A two-time Rugby World Cup winner. A Stormers icon. A Springbok centurion. One of the most respected loosehead props of his generation. And a player who spent more than a decade at the pinnacle of world rugby.
But this is not a story about winning World Cups.
It's a story about what happens when the thing you've done your entire life is taken away in an instant.
In this episode, Steven Kitshoff reflects on the moment a routine scrum changed everything. What initially felt like a minor injury turned out to be a career-ending neck injury, forcing him to confront a future he had never planned for.
Steven opens up about the emotional reality of having his rugby career cut short, the uncertainty that followed, and the challenge of rebuilding a life beyond the game. He shares how elite sport taught him to search for the extra two percent, to push beyond perceived limits, and why excellence is often found in the smallest margins.
The conversation explores leadership, resilience, adaptation and the lessons learned from being part of one of the most successful teams in sporting history. Steven reflects on the pressure of elite performance, the value of ownership and alignment, and how those lessons continue to shape his approach to business, broadcasting and life after rugby.
Most powerfully, he speaks about something many athletes rarely discuss: grief. Not grief for a person, but grief for a version of yourself. The player, the competitor, the identity that existed for decades and suddenly disappeared. And why, even today, part of him still wishes he was on the other side of the white line.
This is a conversation about grief, purpose and learning to step into the unknown when life doesn't go according to plan.

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