Swipe for some of Yumeka Oda's fast flick! Yumeka’s got a great bag of tricks on lock 🔒
1 - Crook Nollie Flip
2 - Kickflip Front Feeble
3 - Kickflip Back 50
4 - Kickflip Front Boardslide
@lmd_3212@Brendennel@AndrewMort18 Only pity is that it does not include the top teams from the Super Rugby and Japan One League. Had it included those teams, it would have been a sort of world cup on club level. We can't have it all, but at least at the moment we get to compete in that competition.
@lmd_3212@Brendennel@AndrewMort18 Who's your "we"? I'm a Saffa and I would much prefer we focus on the Champions Cup. It's literally the biggest club competition in the world. No other competition takes the top teams from 3 other competitions and then pits them against each other to see who is best.
The older you get, the more you realize luck is just exposure.
If you sit in the same chair, same routine, talking to same people… nothing new happens.
You have to touch the world to win.
• Talk to strangers
• try a new coffee spot
• post on social
• Start a side hustle
The world rewards motion.
You don’t find opportunity sitting still.
You bump into it.
@AlastairMarti16@KeithKandrews The point is not wether the other player was hurt, the FACT is that the 2 situations are the same, but the sanctions are worlds apart. The player on the other end of Wiese's head "tap" was also not hurt in the process, further proving the situations are the same.
This is an absolutely phenomenal piece of James Bond media. Sean Connery (on the set of GOLDFINGER) explaining the real life inspiration for changing 007s firearm of choice.
You don’t get behind the scenes videos like this anymore.
@DarrylSaul79@THESTORMERS Really? He just had an 8 game streak before this loss. Still top of the URC log, WITH a game in hand. Yes, he royally screwed up today, but to conveniently discredit the rest of the season after one poor game is short-sighted and simple-minded...
On 9th Jan 1996, South African cricket quietly turned a page that would shape its future for more than a decade. In an ODI against England, two young names appeared on the team sheet for the very first time — names that would soon become inseparable from South Africa’s golden era.
A 20-year-old Jacques Kallis walked out for his debut and looked every bit the composed cricketer he would later become, contributing a steady 38 runs and giving a glimpse of his calm authority at the crease.
Alongside him was another newcomer, 22-year-old Shaun Pollock, who announced himself in far more dramatic fashion. Pollock produced a match-winning all-round performance, finishing unbeaten on 66 and then tearing through England’s chase with figures of 4 for 34. It was his spell that tilted a tense contest South Africa’s way, sealing a narrow six-run victory.
What felt like just another hard-fought ODI at the time would, in hindsight, be remembered as the day two future greats began their journey on the international stage.
@Ingenieurusaca@RassieRugby Hoe ironies dat jy HÓM 'n hanskakie noem wanneer JÝ jou land verlaat het en by 'n ander aangesluit het. Dis in ons guns dat jy weg is, ons soek nie jou soort hier nie. Jy is die ware hanskakie. 💩
@marcrobbins@ElStormerZA@URCOfficial If it was in any way unfair or detrimental to the other 12 teams, it simply would not have been allowed. But clearly it's just you complaining about nonsense. 🤦♂️