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5 year oldSouth African rugby star Francois Hougaard has opened up on long-running rumours that a text message he sent to Reeva Steenkamp sparked her brutal murder at the hands of Paralympic icon Oscar Pistorius six years ago.
Steenkamp, a model and television presenter, was shot dead by Pistorius through the bathroom door of his Pretoria home in the early hours of Valentine’s Day 2013.
Pistorius, the first double amputee to run at the Olympic Games, is serving a prison sentence of more than 13 years.
Reports at the time placed Springbok halfback Hougaard in the middle of the media inquest, claiming he sent a text message to Steenkamp which sparked a row on the night of the killing.
“Reeva and I dated for quite a while,” Hougaard, who now plays for Worcester in Britain, told the Daily Mail.
“One of my best mates phoned me at seven o’clock when I was playing golf to tell me what had happened. He was the first to get to the house. It’s a shock when you hear something like that, isn’t it? It’s tough.
Oscar Pistorius and Reeva Steenkamp in 2012.Source:AFP
“Everyone was saying I sent Reeva a message and that’s why he shot her. I had nothing to do with her any more but it’s all people were asking me about. Mentally, that was a really tough thing to go through.”
The 31-year-old, who was involved in the lengthy court cases, opened up about how he dealt with the mental pressure and kept it from affecting his performance on the field.
“It was tough because rugby is 80 per cent mental. If you’re not mentally where you need to be, then you’re not going to play well,” he said.“I went to see a psychologist to talk about it. That taught me to deal with negative situations. That taught me to turn things into positive fuel and not to sulk.
“When you’re young, you might wake up with a sore shoulder and think ‘Ah, I’m not really keen for training’. Once something really seriously bad happens, it just adds some perspective. You don’t sulk about getting dropped or a niggle. It makes you appreciate what you’ve got.”
Hougaard played the last of his 46 tests with the Springboks in 2017 and said he still had hope of making the side for this year’s Rugby World Cup.
“You play the game to represent your country, don’t you?” he said.
“My deal here is negotiated on the basis that I don’t play for the Springboks, but the World Cup is a bit different I guess. If it works out with my club and I get to go to the World Cup then great, but that’s not my focus.”
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