Posted on
February 03, 2021 by
Ken
Coach Jake White praised his bench for doing the business and claiming another late win in the Currie Cup final against the Sharks at Loftus Versfeld on Saturday, but this time the Bulls left it the latest of all their comebacks as they won with a try with just 72 seconds of extra time remaining.
Replacement loose forward Arno Botha, the senior member of the Bulls’ version of The Bomb Squad, scored both of their tries in the final, but it is the second one that will be remembered for many years to come as he reached over the line to break the 19-19 deadlock and seal a 26-19 win.
“It was incredible, with Covid, no crowd, the lightning stopping play in the first half; the team just had to adapt all the time and it will definitely be a final that will be remembered for a long time. I’m so proud of the team and I really enjoyed the way the bench came on and handled the pressure. Arno is one of our ‘captains’, he spoke well to the team and helped keep them calm.
“We’ve given guys like flyhalf Chris Smith and the reserve front row a lot of game time this season, where other teams have played their key guys for 80 minutes every game. I felt the time we have given the bench was a telling factor today, especially in injury time and extra time. They have grown as a group and they again showed their composure because this is not the only game they’ve come back to win,” White said after the gripping final.
The scrum was one of the few amenities where the Bulls had a clear advantage over the Sharks, but with referee Jaco Peyper, who controlled the feisty match extremely well, deciding not to make the final a penalty fest, the home side were only rewarded once with a penalty at the set-piece. It did come at a crucial time though as it set in motion the events that would lead to Botha’s first try, cutting the deficit to 16-19 in the 64th minute.
“There were times we had go-forward at the scrum and in previous games we would have had the penalty advantage and been able to play. But today we never had that, we had to use the ball coming out. We had to adapt to that interpretation and I would have liked one or two scrum penalties. But we made life too easy for the Sharks at times, we gave them field position.
“The line-speed of the Sharks is also probably the best in the competition and maybe we tried to play a bit too much rugby in our half at times. Maybe we could also have chipped over the line a few times because we were caught behind the gain-line quite often. But the character we showed was amazing, it wasn’t our best game but it’s very good for the team to still win in that situation,” White said.
Tags: 72 seconds, another, bench, Bulls, business, but this time, claiming, coach, comebacks, Currie Cup, doing, extra time, final, Jake White, late win, latest, left, Loftus Versfeld, of all, praised, remaining, Sharks, try, won with
Category
Rugby, Sport
Posted on
February 03, 2021 by
Ken
A try 72 seconds from the end of extra time by Arno Botha settled an industrial-strength clash and gave the Bulls the most dramatic of victories over the Sharks in a gripping Currie Cup final at Loftus Versfeld on Saturday.
The Bulls deserved the trophy for their incredible durability and simple refusal to be beaten however down-and-out they looked. And the Sharks certainly had one hand on the trophy when they led 19-9 with 15 minutes to go.
But the Bulls fought their way back. It started at a scrum, where they had been dominant for most of the afternoon but without getting much reward as referee Jaco Peyper decided not to make the final a penalty-fest. This time he did blow the Sharks up though as loosehead Ox Nche went down on his knee. The Bulls set the lineout and although the drive was stopped, they maintained possession, kept bashing away and earned another penalty, close to the poles. Captain Duane Vermeulen went old school with a tap-and-go by the pack, from which flank Botha forced his way over for the try.
The conversion by Morne Steyn and then a penalty by his replacement Chris Smith, after great runs by wing Stravino Jacobs and centre Cornal Hendricks, levelled the scores. Smith had a chance to win the final after the hooter for full time, but his angled penalty swung wide.
But it was Botha’s second try that will live long in the annals of Bulls rugby, after both Smith and Curwin Bosch had missed long-range penalties in the first half of extra time. A relentless Bulls pack kept driving forward and the veteran found enough space to get to the line and reach over the cup-winning try.
But for much of the game, the Currie Cup looked set to find new premises at Kings Park as the Sharks were winning the kicking game and destroying the Bulls at the breakdown. The first half was interrupted after 24 minutes, with the Bulls leading 6-3, by a 40-minute delay for lightning.
Bosch and Steyn traded penalties when they returned, before the Sharks opened up the game just before halftime when wing Sbu Nkosi powered over in the corner. Being behind 13-9 at the break was mostly down to the Bulls’ ill-discipline and own mistakes.
The try came after a Sharks player was taken out in the air and although Bosch missed that angled penalty, Steyn then sent the restart straight into touch. From the scrum on the 22, the Sharks spread the ball, fullback Aphelele Fassi joining from deep to create the extra man and Nkosi finishing with a leap through the cover-tackle.
The Bulls did not initially come out of the changeroom any better, conceding two more penalties to Bosch.
But what is clear, is that there is a great resolve and winning drive at Loftus Versfeld. They might not even have played the better rugby, but that’s why the Currie Cup has returned to Pretoria after an 11-year absence.
Scorers
Bulls – Tries: Arno Botha (2). Conversions: Morne Steyn, Chris Smith. Penalties: Steyn (3), Smith.
Sharks – Try: Sbu Nkosi. Conversion: Curwin Bosch. Penalties: Bosch (4).
Tags: 72 seconds, Arno Botha, Bulls, clash, Currie Cup, dramatic, end, extra time, final, from, gave, gripping, industrial, Loftus Versfeld, most, settled, Sharks, strength, try, victories
Category
Rugby, Sport
Posted on
February 03, 2021 by
Ken
Pakistan-bound Janneman Malan and Nandre Burger showed important signs of hot form as they led the Cape Cobras to a vital 76-run win over the Imperial Lions in their Momentum One-Day Cup match in Potchefstroom on Friday.
The victory keeps the Cape Cobras alive in the competition and their match against the Warriors on Saturday will decide who goes through to the semi-finals with the Lions, who were already guaranteed first place on the log and rested some key players.
Malan and debutant Burger have both been included in the Proteas squad for the T20 series in Pakistan that starts on February 11.
Opening batsman Malan blazed 95 off 97 balls to lead the Cobras to a formidable 284 for five, with brother Pieter scoring 53 in a first-wicket stand of 131 with the Protea. A run-a-ball 40 from captain Zubayr Hamza and the talented Jonathan Bird’s 50 not out off 47 balls added the finishing touches to the innings.
Left-arm spinner Bjorn Fortuin, who is also heading for Pakistan, continued his fine tournament as he was the pick of the Lions bowlers with two for 42 in nine overs.
Left-arm quick Burger then had the Lions under pressure from the outset with a feisty new-ball burst in which he also swung the ball, bowling Reeza Hendricks (another T20 squad member but sadly out of form) for just 6 with a beauty.
Burger deserved much better than his final figures of two for 51 in nine overs, and seamer Onke Nyaku then built on the pressure created with some outstanding bowling of his own to take four for 29 in 10 overs as the Lions were bowled out for 208, giving the Cobras a bonus point which puts them level-pegging with the Warriors on the log.
Fortuin lashed 39 off 29 balls and Eldred Hawken scored a run-a-ball 37, but they were ancillary efforts as by then the required run-rate was almost 10 runs-per-over and the Lions were seven down. Nicky van den Bergh was the only other batsman to threaten the Cobras as he scored 35.
Lanky off-spinner Imraan Manack played a good supporting tole to the Cobras seamers as he took two for 31 in 7.4 overs.
Tags: bound, form, hot, Imperial Lions, important, Janneman Malan, led, Momentum One-Day Cup, Nandre Burger, over, Pakistan, Potchefstroom, showed, signs, vital, Western Cape Cobras, win
Category
Cricket, Sport
Posted on
February 03, 2021 by
Ken
Amidst the wreckage of South Africa’s eighth successive loss on the subcontinent, at least some hope came out of their seven-wicket loss to Pakistan on Friday as Aiden Markram, supported by Rassie van der Dussen, showed the way forward in terms of batting on dry, turning pitches.
Markram and Van der Dussen added 129 for the second wicket in 51 overs in the Proteas’ second innings, putting them back on even terms with Pakistan before the rest of the batsmen failed to heed their lesson and collapsed to spin yet again.
Markram, in scoring his first half-century in Asia in his 10th innings, said he followed Pakistan’s example by batting for five hours and facing 224 balls for his 74. Normally a strokeplayer, he adapted his game to what a slow, turning pitch, with inconsistent bounce, allowed him to do. Van der Dussen backed him up with 64 in 205 minutes off 151 balls.
“In this Test we had a chance to learn how Pakistan played so I observed them closely. They backed their defence even when the ball really started to turn. So I really bought into that, it was a challenge to accept that it was really about spending time at the crease and not worrying about scoring runs. That was really difficult for me but it had to be done on a pitch like that.
“Rassie and I both had the same game-plan and our conversations were just to stick with those, although the scoring-rate was very slow. We knew that if we went away from that, then it would give Pakistan an opportunity to strike. After spending time out in the middle, you eventually feel that you can find ways to score. But your first 20-30 balls are vitally important and it’s generally very difficult on the subcontinent for the new batsman to get in,” Markram said after South Africa extended their winless streak in Asia to 13 Tests dating back to 2014.
While the 26-year-old opener had reason to be happy with a landmark innings, Markram clearly still felt he let the team down by getting out shortly before stumps on the third day. He was part of a collapse of three wickets in the last eight overs before stumps as the proteas were put back in serious trouble by the Pakistan spinners, Yasir Shah and Nauman Ali.
“I’ll take a bit of confidence from the innings but ideally I would have loved to kick on and not get out so close to stumps. That would have helped settle the changeroom and maybe we could have set a better target. By getting out when I did, it opened the door for Pakistan, and I blame myself for that. Rassie’s wicket was also obviously a big moment, but at least we didn’t throw our wickets away.
“They put enough balls in the right places and got reward. So it felt like we took a few steps forward but were then forced a few steps back by those wickets, and then it was always going to be tough for the new batsmen coming in at that time of day. But at least it was a step in the right direction for me, although I’m obviously not all of a sudden going to be the finished product now just by scoring one fifty on the subcontinent,” Markram said.
Category
Cricket, Sport