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Ken Borland


John McFarland Column – SuperRugby Rd7: Tremendous games & individual performances

Posted on April 06, 2018 by Ken

 

Last weekend’s SuperRugby action was filled with some tremendous games of rugby and superb individual performances.

The Bulls versus Stormers game at Loftus Versfeld took us back to the good old days of real war on the gainline, full of big hits and turnover attempts.

The Stormers will be disappointed to lose because they had opportunities they didn’t take, but the Bulls will be very excited to return to winning ways after their tour. They were under pressure after losing four in a row and questions would certainly have been asked if they had lost last weekend too.

What made the difference in the match was the kicking game of the Bulls, their ability to get the ball behind the Stormers wings and then put in a good chase, and they scored two excellent maul tries.

The Bulls were obviously all motivated to put in a big performance for Adriaan Strauss in his record appearance. I remember him wandering up to my office at Loftus as a 19-year-old, many moons ago, and then when he was 21, at the end of 2006, he decided to further his career with the Free State Cheetahs. And then he came back to Pretoria as a seasoned Springbok.

Adriaan is currently in great shape, the rest he took during last year’s Currie Cup clearly did him good and he is still a really quality player. Directing things at the back of the maul, where you have to sense when and where the momentum is, is not an easy job.

Stormers flyhalf Damian Willemse, for all the hype, really struggled against the pressure the Bulls exerted on him through the rush defence. His option-taking was not great and he wanted to kick or go around the rush defence, when actually you must go through it and then you have lots of numbers on the fullback. If you go around the rush defence then the fullback is in the defensive line and it closes down your options.

Jake White did not do young Willemse any favours with his comments about the 19-year-old needing to be picked for the Springboks right now. Willemse still needs time to develop.

He is, however, a real talent and you have to credit Stormers coach Robbie Fleck for playing him so early. Willemse has a lot of strengths – he tackles well and has silky running skills, but the tactical appreciation is not quite there, which is so important. He doesn’t have the kicking game yet, that appreciation of space that allows a flyhalf to play the suffocation game that is so important in Test rugby. I don’t think Rassie Erasmus will change the blueprint he presented to us when we were the Springboks coaching staff – a strong kicking game and a big pack of forwards.

I thought the two Bulls flankers, Hendre Stassen and Roelof Smit, had a huge effect on the breakdown. It’s interesting because the Stormers had Nizaam Carr and Siya Kolisi, both possible Springboks later this year, but there’s no doubt that the Bulls did win the breakdown battle at the back end of the game.

Stassen is just 20 and will be a heck of a player. In the last few weeks he has really announced himself, he’s tough and he goes hard on the ball.

For both teams, the defence on the wings was not good, guys shot up and opened holes in the defensive line. It’s a concern in our game at the moment that we don’t seem to get the right decisions being made in defence out wide. We have Springbok wingers there and they are not covering themselves in glory on the outside at the moment.

For the Sharks, what a turnaround!

To score 63 points in New Zealand when they were really under pressure, what a response that was! To out-score a New Zealand side so convincingly deserves great credit.

I could certainly see the effect of Dick Muir in the coaching staff, they played with no fear whatsoever. Jean-Luc du Preez had a colossal game and to see him swatting off defenders really bodes well for the Springboks later this year.

Flyhalf Robert du Preez may be in the Springboks mix himself, along with Handre Pollard. Du Preez is a consistent goal-kicker, he has steered teams to big wins in finals before, and he knows where the space is behind. He’s also a big guy, but he does struggle a bit to find the right level to hit guys when defending. But Du Preez can certainly win you a game.

It’s been a funny four weeks for the Lions, starting when they came so close in the Blues game, with the TMO overturning a try. But in SuperRugby, every team goes through some sort of mini-crisis because it is such a tough competition. It’s about how you deal with it and recover.

After the bad result in Argentina, the Lions gave the Crusaders a huge run for their money and 14-8 is not a typical Lions score. Coach Swys de Bruin takes great pride in outscoring the opposition, but it was good to see their defensive system function well, even though they did not do enough to get the win.

They are missing their captain, Warren Whiteley, hugely; just the calmness he brings and he is much more comfortable with the tactical side of the job. Franco Mostert is also an inspirational captain but he is more of the follow-me type leader.

As far as the Lions not taking that kick at goal at that penalty midway through the second half, sometimes the coach will put on a message to kick for the corner because he believes the momentum is with his side; but sometimes a captain just goes for the corner when the coach wants the team to go for poles!

It happens in rugby and is reminiscent of that famous SuperRugby semi-final at Loftus Versfeld in 2013.

 

 

 

 

John McFarland won three SuperRugby titles (2007, 09, 10) with the Bulls and five Currie Cup crowns with the Blue Bulls as their defence coach. In all, he won 28 trophies during his 12 years at Loftus Versfeld.

He is currently the assistant coach of the Kubota Spears in Japan and was the Springbok defence coach from 2012 through to the 2015 World Cup, where they conceded the least line-breaks in the tournament and an average of just one try per game.

 

 

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