Provincial career Small played much of his provincial career under coach
Harry Viljoen, following him from Transvaal to Natal in 1993, and to Western Province in 1998. That same year he returned to the Transvaal, then known as the Golden Lions, but "had a string of discipline problems with former All Black coach
Laurie Mains". He played for the Cats in 1999, and retired after an injury.
International career His first Test match in 1992 was the first for the Springboks at the dawn of the new, internationally acceptable South Africa following the release of Nelson Mandela and the unbanning of the ANC. He was one of the heroes of the Springbok team that won the 1995 Rugby World Cup and later that year experienced the transition of rugby from an amateur to a professional sport. After the fall of
apartheid, when the Springboks were being taught the lyrics to the new South African national anthem, "
Nkosi Sikelel' iAfrika", Small was particularly enthusiastic about learning the lyrics. When the Springboks visited
Robben Island on a tour, Small was very moved by what he saw and visibly wept, In later years Small acknowledged that he felt he had let a lot of people down but that he was sent off as a result of an accumulation of incidents in the team. though as an opponent in provincial rugby, not as a Springbok teammate.
Test match record Pld = Games played, W = Games won, D = Games drawn, L = Games lost, Tri = Tries scored, Pts = Points scored
Test tries (20) World Cup matches Champions Runners-up Third place Fourth place ==Post rugby life, career and business interests==