Player exodus threatens world order", The Sunday Times, 2007-04-29. Retrieved on 2007-04-30. 
  5. ^ "Banned Burger out of England game." BBC News online, Wednesday, 12 September 2007, 05:35 GMT.

(6) http://www.planet-rugby.com/Story/0,18259,3551_3197603,00.html

In May 2008 his sister was kidnapped and raped in Cape Town, South Africa. The rapist has not been caught.

[edit] External links

Awards
Preceded by
Flag of England Jonny Wilkinson
IRB International Player of the Year
2004
Succeeded by
Flag of New Zealand Daniel Carter