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Ken Borland



Sharks & Brumbies dominate home focus 0

Posted on December 04, 2013 by Ken

Whether the good fortunes of the Bulls and Cheetahs overseas will continue will be occupying the minds of their supporters, but the obvious focus of this weekend’s SuperRugby programme, from a South African perspective, will be at King’s Park in Durban, where the Sharks and Brumbies clash.

Play will be a meeting between two of the three remaining unbeaten sides in the competition, and should be a good measure of the Brumbies’ credentials.

The Brumbies’ three wins have been against the Reds, Rebels and Waratahs, but with the strength of the Australian conference the subject of much debate, the men from the Capital Territory have the chance on Saturday (5.05pm) to show that they are at the same level as the other title contenders from New Zealand and South Africa.

Under Jake White, the 2007 World Cup-winning coach, the Brumbies have married the strong driving play and stout defence the Springbok sides under his tenure were famous for to the different lines of running and interplay the teams of Stephen Larkham and George Gregan were renowned for.

The occupants of the top spot on the combined log do have a member of that championship side of the early 2000s in their starting line-up in the form of George Smith, one of the all-time great loose forwards and someone whose ball-stealing abilities have left many Springboks with mental scars.

The effects of travel and the fact that Kings Park has never been a happy ground for the Brumbies – winning just one of seven matches there – are obvious factors counting against the Australians.

The most obvious problem facing the Sharks is their lack of tries at the moment – and the return of Charl McLeod at scrumhalf suggests adding some spark and better cohesion between forwards and backs (something the Natalians are famous for) is at the forefront of coach John Plumtree’s mind.

The strong kicking game of the Brumbies can be seen as the reason for Odwa Ndungane being preferred to Lwazi Mvovo on the wing, while the rich reserves of loose forward strength the Sharks have is reflected by the lack of worry when Jean Deysel joins Willem Alberts on the injured list: Keegan Daniel, the key link man in much of the attacking brilliance the Natalians have shown in recent years, merely returns and takes over the captaincy as well.

The Sharks are winning ugly at the moment, which has worked for the Stormers over the last two years, so the manner of their victory won’t really matter on Saturday, although they will need to have the firepower to match a team that has scored 10 tries this season already, the third most in the competition.

For the aficionados of forward play, there is a mouthwatering clash to enjoy in the scrums, and not just because Siliva Siliva is the Brumbies’ reserve prop; Springboks Beast Mtawarira and Jannie du Plessis will lock horns with Wallabies Ben Alexander and Stephen Moore.

The Cheetahs were a team that showed a new willingness to win ugly last weekend when they pulled off a famous victory over the Highlanders in Invercargill, and hopefully they have carried that spirit across the Tasman with them to Sydney, where they take on the Waratahs on Friday at 10.40am.

The Waratahs are in some disarray with some of the horrors of last season carried over into the current campaign with the New South Welshmen losing two of their first three matches, including a 35-6 thumping at the hands of the Brumbies last weekend.

Coach Michael Cheika has responded by introducing six new faces into the side for this weekend, but veterans such as Benn Robinson, Dave Dennis, Berrick Barnes, Adam Ashley-Cooper and Lachie Turner are still part of the furniture.

Cheetahs scrumhalf Sarel Pretorius was superb last weekend against the Highlanders and is returning to where he played his rugby last year. But his stay with the Waratahs was an unhappy one, and he will have much to prove against opponents who will also be looking to make a statement.

The game awareness of the Cheetahs was outstanding last weekend and, if they can produce their wonderful attacking instincts at the right time in the right place, they could show that their 23-3 victory in Sydney, which was their first ever outside South Africa, was no fluke.

The Bulls, the other unbeaten team in the competition, are in Christchurch to take on the Crusaders and will not have bought the nonsense that the seven-time champions are a spent force.

While the Crusaders have lost their opening two games, they will be buoyed and motivated by returning to the AMI Stadium for the first time in 209 days due to the earthquakes in Christchurch and they still have plenty of quality in their ranks.

Their backline, marshalled by Dan Carter, boasts Israel Dagg, Robbie Fruean, Ryan Crotty and Andy Ellis, while an all-international front row of Owen Franks, Corey Flynn and Wyatt Crockett has fellow All Blacks behind them in Sam and George Whitelock, Matt Todd and Kieran Read.

The Bulls will need to be clinical from the start and keep the pressure on the Crusaders while their confidence is still low and the crowd has not yet got firmly behind them.

The smart money though is on the Crusaders rebounding, clicking into gear and getting their 2013 campaign up and running, so the Bulls will have to be at their best to win back-to-back matches in New Zealand for the first time. And unfortunately, the Bulls do seem to have a bit of an issue with the second game on tour…

The Southern Kings have shown impressive competitiveness and steel in their debut season thus far, but the first real test of their defences comes on Friday night in Port Elizabeth (7.10pm) when they take on New Zealand opposition for the first time, in the form of the defending champions Chiefs.

There can’t be a sterner defensive test at the moment than coming up against the Chiefs – they even managed to score four tries against the Stormers at Newlands last weekend, even though they couldn’t quite win the game.

Kings coach Matt Sexton will need to conceive of better ways of starving the opposition of ball otherwise it will be difficult to see quite how the Eastern Cape men can win this one.

Better skills in hanging on to their own ball would be a start, but this could be where it all starts to go wrong for the Kings, who depart on tour next week.

But this has been a season of surprises so far and this Kings team certainly has heart, so there is hope yet for the rookies.

Teams

Cheetahs: Hennie Daniller, Willie le Roux, Johann Sadie, Robert Ebersohn, Raymond Rhule, Johan Goosen, Sarel Pretorius, Philip van der Walt, Lappies Labuschagne, Frans Viljoen, Francois Uys, Lood de Jager, Lourens Adriaanse, Adriaan Strauss, Trevor Nyakane. Replacements – Ryno Barnes, Coenie Oosthuizen, Ligtoring Landman, Heinrich Brüssow, Piet van Zyl, Riaan Smit, Ryno Benjamin.

Southern Kings: SP Marais, Sergeal Petersen, Ronnie Cooke, Andries Strauss, Marcello Sampson, Demetri Catrakillis, Shaun Venter; Jacques Engelbrecht, Wimpie van der Walt, Cornell du Preez, Steven Sykes, Darron Nell, Kevin Buys, Bandise Maku, Schalk Ferreira. Replacements – Edgar Marutlulle, Jaco Engels, David Bulbring, Daniel Adongo, Nicolas Vergallo, George Whitehead, Hadleigh Parkes.

Bulls: Zane Kirchner, Akona Ndungane, JJ Engelbrecht, Wynand Olivier, Jürgen Visser, Morné Steyn, Jano Vermaak, Pierre Spies, Arno Botha, Deon Stegmann, Juandré Kruger, Flip van der Merwe, Frik Kirsten, Willie Wepener, Morné Mellett. Replacements – Chiliboy Ralepelle, Werner Kruger, Grant Hattingh, Jacques Potgieter, Francois Hougaard, Louis Fouché, Jan Serfontein.

Sharks: Louis Ludik, Odwa Ndungane, Paul Jordaan, Frans Steyn, JP Pietersen, Pat Lambie, Charl McLeod, Ryan Kankowski, Keegan Daniel, Marcell Coetzee, Franco van der Merwe, Anton Bresler, Jannie du Plessis, Craig Burden, Tendai Mtawarira. Replacements – Kyle Cooper, Wiehahn Herbst, Pieter-Steph du Toit, Jacques Botes, Cobus Reinach, Meyer Bosman, Lwazi Mvovo.

Other fixtures: Highlanders v Hurricanes (Dunedin); Reds v Force (Brisbane).

Byes: Stormers, Blues, Rebels.

http://www.dailymaverick.co.za/article/2013-03-15-superrugby-preview-what-sharks-pip/#.Up8Rr9IW29A

Brumbies swarm all over Lions 0

Posted on April 30, 2012 by Ken

The ACT Brumbies swarmed to a 34-20 (half-time 17-6) victory over the Gauteng Lions, putting themselves in pole position in the Australian Conference, in their SuperRugby match at Ellis Park on Friday.

Wing Henry Speight, with two tries, was one of the driving forces for the overwhelming victory, along with the strong running of flyhalf Christian Lealiifano and a dominant forward pack.

The Lions, who are under pressure to maintain their SuperRugby status with the South African Rugby Union having guaranteed the Southern Kings promotion next year, produced an abject display and only rallied to score two tries in the final quarter to narrow the losing margin.

“I’m very happy. The way we carried the ball was so precise, we stuck with things and we put them under real pressure in the 22. We had some great stuff going on on the gain-line and things are starting to come together that we’ve been working on,” Brumbies coach Jake White said after the match.

The Brumbies went behind early to a penalty by Lions flyhalf Elton Jantjies, but struck back with a 12th-minute try by prop Ruaidhri Murphy, who ploughed over the line from a ruck set up when Speight was stopped just short of the line after bursting down the blindside wing.

The visitors fell behind again, though, as Jantjies kicked another penalty four minutes later, and the Lions held on to the lead until the 22nd minute as Lealiifano and fullback Jesse Mogg missed three kicks between them.

With scrumhalf Nic White feeding them quick ball from the rucks, the Brumbies backs were a constant threat with their direct running and changes in the point of attack and Speight grabbed his first try after White’s long pass to outside centre Andrew Smith had set up a ruck, from which Lealiifano made a half-break to present the wing with an easy touchdown.

Speight was involved again as the Brumbies scored five minutes before half-time, cutting in from his wing and breaking through the porous Lions defence and popping the ball to Smith to dot down.

The lacklustre Lions had defended poorly and kicked wastefully in the first half and started the second half in even worse fashion as they conceded two tries in the first seven minutes.

Lions fullback Andries Coetzee presented wing Joe Tomane with a welcome gift try as he failed to gather a Mogg grubber and flank Michael Hooper, having hassled the Lions all game at the breakdown, then punished them from the kickoff as he burst clear and set up prop Ben Alexander for a powerful finish.

Speight scored again for the Brumbies in the 58th minute after the Lions twice presented them with turnovers in the 22, stretching the lead to an unassailable 34-6.

The situation was made worse for the Lions in the 63rd minute when replacement centre Butch James charged into a ruck with his shoulder and was yellow-carded. But the home team finished the match as the stronger side, with centre Jaco Taute and loosehead prop Caylib Oosthuizen scoring never-say-die tries at the death, both converted by Jantjies.

“It was our worst defensive performance of the season. We weren’t effective in the tackle and they hurt us with their carry and got enough breaches. They kept hold of their ball while we lost ours and they were more effective at the breakdown. I thought Hooper was outstanding, he’s world-class, that boy,” Lions coach John Mitchell said.

But the Brumbies were the stars of the show with imposing eighthman Fotu Auelua also amongst their heroes and named man of the match.

The Lions have now won just one of their eight matches and face a daunting task when they play the pace-setting Waikato Chiefs in Hamilton on May 5.

The Chiefs will have the chance to extend their lead on top of the standings when they host the Wellington Hurricanes on Saturday.

Scorers

Lions – Tries: Jaco Taute, Caylib Oosthuizen. Conversions: Elton Jantjies (2). Penalties: Elton Jantjies (2).

Brumbies – Tries: Ruaidhri Murphy, Henry Speight (2), Andrew Smith, Joe Tomane, Ben Alexander. Conversions: Jesse Mogg, Christian Lealiifano.

Steyn has to do bulk of scoring for Bulls 0

Posted on April 24, 2012 by Ken

 

Flyhalf Morne Steyn had to do the bulk of the scoring with his boot as the Northern Bulls were outscored by five tries to two but still beat the ACT Brumbies 36-34 in their Super Rugby match at Loftus Versfeld on Saturday.

Steyn kicked seven penalties, a conversion and a drop goal as the Bulls built a 33-13 lead heading into the final quarter.

But the young Brumbies side made the Bulls look vulnerable at home as they ran in three tries in the last 11 minutes to earn two bonus points.

The Brumbies scored the opening try in the 10th minute, after two Steyn penalties, as wing Henry Speight sprinted clear down the right touchline, flyhalf Christian Lealiifano having created space as he sucked in defenders in midfield.

The Brumbies’ second try, in the 13th minute, was due to the same move, although this time it was the fullback, Jesse Mogg, who sliced through the midfield to score.

Steyn kicked a pair of penalties before half-time though, and, with the Bulls backline showing good hands to create space and time for wing Bjorn Basson to score in the right corner, the home side led 19-13 at the break, following Steyn’s conversion and a penalty by Lealiifano.

The Springboks flyhalf began the second half with a drop goal when he knew he had the penalty advantage anyway, and the Bulls stretched their lead to 25-13 in the 46th minute when they earned a penalty on halfway, which Steyn kicked.

The Brumbies were unfortunate to concede a try to flank CJ Stander in the 58th minute when they stopped playing following an obvious knock-on by Steyn. Even the Bulls players were expecting a scrum, before Stander eventually realised the whistle had not blown and he ran clear from 60 metres out.

The Australians were stung into action by the injustice and they were rewarded for their impressive efforts with ball in hand by three late tries, by centre Andrew Smith, replacement scrumhalf Ian Prior and replacement hooker Anthony Hegarty, which gave them two bonus points to keep them on top of the Australian conference.

http://uk.reuters.com/article/2012/04/21/rugby-super-bulls-idUKB973620120421

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    Philippians 2:13 – “For it is God who works in you to will [to make you want to] and to act according to his good purpose.”

    When you realise that God is at work within you, and are determined to obey him in all things, God becomes your partner in the art of living. Incredible things start to happen in your life. Obstacles either vanish, or you approach them with strength and wisdom from God. New prospects open in your life, extending your vision. You are filled with inspiration that unfolds more clearly as you move forward, holding God’s hand.” – Solly Ozrovech, A Shelter From The Storm

    But not living your life according to God’s will leads to frustration as you go down blind alleys in your own strength, more conscious of your failures than your victories. You will have to force every door open and few things seem to work out well for you.

     

     



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