Kolisi, who grew up in the township of Zwide, just outside Port Elizabeth, was just 16 when South Africa won the 2007 Rugby World Cup final.
“When I was a kid, there’s no way I would’ve dreamed of being Springbok captain,” South Africa’s first ever black skipper told CNN Sport before the tournament kicked off.
On Saturday, the man whose family did not own a television, had his picture beamed across the world after leading his side to World Cup glory.

It is a picture that will become part of history, but also perhaps, a glimpse of the future.
“It is really special and it was more than just a game for us,” Kolisi told ITV after the game. “We are really grateful to have our families here and all I want to do is to inspire my kids and every other kid in South Africa. I never dreamed of a day like this at all. When I was a kid all I was thinking about was getting my next meal.
“A lot of us in South Africa just need an opportunity and there are so many untold stories. I’m hoping that we have just given people a bit of hope to pull together as a country to make it better.”

For South Africa, this was never just about the rugby. As coach Rassie Erasmus said ahead of the game, this was about a team uniting a nation and giving it hope.
As Kolisi held tight the trophy, the country’s president Cyril Ramaphosa wearing the green jersey of South Africa, joined the celebrations. He too, like Nelson Mandela and Thabo Mbeki before him, will know only too well of rugby’s ability to bring hope to those who seek it.
“Madiba (Nelson Mandela) will be looking down on you, and be so proud in what you have achieved,” former South Africa star Bryan Habana told Kolisi in the immediate aftermath of the contest.

But those who triumphed in Yokohama will join the victorious Springbok teams of 1995 and 2007 in creating a new wave of hope.
Few national teams carry the weight of history that South Africa does but then few have a captain like Kolisi.
The 1995 World Cup final, the image of the country’s first black president Mandela awarding the trophy to Francois Pienaar, the captain of the Springboks, a team that had been a symbolism of white South Africa for so long, remains one of the most talked about moments in the country’s sporting history.
Now, at last, it has another image. An image of a black captain, a leader, a man hoping to inspire change.
“Since I have been alive I have never seen South Africa like this,” Kolisi said.
“With all the challenges we have, the coach said to us that we are not playing for ourselves any more, we are playing for the people back home — that is what we wanted to do today.”

Dominant in the scrum and at the breakdown, the Springboks did what it always seems to do in a World Cup final. Win.
And yet, after the triumphs of 1995 and 2007, this was perhaps one of the more unlikely triumphs given the depths to which South African rugby plunged last year.
Just over 12 months ago the Springboks languished in seventh in the world rankings — its lowest ever position. On Saturday it climbed back to the top of the world.
This win was not by chance. This was a performance in which the Springboks won every big point, every big moment, dominating from the very first minute of the contest to the very last.

No team has ever surrendered a halftime lead in the World Cup final and South Africa, too quick and too cute for its opponent throughout, rarely looked in trouble.
“I don’t think it’s sunk in yet,” Handre Pollard, who scored 22 of South Africa’s 32 points, told the BBC. “It’s amazing. The boys are very, very happy.
“You can’t put it in to words. As a group of rugby players, we wanted to win the World Cup for ourselves and the management but the magnitude of what happened tonight for South Africa as a country is back home is something people who live in South Africa will understand. Going forward hopefully it’s a measure of hope we can put back into our country.”
Pollard was instrumental in his team’s success. The Springboks No.10 kicked four first-half penalties and another two after the break.
When Makazole Mapimpi ran through to score his side’s first try with 14 minutes remaining, the first try the Springboks had ever scored in a World Cup final, the celebrations could finally begin.
Cheslin Kolbe’s try, eight minutes later, added further gloss to the scoreline and underlined South Africa’s dominance.

“We just decided, let’s stand together and work really hard and play well on the field and then from that all the other things will come out later and I think that’s what we did and with that we won the World Cup.”
As those in green danced into the Yokohama night, England’s players slunk off into the locker room.
A third defeat in four World Cup appearances but this loss, and the team’s performance will rankle for some time.
Only a week ago, England dazzled. It produced one of its greatest ever showings to dismantle New Zealand, a team that had won the past two World Cups and appeared destined for an unprecedented third in succession.
That victory captured the imagination of the English public — a public that is desperate to cling onto anything that will distract it from Brexit.

“We just couldn’t get on the front foot,” England coach Eddie Jones told the BBC.
“We were dominated in the scrum particularly in the first 50 minutes. When you’re in a tight, penalty-driven riven game, its difficult to get any sort of advantage.
“We needed to fix up the scrum, little things around the line-out, then get a bit more accurate in how we attacked. We did that for a while, got ourselves back into the game, but in the end we had to force the game and gave away a couple of tries.
“They were too good for us at the breakdown today. That’s the great thing about rugby, one day you’re the best team in the world and the next a team knocks you off.”