An avowed communist is now running New York. A literal Nazi sits in the White House. London is a blood-soaked war zone. None of these things are true, of course, but why should that matter when public opinion is pulled to the extreme fringes by sensationalists on social media?
Spend five minutes online and you’d swear South African rugby supporters are the most unbearable fans in sport. The loudest, the rudest, the most paranoid. Every referee is corrupt, every journalist biased, and every loss a conspiracy. According to the digital narrative, Springbok fans don’t just follow rugby, they wage crusades in the comment section.
A recent editorial on Planet Rugby claimed that Springbok supporters “need to grow up.” It struck a chord, but also a nerve. The writer wasn’t entirely wrong; some of what happens online really is draining. But the brush felt too broad. The piece talks about fans “weaponising victory” and “living through reflected glory.”
Perhaps there’s some truth in that, but isn’t all sport a kind of reflected glory? The joy, the tension, the chest-thumping pride; that’s the point of caring. To fault South Africans for feeling it too loudly is to confuse passion with pathology.
Even Oom Rugby – one of the sharpest rugby minds left on X – recently mused that the tone of fan discourse has become, well, exhausting. He wasn’t wrong either. A few voices really do dominate the feed with unfiltered outrage. But that’s true of every rugby nation with Wi-Fi and a chip on its shoulder. The difference is that South Africa’s noise travels further, because it sits at the intersection of global rugby relevance and national identity. The jersey means more, and so does the argument. It’s also true because the Springboks are currently rugby’s undisputed kings.
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And yet, what certain commentators and journalists believe about South African rugby often gets mistaken for universal truth. When Stephen Jones of The Sunday Times branded the Springboks’ World Cup final win over New Zealand as “panicky,” or when The Telegraph’s Daniel Schofield called them “the most morally compromised team at the tournament,” they weren’t speaking for all Welsh or English fans, just as the trolls online don’t speak for all South Africans.
They simply have a platform, and more often than not, that platform isn’t earned. The same goes for the recurring spats between RugbyPass’s Ben Smith and Rassie Erasmus, or Smith’s fractious relationship with Bok supporters: it’s theatre, not truth, and it thrives because outrage has a higher click-through rate than context.
That, of course, is the dirty little secret of modern rugby culture: the outrage keeps the lights on. The clicks, the comments, the tribal volleys across social media, they’re what drive engagement, subscriptions, algorithms, and airtime. Rage doesn’t just fuel the circus; it is the circus. Without it, the tent would start to sag.
But step away from the screen and the caricature collapses. In the real world, South African supporters are some of the most dedicated in the game. They travel in numbers that defy economic gravity, filling stadiums in Dublin, London, and Paris while earning in rands and spending in euros. They come from a country where the economy wobbles, the power cuts out, and the cost of living is a contact sport. Yet they still shape their lives around the fate of an oval ball. And if you ever meet them on the road, they’ll probably hand you a bag of biltong and a cold beer before asking who you support.
If that’s toxicity, then passion needs rebranding.
Of course, there is a minority that gives everyone else a bad name. The conspiracy theorists. The refereeing obsessives. The people who believe Erasmus is the second-coming of the messiah. But the silent majority of supporters cringe when they see those same numbskulls misrepresent them online. They know the emptiest vessels make the most noise.
Fans of South Africa cheer during The Rugby Championship match between South Africa Springboks and Argentina at Allianz Stadium on October 04, 2025 in London, England. (Photo by Ryan Pierse/Getty Images)
If you can’t tell the difference between a social media thread and a Test-match terrace, you’re not analysing fandom, you’re just scrolling anthropology. Still, the critics touch on something worth acknowledging. The line between passion and poison is thin.
Rugby thrives on tribalism, and tribalism thrives on rancour. The trick isn’t to silence it; it’s to remember that beneath the shouting lies shared affection for the same sport. If rugby were stripped of its edge – of the rivalries, the needle, the songs – it would lose half its heart.
And that brings us neatly to this weekend’s meeting with France.
If ever there was a fixture to test rugby’s emotional temperature, this is it. The bruisers from the south against the stylists of the north. The two champions of their hemispheres. The chance for revenge and the opportunity to reinforce the status quo.
The Paris crowd will be a wall of thunder, the Springboks will snarl at the chaos, and the rest of the rugby world will lean in. Online, there’ll be the usual fuss – questionable memes, outrage over decisions, sweeping declarations of moral superiority – but in the stadium, there’ll be something much rarer: joy. The simple, unfiltered joy of two of the best rugby cultures colliding.
Rugby would be better served if we remembered that difference. The internet exaggerates division, but the stands still unite. Fans argue ferociously for eighty minutes and then share a drink. They trade jerseys, not insults. The vitriol lives mostly online; the camaraderie lives in person.
At the same time, it would be naïve to wish tribalism away. Without it, there would be no storylines, no energy, no reason for anyone to care. A little friction keeps the wheels turning. The trick is to stop it from grinding the gears.
So, no, South African supporters aren’t the “worst” or “most toxic.” They’re passionate, flawed, and gloriously human – a microcosm of the sport itself. They can be infuriating one moment and inspiring the next, but they care in a way that moves the needle for everyone else.
Rugby doesn’t need fewer South African fans; it just needs fewer people mistaking the comments section for the crowd.
Because the real nightmare for the sport isn’t hostile South Africans, it’s indifferent ones. If the day ever comes when South Africans stop arguing, stop singing, stop spending their hard-earned rands to follow a game half a world away, rugby will feel it everywhere. The stadiums will sound a little quieter, the rivalries will feel a little flatter, and even the harshest critics will miss the roar they once mistook for trouble.
Rugby doesn’t suffer when South Africans care too much. It suffers when they don’t.