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Steyn adjusts his sights

Johannesburg - After terrorising the southern hemisphere with his right boot, Springbok flyhalf Morné Steyn hopes he can cause equal damage on a Europe tour that begins against France in Toulouse on Friday.

As the British and Irish Lions, Australia, New Zealand, a host of Super 14 teams and some in the Currie Cup will testify, any infringement within 55 metres of goal can have deadly consequences.

An international unknown at the beginning of this year, the 25-year-old native of Cape Town with looks that would not be out of place on a movie set has taken rugby union by storm.

First it was the Super 14 with Steyn scoring 191 points to finish as leading scorer as his Bulls routed New Zealand visitors the Chiefs to win the trophy for a second time.

Springbok coach Peter de Villiers publicly preferred Ruan Pienaar as his first-choice flyhalf, believing the Sharks pivot was more inventive than Steyn and an acceptable place kicker.

Pienaar got the nod for the first Test against the Lions in his Durban lair and did little wrong while replacement Steyn proved he is no one-trick pony with a try-saving tackle on giant wing Ugo Monye.

After Pienaar missed three shots at goal the following weekend, Steyn came on and won the hearts of a rugby-mad nation by landing a 53-metre penalty with the last kick of the game to win the second Test and the series.

Bok skipper and prop John Smit recalls the moment when 12 years of torment were erased after the Lions had snatched a shock 2-1 series triumph in 1997 against the then world champions.

"Morné did not actually ask to take that final kick, he just walked toward me with his eyes transfixed on the ball. Although I had the option of Frans Steyn, when I saw Morné focused on the ball I immediately tossed it to him.

"Welcome to Test rugby I said. He was seemingly so casual and calm it was scary. I was nervous despite playing dozens of times for my country yet this new kid on the block did not flinch."

With the Lions caged, Steyn turned to perennial rivals the Wallabies and the All Blacks and his lethal goal kicking was instrumental in five Bok wins from six starts which brought the title to South Africa for only the third time.

At Absa Stadium in Durban, he scored all 31 points against New Zealand to create a Tri-Nations record and his tally included an opportunist try at a crucial stage.

When South Africa gathered last week to honour its heroes, Steyn was the most frequent visitor to the stage after being voted Players' Player of the Year, Super 14 Player of the Year and Best Test Player in the Lions series.

Not bad for a man who understudied Bulls flyhalf Derick Hougaard for several seasons and almost drove kicking coach Vlok Cilliers crazy as he struggled to master the kicking art.

"The biggest problem when Morné arrived at the Bulls was that he could not kick at all. He could not kick at the posts and he could not kick out of hand," his patient mentor recalled.

"Morné developed into a 70 percent kicker and then decided he wanted to be the best. Practice makes perfect so he put in the hours and now deserves all the accolades that come his way."

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