Thursday, 10 September 2015

BLACK SOCIAL HISTORY : AFRO-SOUTH AFRICAN " HANYANI SHINANGE " IS A FORMER RUGBY UNION PLAYER AND PLAYED IN THE HOOKER POSITION : GOES INTO THE " HALL OF BLACK GENIUS "

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Hanyani Shimange


Hanyani Shimange
Personal information
Full nameHanyani Masana Shimange
NicknameShimmie
Born17 April 1978 (age 37)
ElimWestern CapeSouth Africa
Height1.78 m (5 ft 10 in)
Weight104 kg (16 st 5 lb)
OccupationRugby analyst for SuperSport
School(s) attendedRondebosch Boys High School
UniversityUniversity of Cape Town
Club information
Playing positionHooker
Senior career*
YearsTeamApps(Pts)
2000Natal Wildebeest()
2000–01Natal Sharks()
2002–04Free State Cheetahs()
2003–04Cats18(0)
2005–06Western Province13(5)
2005–10Stormers15(0)
2007Boland Cavaliers0(0)
2008–10Western Province27(5)
Representative team(s)
1999South Africa U21()
2003South Africa 'A'()
2004–06South Africa9(0)
† Appearances (Points).
Hanyani Masana Shimange (born 17 April 1978 in Elim, a small town in South Africa's Western Cape Province) is a former rugby union player. His position of choice was hooker, but played one game for the Springboks at flank. During his career, Shimange played for the Natal SharksFree State Cheetahs and Western Province in the Currie Cup competition in South Africa and the SharksCats and Stormers in the international Super Rugby competition.[1]
Shimange started his rugby career at Western Province, being part of the Western Province Academy Team.[2] In 1999 he was picked for the South Africa u/21 team who took part in the Southern Hemisphere u/21 competition. In 2000 Shimange moved to Durban where he was selected for the Natal Wildebeest, competing in the Vodacom Cup competition. During the same year he made his debut in the Currie Cup for the Natal Sharks. In 2002 he moved to Bloemfontein to play for the Free State Cheetahs, where he also played in the Vodacom Cup as well as the Currie Cup. As a representative of the Cheetahs he was picked for the Cats' Super Rugby team in 2003. Through 2003 and 2004 he played a total of 18 games for the Cats, often as a replacement, but failed to score any points. He was also on the bench for two more games, but did not take to the field.[3] He played for the Free State Cheetahs and the Cats until 2004, before moving back to the Western Cape, to take up a contract with Western Province. He also played Currie Cup for Western Province until 2006. Shimange often found himself picked as a replacement and started few games. In 2007 Shimange moved to Boland in the hope of getting more game-time. However he ended up playing for no South African domestic union in 2007, due to Boland laying him off in the wake of the Fidentia meltdown.[4][5] He did however continue to be part of the Stormers' squad in the Super Rugby competition that year. He returned to Cape Town in 2008 where he started playing for Western Province in the Vodacom Cup, before playing Currie Cup rugby for them from 2009 until his retirement in 2010. In January 2010 Shimange trained with the Lions Super Rugby squad while being assessed by Lions' coach Dick Muir for a possible loan agreement with the Stormers to whom he was contracted.[6] He did not end up playing for the Lions on loan and formed part of the Stormers squad for the 2010 Super Rugby season.
On 26 June 2004, Shimange made his debut for the Springboks against Wales at Loftus Versfeld in Pretoria, coming on as a replacement in the second half, replacing Victor Matfield in the 62nd minute, and playing his only test at flank.[7] South Africa won the game 53-18. All Shimange's international caps came as a replacement. He took the field a total of 9 times from the replacement bench, but was unused on the bench for another 12 tests.[1] His final test for the Springboks was played on 10 June 2006 against Scotland at Kings Park in Durban. South Africa won the game 36-16. He was included on the bench in subsequent tests, but was never utilised again until he was dropped from the Springbok squad in May 2007 by coach Jake White.[4]
Shimange was nominated for the SA Rugby Young Player of the Year award in 2002.
After retirement, Shimange joined South African pay TV channel SuperSport's broadcasting team in 2011 as a Rugby Analyst[2]
In 2013, Shimange took over the coaching of the University of Cape Town's rugby team, the Ikey Tigers for their Super League A campaign after the departure of their head coach Kevin Foote to the Western Force following the 2013 Varsity Cup season.[8]

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