Joost van der Westhuizen (born February 20, 1971, Pretoria, South Africa—died February 6, 2017, Johannesburg) was a South African rugby union football player who was an unusually powerful scrum half and helped propel the South African Springboks to victory in the 1995 Rugby Union World Cup. The tournament was immortalized in the Clint Eastwood movie Invictus (2009).
Van der Westhuizen debuted in 1992 with Northern Transvaal’s Blue Bulls, and he was capped for South Africa the following year. In the 1995 World Cup final, competing against the New Zealand All Blacks, van der Westhuizen successfully tackled the nearly unstoppable Jonah Lomu, and, when the game went into extra time, he passed the ball back to fly half Joel Stransky, who made the kick that gave South Africa its 15–12 victory. The tournament, hosted by South Africa, was the first World Cup that South Africa had played in since being readmitted to international rugby play following the end of apartheid. Van der Westhuizen captained the Springboks for four years and led the side to a third-place finish in the 1999 World Cup. He retired in 2003 with a record of 89 Test (international) caps and 38 tries (as goals are called in the sport), both South African records at the time.
Van der Westhuizen was diagnosed in 2011 with motor neuron disease (amyotrophic lateral sclerosis). He later started the J9 Foundation, which had as its mission education about the fatal disease, encouragement of research, and support for others with the illness.