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Ken Borland


Archive for the ‘Rugby’


Hansen not concerned with winning streak 0

Posted on October 20, 2014 by Ken

It’s been three long years since the All Blacks lost to the Springboks – and 22 Tests since their previous defeat against anyone (v England at Twickenham on 1 December 2012) – but their coach Steve Hansen is not as concerned with maintaining the winning streak as he is with delivering a quality performance on Saturday at Ellis Park.

Of course, he is in the lovely position of not having to worry if they lose on Saturday, while Bok coach Heyneke Meyer will bear the full brunt of the public’s obsession with beating the number one side in the world for the first time in six attempts.

“For us, it’s not about the winning streak but about the quality of performance, that’s hugely important. Our heads need to be in the right place, our preparation is about getting that right, and then Saturday is fun time.

“But it’s no fun if you don’t play well. But we have a quite a bit of talent in this group and if we play as well as we can, then it will take a good team to beat us,” Hansen said on Thursday.

With some people, including former coach Graham Henry, warning that the All Blacks are setting themselves up for a fall at the World Cup, there have even been suggestions that defeat might be good for New Zealand. Hansen dismissed such notions.

“I’ve never concurred with people saying you need to lose to learn. It hurts to lose, so why do you want to go through that to learn? We learn when we review games that maybe we should have lost, but we won.

“People say sometimes you have to get burnt to learn, but you can tell a flame is hot, you don’t need to put your hand in it,” Hansen said.

The All Blacks coach said Saturday’s Test would be decided by the tight fives and injury has forced the visitors to go with relative rookies at loosehead prop and tighthead lock.

Wyatt Crockett withdrew from selection with bad cuts to the face and has been replaced by Crusaders prop Joe Moody, who comes to his first Test start with a junior commonwealth games bronze medal in wrestling to his name.

Jeremy Thrush will partner with Sam Whitelock in the second row after Brodie Retallick failed to recover from concussion.

The 26-year-old Moody seemed pretty relaxed and was even able to make a subtle dig at his opposite number, the vastly-experienced Jannie du Plessis.

“Jannie is a bit different to what we normally get in New Zealand, he attacks the hooker much more, while our tightheads normally scrum straighter. But we’ve done our homework and I’m sure the scrums will go well,” Moody said.

The All Blacks’ winning streak is about thorough preparation and supreme conditioning, but it’s also about the character of the players under pressure, as Hansen stressed.

“We’ve been able to keep our composure in really tight situations, but we’ve had a bit of luck as well. We practise the moment without pressure so we can do it under pressure. As a group, this team has shown it is mentally strong and has great composure,” Hansen said.

All Blacks team: 15-Israel Dagg, 14-Ben Smith, 13-Conrad Smith, 12-Malakai Fekitoa, 11-Julian Savea, 10-Beauden Barrett, 9-Aaron Smith, 8-Kieran Read, 7-Richie McCaw, 6-Jerome Kaino, 5-Samuel Whitelock, 4-Jeremy Thrush, 3-Owen Franks, 2-Keven Mealamu, 1-Joe Moody. Reserves – 16-Dane Coles, 17-Ben Franks, 18-Charlie Faumuina, 19-Steven Luatua, 20-Liam Messam, 21-Tawera Kerr-Barlow, 22-Colin Slade, 23-Ryan Crotty.

Bismarck back in the starting line-up 0

Posted on October 17, 2014 by Ken

Bismarck du Plessis, widely regarded as the world’s best hooker, is back in the starting line-up for the Springboks’ crunch Test against the All Blacks in Johannesburg on Saturday.

The South Africans are fortunate, of course, to be able to call on Adriaan Strauss of the Free State Cheetahs as the back-up on the bench, while Saracens star Schalk Brits is also in the wider squad but cannot break into the match-day 23.

The Springboks struggled in the tight phases during the first half of the Rugby Championship and the younger brother of tighthead prop Jannie has never been known as the strongest scrummager, while the inconsistency of his lineout throwing was also exploited by the Argentineans and especially by the Wallabies in Perth.

The most noticeable sign that something was amiss with Bismarck, however, came in the absence of the massive hits, storming ball-carries and steals on the ground that he was famous for last year.

The elevation of Strauss to the starting line-up saw an improvement in the Springboks’ set-pieces but it has also allowed Du Plessis to make more of an impact coming off the bench.

So is Du Plessis’ star on the wane or is this just a temporary loss of form for the Sharks powerhouse?

At the age of 30, it is more likely to be the latter and the Sharks’ insistence on playing Du Plessis in all 17 of their SuperRugby games this year seemed to have diluted the energy of one of the most explosive rugby players in the world.

“Bismarck has played a lot of rugby this year and we always planned to rest him. He’s had a good break now after Adriaan started three in a row, and the selection is purely a rotation, to keep both players fresh,” Springbok coach Heyneke Meyer confirmed.

“Adriaan is playing some of the best rugby of his whole career, but last week against Australia took a lot out of the players, the ball was in play more than ever before and there were more tackles as well. It doesn’t matter who starts, they both have very strong points and they’re both in-form.”

 

 

 

Stormers return to action against top-class Brumbies 0

Posted on October 17, 2014 by Ken

The Stormers return to SuperRugby action at Newlands on Saturday with a crunch match against a top-class Brumbies side enjoying a four-game unbeaten run.

A compelling victory over the Sharks last weekend in Durban has ensured that the pressure is not on the Brumbies in Cape Town – a venue they have also enjoyed impressive success at – but on a Stormers side that is painfully aware that a defeat will leave them with a dismal record of just one win in four matches, and a game against the Crusaders to follow.

The Brumbies have stated in no uncertain terms that they see the collisions as the key battle on Saturday and it just happens to be the area where they most comprehensively outplayed the Sharks last weekend.

It’s no secret that the Stormers regard the Sharks as the most physical challenge they face in this competition, so they have certainly taken notice of last weekend and coach Allister Coetzee was happy to concede that the Australians will be favourites at Newlands.

“I can’t remember when last I saw a Sharks team giving away so much momentum to the opposition. The Brumbies are a quality team and there is no doubt they must start as favourites this weekend,” Coetzee said this week.

It is also no secret that the Brumbies are the masters of ball retention, so if the Stormers forwards don’t front up on Saturday, they will be spending a lot of time without the ball, tackling, and, as stout as the Capetonians’ defence is, Jake White’s team have shown enough on attack this year already to suggest they can score tries against any team.

“If we score tries I can’t see the Stormers winning against us with kicks,” White rather bullishly said this week.

But it’s true because the Brumbies have been just as impressive on defence this year, they are in the faces of the opposition, their discipline under White has been good and, having lost just two of their six matches at Newlands since 1998, it’s easy to see why many people consider the Brumbies to be the favourites on Saturday.

The Stormers have lost star wing Bryan Habana, who had an operation for torn knee ligaments and is out for at least 10 weeks, but fellow Springbok Juan de Jongh returns at outside centre, allowing Jean de Villiers to shift back to his regular position of inside centre. Tiaan Liebenberg is also back, bringing a more physical presence at hooker.

Six Springboks have paid the price for the Sharks’ poor show last weekend with coach John Plumtree dropping Odwa Ndungane, Frans Steyn, Charl McLeod, Ryan Kankowski, Jannie du Plessis and Craig Burden. Ndungane is out of the match-day 22 altogether, but the other five are on the bench for the game against the Melbourne Rebels in Durban on Saturday.

After a miserable afternoon last weekend in pouring rain watching a lacklustre effort by the home side, Sharks fans will be hoping to get much better value for their Kings Park ticket fee on Saturday as last year’s beaten finalists look to bounce back against one of the competition’s minnows.

The Sharks have provided little hint of their attacking quality this year and the dropping of inside centre Steyn in favour of the more subtle skills of Meyer Bosman suggests Plumtree has identified his vice-captain as the problem.

More particularly, the lack of conditioning of Steyn, who has come off a long period of inactivity after an ankle injury and a tough week of training awaited the 2007 World Cup winner.

But the Sharks will obviously need a much better effort from their forwards if they are to do any meaningful attacking on Saturday and the eagerness of promoted players such as Jacques Botes, Pieter-Steph du Toit, Kyle Cooper and Wiehahn Herbst could inspire the pack to dominate the rather no-name-brand mediocrity of the Rebels.

What could threaten the Sharks is a fast and loose game which brings Rebels backs such as James O’Connor, Lachlan Mitchell, Cooper Vuna and Mitch Inman into the contest.

A change of personnel is also what Bulls coach Frans Ludeke has prescribed after his team’s disappointing performance in last weekend’s 41-19 defeat by the Crusaders, with nine changes being made. Four of those are due to injury, with wing Akona Ndungane, centre Wynand Olivier, scrumhalf Francois Hougaard and lock Flip van der Merwe all ruled out.

“Player management” and “rotation policy” is what Ludeke is calling flyhalf Morné Steyn’s demotion to the bench for the match against the Reds in Brisbane on Saturday, but the points machine could be paying the price for some defensive lapses last weekend in Christchurch.

With Steyn heading for France at the end of the SuperRugby campaign, the reign of Louis Fouché as the Bulls’ pivot could start this weekend against one of the world’s most innovative flyhalves in Quade Cooper.

The Reds will be smarting after their 19-12 defeat at home to the Force last weekend and will be hoping for a much better display from their fit-again halfbacks, Will Genia and Cooper, in particular.

The Queenslanders will be desperate to get back to winning ways at home, with the Force upset being only their fourth loss in 26 games at Suncorp Stadium, because the gap between them and the Brumbies, who have a game in hand, at the top of the Australian Conference could be more than 10 points if they lose to the Bulls.

Suncorp Stadium is a “fast” venue, a quick pitch helping the expansive style of the Reds and, with inspirational 2011 title-winning captain James Horwill back in harness and so much disruption in the Bulls camp, the home side will be favourites.

The Crusaders are most definitely favourites in Christchurch on Saturday as they take on the Southern Kings, playing in New Zealand for the first time.

The Kings have produced some stirring displays in Port Elizabeth this season, showing plenty of tenacity and spirit, but they are in for the fight of their lives against the Crusaders, who looked back in top form in dispatching the Bulls so clinically last weekend.

Coach Matt Sexton is also rapidly going through his store of captains with prop Schalk Ferreira becoming the fourth player to lead the team out in four matches. Luke Watson, Darron Nell and Steven Sykes have all succumbed to injury.

If the Kings fail to match the tremendous passion and determination they showed in Port Elizabeth, then their first SuperRugby tour could get off to the most inauspicious of starts.

The Cheetahs are also in action overseas as they take on the Western Force in Perth and we will see if the central franchise is dependent on flyhalf Johan Goosen for its success.

The Cheetahs have won in Invercargill and Sydney on this tour, with Springbok flyhalf-in-waiting Goosen playing a key role. But the 20-year-old tore his cruciate ligament while practising his goal-kicking at the start of the week and Naka Drotske’s team will be without him for the rest of the campaign.

“To lose Johan to injury is a major blow, but this is the perfect time for Riaan Smit to prove his worth and we have full confidence in him,” Drotske said.

Apart from the exciting Smit appearing at flyhalf, the match also marks the return of Heinrich Brüssow to the starting line-up. Out-and-out fetchers are not exactly in vogue in South African rugby at the moment, but with the Cheetahs looking to play a fast-paced game, the Springbok will be looking to impress with his skills at the tackle area.

With the Kings, Bulls and Stormers all up against tough opposition we are probably relying on the Sharks and Cheetahs to provide odds-on South African victories this weekend.

Whatever the result in Cape Town, the Brumbies are guaranteed to retain the top spot on the combined log, with the Bulls, Blues and Reds all chasing second place if the Chiefs slip up against the Highlanders in Hamilton in Friday’s only game.

The top spot in the South African Conference will be there for the taking if the Bulls go down in Brisbane, with the other four teams all theoretically capable of overtaking the three-time champions, although the Sharks are the most likely to claim the bonus-point victory that will secure first place on the log. DM

Teams

Southern Kings (v Crusaders, Saturday 8h35): George Whitehead, Marcello Sampson, Ronnie Cooke, Hadleigh Parkes, Sergeal Petersen, Demetri Catrakilis, Shaun Venter, Jacques Engelbrecht, Wimpie van der Walt, Cornell du Preez, David Bulbring, Daniel Adongo, Kevin Buys, Bandise Maku, Schalk Ferreira. Replacements: Edgar Marutlulle, Jaco Engels, Rynier Bernardo, Devin Oosthuizen, Nicolas Vergallo, Waylon Murray, Elric van Vuuren.

Bulls (v Reds, Saturday 10h40): Zane Kirchner, Lionel Mapoe, JJ Engelbrecht, Francois Venter, Bjorn Basson, Louis Fouché, Jano Vermaak, Pierre Spies, Dewald Potgieter, Deon Stegmann, Grant Hattingh, Paul Willemse, Werner Kruger, Chiliboy Ralepelle, Morné Mellett. Replacements: Willie Wepener, Frik Kirsten, Juandré Kruger, Jacques Potgieter, Ruan Snyman, Morné Steyn, Jan Serfontein.

Cheetahs (v Western Force, Saturday 12:45): Hennie Daniller, Willie le Roux, Johann Sadie, Robert Ebersohn, Raymond Rhule, Riaan Smit, Sarel Pretorius, Phillip van der Walt, Lappies Labuschagne, Heinrich Brüssow, Francois Uys, Lood de Jager, Lourens Adriaanse, Adriaan Strauss, Trevor Nyakane. Replacements: Ryno Barnes, Coenie Oosthuisen, Rynhard Landman, Boom Prinsloo, Piet van Zyl, Burton Francis, Ryno Benjamin.

Sharks (v Melbourne Rebels, Saturday 17:05): Louis Ludik, JP Pietersen, Paul Jordaan, Meyer Bosman, Lwazi Mvovo, Patrick Lambie, Cobus Reinach, Keegan Daniel, Marcell Coetzee, Jacques Botes, Franco van der Merwe, Pieter-Steph du Toit, Wiehahn Herbst, Kyle Cooper, Beast Mtawarira. Replacements: Craig Burden, Jannie du Plessis, Jandré Marais, Ryan Kankowski, Charl McLeod, Frans Steyn, Riaan Viljoen.

Stormers (v Brumbies, Saturday 19:10): Joe Pietersen, Gio Aplon, Juan de Jongh, Jean de Villiers, Gerhard van den Heever, Elton Jantjies, Dewaldt Duvenage, Duane Vermeulen, Rynhardt Elstadt, Siya Kolisi, Andries Bekker, De Kock Steenkamp, Frans Malherbe, Tiaan Liebenberg, Steven Kitshoff. Replacements: Deon Fourie, Pat Cilliers, Don Armand, Nizaam Carr, Nic Groom, Damian de Allende, Jaco Taute.

 http://www.dailymaverick.co.za/article/2013-03-22-superrugby-preview-crunch-time-for-the-stormers/#.VET05PmUde8

Young and old props returning for Sharks 0

Posted on October 16, 2014 by Ken

Cell C Sharks coach Brad Macleod-Henderson said that the returns to fitness of young and old props Thomas du Toit and Matt Stevens was timely given the strength of the Golden Lions scrum that they will face in their Absa Currie Cup match at King’s Park on Friday.

The Lions have boasted the form scrum in the Currie Cup this season and that has prompted Macleod-Henderson to return Du Toit to the loosehead prop position and also choose an entire front-row on the bench, with England and British Lions international Stevens joining Dale Chadwick and either Monde Hadebe or Franco Marais amongst the replacements.

Hadebe has been bracketed with hooker Kyle Cooper, who needs to pass a fitness test on a knee injury, in the starting line-up.

“The Lions have a strong scrum, they’ve enjoyed great continuity from SuperRugby and they like to play an exciting brand of rugby and keep the ball in hand. We will need to sort our scrum out, defensively we will need to be strong and we’ll look for a few chinks in their armour that we’ll try to exploit.

“But the Lions have really set the Currie Cup alight since the first round, so we know we’ve got a huge challenge on our hands and we are looking forward to it,” Macleod-Henderson said on Wednesday.

The Sharks tight five has also been boosted by the return to the starting line-up of Springbok Stephan Lewies, relegating the promising JC Astle to the bench, while veteran flank Jacques Botes is also back for a match that will also be a tribute for the most-capped Currie Cup player ever on potentially his last game at King’s Park.

“I said earlier in the week that the word legend is maybe used too often these days, but Jacques is really a legend both on the field and off it. As a team man, I don’t think you’ll find better anywhere in the world. We’ll be going out to make sure he ends with a victory,” Macleod-Henderson said.

A new-look bench, split five-two between forwards and backs, also features the return of flyhalf Fred Zeilinga to the match-day squad, the 21-year-old being chosen ahead of Tim Swiel.

The release of wing Lwazi Mvovo from the Springboks means the Sharks will field the same backline that shone in beating the EP Kings 53-24 last weekend.

Victory for the third-placed Sharks, who trail the Lions by five points, is obviously crucial if the Durbanites are to have any chance of hosting a semi-final.

Sharks team: 15-SP Marais, 14-S’bura Sithole, 13-Paul Jordaan, 12-Andre Esterhuizen, 11-Lwazi Mvovo, 10-Lionel Cronje, 9-Cameron Wright, 8-Tera Mtembu, 7-Etienne Oosthuizen, 6-Jacques Botes, 5-Marco Wentzel, 4-Stephan Lewies, 3-Lourens Adriaanse, 2-Kyle Cooper/Monde Hadebe, 1-Thomas du Toit. Replacements – 16-Monde Hadebe/Franco Marais, 17-Dale Chadwick, 18-Matt Stevens, 19-JC Astle, 20-Khaya Majola, 21-Conrad Hoffmann, 22-Fred Zeilinga.

 

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