The South Africans then won their game.
Mandela would have surely enjoyed it, just as he famously delighted in the Springboks' famous rugby World Cup victory in 1995 or the country's historic hosting of the 2010 football World Cup.
In the stands at Nelson Mandela Bay Stadium, blacks and whites waved their country's colorful flag and loudly cheered scores by the dreadlocked Cecil Afrika and the team's blond captain, Kyle Brown.
Mandela, who died Thursday at the age of 95.
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Brown said he would have liked to give a better description of what Mandela meant to South Africa. In fact, it was more incisive than he thought.
South African sport is now proud, and it wasn't always. For decades it was instead splintered by racism like every aspect of South Africa's apartheid-era society. Black players were excluded and white ones vilified for their perceived connection to a racist regime. Fans at home turned on their own national teams until Mandela told them to unite.
South Africans will play for Mandela; rugby players, footballers, cricketers and more.
From the international rugby sevens tournament in Port Elizabeth to a big domestic football cup final in the northern city of Nelspruit later Saturday and a cricket game between South Africa and visiting India in the east coast city of Durban tomorrow.
"We celebrate a life well lived," sports minister Fikile Mbalula said, announcing a plan for games for the next week. "It's through sport that we do not differentiate between white and black but are identified as one nation. This is through the legacy that Mandela achieved."