Saturday 13 October 2012

Bulls surge into semis


Bulls surge into semis

13 Oct 2012 21:15:50
The Vodacom Blue Bulls produced a scintillating display of controlled rugby as they powered to a 50-29 victory over the MTN Golden Lions at Coca-Cola Park to book their place in the Absa Currie Cup semifinals.
The win means the Blue Bulls leapfrog Griquas and Cheetahs to take the fourth spot, and condemn the Cheetahs to play a promotion-relegation game against the EP Kings on Friday night in Bloemfontein.
The Blue Bulls will now head to Durban on Saturday to face the Sharks, while the Lions – who finished second despite the loss – will host Western Province in Johannesburg in the other semifinal.
But on a night where winning was the only option, the Blue Bulls had to overcome an early setback and went down 13-0 before clawing their way back into the game and eventually settled it with more composed play and by taking the chances they created in the second half.
It was a remarkable difference that the Boks made to the Bulls, with Jacques Potgieter, Flip van der Merwe, Morne Steyn and Zane Kirchner all looking top class in the game.
Yet it didn’t start off that well as the Bulls struggled in the opening exchanges, and had to watch as they were under pressure from the word go with little ball to speak of in the opening 20 minutes.
In that time, Butch James slotted two penalties, and a brilliant bit of counter-attacking led to Michael Rhodes’s try, giving the Lions an early 13-3 lead.
But then Steyn started to take control of the game, and on the back of a pack that was slowly gaining the ascendancy, he clawed the Bulls back into the game.
First a stunning drop goal reminded the crowd that Steyn had refound his confidence, and even though the Lions answered with a penalty, Steyn drilled two more of his own back to bring the Bulls within four points.
Then, as halftime started approaching, Jacques Potgieter burst through a lovely gap and sprinted 50 metres, being stopped just short of the tryline but not before unloading to Bjorn Basson to crash over for the try and take the lead.
Another Steyn penalty made it 22-16 at the break, but that lead was cut almost immediately as Butch James slotted two penalties early in the second half to bring the scores level.
ON A KNIFE EDGE
With the Bulls needing the win to secure their semifinal place, the match was on a knife edge, and it was the Lions who blinked first when Kirchner tapped back an up and under into the hands of Arno Botha, who surged forward before offloading to Jano Vermaak for the try.
While there was some speculation of a forward pass, the TMO decided it was not and gave the try, giving the Bulls the lead.
The Lions fought back, and it wasn’t long before Anthony Volminck spotted a gap behind the ruck and burst through to level the scores again. Little did he know it was the last time the Lions would score on the night.
As the game reached the final quarter, the Bulls' experience and pedigree showed through, and they simply moved away from their opposition, and while a first lineout drive was denied, the second proved a lot more deadly as Botha claimed the score.
Then the wheels really came off for the Lions, as first a quick throw went horribly wrong and captain Dewald Potgieter pounced to grab the loose ball and score, and then in their desperation to run, Butch James slapped back a ball into no-man’s land, with Akona Ndungane driving the final nail into the coffin.
The Bulls may have a tough task in heading to Durban, but given the fight they’ve shown in the last month to get to the semis, they will back themselves all the way.
SCORERS
MTN GOLDEN LIONS – tries: Michael Rhodes, Anthony Volminck. Conversions: Butch James (2). Penalties: James (5).
VODACOM BLUE BULLS – Tries: Bjorn Basson, Jano Vermaak, Arno Botha, Dewald Potgieter, Akona Ndungane. Conversions: Morne Steyn (4), Louis Fouche (1). Penalties: Steyn (4). Drop goal: Steyn.

Pat Lambie Propels The Natal Sharks to top spot.


Lambie propels Sharks to top spot

12 Oct 2012 21:06:01
The Sharks started the final weekend of the league stage of Absa Currie Cup rugby clinching top spot on the log with a convincing 42-3 victory over Griquas at Mr Price Kings Park on Friday night.
The Durbanites just needed to win to make sure of prime position on the log going into the playoff phase, and once they had taken a 10-0 lead after 14 minutes there was seldom any doubt that they would achieve their objective. Keegan Daniel’s men will now wait until Saturday’s round of matches before finding out who their semifinal opponents will be in Durban next weekend.
The Sharks didn’t need to get the four-try bonus point but they got it anyway, with replacement flanker Lubabalo Mtembu dotting down in the left corner as Griquas ran out of defenders as the Sharks worked the ball left with 10 minutes to go in a one-sided game.
While the winners never really engaged top gear, they were always significantly better than a well beaten Griquas side that now has to wait to find out if they will advance to the semifinals. They will require Western Province to beat the Cheetahs and the Lions to beat the Bulls for that to be the case, but on Friday night they made it hard for themselves by lacking the intensity that they have displayed in their home games in Kimberley this season and against the Lions last week.
Griquas actually shaded the possession battle early on but slipped too many tackles, as many as five in the first 14 minutes, and that played a role in the Sharks dominating territory. Patrick Lambie, playing his first full game at flyhalf for quite a while, did everything and perhaps even a little more than could have been expected of him in his first game back after warming the Springbok bench.
He did miss a first-half penalty but he slotted most of his kicks, including the angled conversion from the touchline of the Mtembu try. His distribution was good, his tactical kicking was excellent and while Griquas were well below test level, he did at least show that he has remembered the essentials of flyhalf play.
It was his little kick through after taking the ball flat following a crash up by JP Pietersen that set up the second try in the 27th minute, with fullback Louis Ludik coming through to grab the ball and score. Lambie missed that conversion, but it meant the Sharks led 15-3 following a ninth-minute try scored by the impressive young scrumhalf Cobus Reinach, who featured twice in the movement as he drew in Odwa Ndungane before taking the return pass from the wing.
There was also a 14th minute penalty from Lambie, and although skipper Daniel spent the last 10 minutes of the half off the field after being yellow carded, a dangerous tackle by Griquas wing Jannie Boshoff saw the player numbers redressed. Lambie missed the penalty that resulted from the Boshoff tackle, but Lwazi Mvovo, on for Ndungane when he was injured in helping set up the first try, scored the third try two minutes from the break to propel his team into a 22-3 halftime lead.
While Sharks coach John Plumtree was resting some of his top players, he should be pleased with the form of some of the players who did play. Daniel continues to impress with every game, as does Jean Deysel, while apart from Lambie and Reinach the other impressive back was Pietersen, who is back in the mix after a fair injury layoff.
Lambie was the deserved recipient of the man of the match award and seemed to become more assured the longer the game lasted, and he was in the thick of things as the Sharks closed out the game in the second half.
Lambie kicked penalties in the 44th minute and the 50th before the Mtembu try and then a turn-over effort completed by replacement scrumhalf Charl McLeod ensured that there was plenty of light between the teams on the score that shone on the Kings Park scoreboard at the final hooter.
SCORES
SHARKS 42 – Tries: Cobus Reinach, Louis Ludik, Lwazi Mvovo, Lubabalo Mtembu and Charl McLeod; Conversions: Patrick Lambie 4; Penalties: Patrick Lambie 3.
GRIQUAS 3 – Penalty: Francois Brummer.

WP sends the Free State Cheetahs into the relegation zone


WP send Cheetahs into relegation zone

13 Oct 2012 19:07:08
The phrase “being sent packing” was given new meaning by DHL Western Province at Newlands on Saturday night as they sent the Toyota Free State Cheetahs into the zone where the perils of promotion become a reality.
WP, with seven Springboks back, were always going to be favoured to win, and the result was never in doubt as they romped home 36-15 in front of a crowd that was bigger than has been average for Currie Cup rugby this season but was by no means the resounding vote for full-strength rugby that might have been anticipated.
As a result of this five try to two romp, WP ended third on the Currie Cup log and in so doing booked themselves a flight to Johannesburg for next week’s semifinal against the Lions.
That was where they came unstuck at the same stage last year, but the difference between then and now was that the returning Boks 12 months ago were a bit stunned by their World Cup exit.
They don’t have quite the same psychological baggage to carry around with them now, and they look more business-like and determined. The Currie Cup definitely isn’t what it used to be, but a trophy would at least get the monkey off the WP backs.
There were times in the first half that the hosts weren’t direct enough and that was the reason why they looked like they were making heavy weather of the task at that stage.
Not that they were ever threatened in the match, with flyhalf Demetri Catrakilis putting them into a 3-0 lead that they would never relinquish with a third-minute penalty, before returning captain Jean de Villiers scored a highly popular try in the corner in the ninth to make it 8-0.
The try was the product of the sort of play that would have had the Newlands patrons falling off their seats in shock had it happened during Super Rugby.
MULTI-PHASE ATTACK
It was the product of a sustained and prolonged multi-phase attack that swept this way and that across the field, but was given its impetus by a clever kick over the advancing Cheetahs defenders from the right touchline that was picked up by scrumhalf Nic Groom.
The move had been on the go for a while already, and it was to go through several more phases before finally De Villiers went in, but it was a score that was on the cards the moment Groom found himself in space.
The Cheetahs did have their moments, and perhaps WP were a bit guilty of falling into the trap of trying to play it their way.
Nico Scheepers missed a penalty in the first quarter before landing one in the 20th minute, and there was one excellent attacking movement in which Sias Ebersohn chipped over the WP backs to set up Hennie Danniller, with the score only being prevented by an excellent try-saving tackle from behind by that busy-as-a-bee Springbok, Bryan Habana.
It was still a close game as the half hour mark neared, but then WP surprised the Cheetahs by taking a quick tap from a penalty awarded almost in front of the posts, and big Andries Bekker went over for a try that the TMO awarded after lengthy deliberation.
And three minutes before the break WP pretty much wrapped up their third-place finish when, from an attacking lineout, a driving maul deposited Deon Fourie over the line.
Fourie was of course the captain before De Villiers returned and he is enjoying a great season, so it was fitting that he should complete a great field day for himself by breaking a few tackles up the middle before going in for the fourth try.
It was the bonus-point score, and although it was an unnecessary one because WP just needed to win, it will nonetheless serve as a confidence booster.
The Boks did make their mark, and none more so than the second row, with Eben Etzebeth winning the official man of the match award. The big man certainly does make a massive difference when he is present.
But then so does Duane Vermeulen, and as WP go into the play-offs, perhaps it should be remembered that the No 8's physical presence hasn’t been there when WP and the Stormers have failed at the knock-out hurdle over the past 16 months.
The former Free Stater celebrated his return to the Cape side with the fifth try, going over near the posts with around a quarter of the match left to give his team a 36-3 lead.
At that stage a score beyond the 50 mark looked distinctly possible but the Cheetahs came back well in the last quarter to score consolation tries through Francois Uys and Philip Snyman that gave the scoreboard some respectability.
But with the Lions/Bulls match in Johannesburg still to come, the Bloemfontein team was hovering perilously close to the relegation zone as the league part of their Currie Cup season ended.
SCORERS
DHL WESTERN PROVINCE – Tries: Jean de Villiers, Andries Bekker, Deon Fourie (2), Duane Vermeulen; Conversions: Demetri Catrakilis (4); Penalty: Catrakilis.
TOYOTA FREE STATE CHEETAHS – Tries: Francois Uys, Philip Snyman; Conversion: Sias Ebersohn; Penalty: Nico Scheepe