Bulls discover their inner mongrel at Ellis Park 0
The Bulls were able to discover their inner mongrel at Ellis Park on Saturday as they hammered the Lions 30-12 in their SuperRugby match, the hosts experiencing that losing feeling in a home derby for the first time since February 2015.
The win was based on the dominance of the Bulls pack who managed to muster extraordinary levels of energy and intensity despite having to undergo the draining flight back from Argentina at the start of the week. They simply had too much grunt for an inexperienced Lions pack and having seized the advantage early in the first half, they just never surrendered the momentum.
But it was not just brute force that won the day for the Bulls forwards. They certainly seem to have up-skilled themselves and their handling and support play was excellent as the visitors chose to, sensibly, base much of their attacking efforts around close quarters, their forwards driving and passing with equal effectiveness.
It was a terrible first half for the Lions from the moment wing Aphiwe Dyantyi fumbled flyhalf Handre Pollard’s soaring up-and-under as the Bulls cleared their lines after the kick-off. For the next 40 minutes the Bulls thoroughly dominated territory and Lions coach Swys de Bruin was not exaggerating afterwards when he said “we never had the ball for the first 24 minutes and we had just one attacking opportunity in the first half”.
The one positive for the Lions was that they put in a top-class defensive effort in the first half and it took the Bulls 14 minutes to finally turn their overwhelming dominance into points. Hooker Malcolm Marx was deemed to have deliberately knocked the ball on and Pollard slotted the penalty.
The Springbok flyhalf kicked another penalty in the 27th minute after a superb build-up by the Bulls, their forwards keeping it tight, bashing away and then bringing the backline into play at just the right time. Marnus Schoeman, a perpetual nuisance at the breakdown, conceded the ruck penalty.
But the Bulls did not just play 10-man rugby at Ellis Park and their first try came on the half-hour when they were able to con the Lions defence with a deft pop-pass to Rosko Specman after a lineout, the impressive wing racing into the 22, whereafter eighthman Duane Vermeulen provided the powerful finish.
Pollard kicked another penalty three minutes before the break as the Bulls went into halftime 14-0 up, a lead which certainly did not flatter them and in fact should have been more but for some finishing touches being lacking.
It would have been silly for the Bulls to abandon what worked so well for them and they started the second half with a powerful driving maul, the brittle Lions pack conceding another penalty to Pollard.
At 17-0, the Lions were in the Valley of Death, but they showed some spirit in the second half, even though they were clearly out-muscled. Tighthead prop Carlu Sadie burrowed over for a try in the 48th minute and at times it looked like a comeback was about to start for the home side, but the Bulls defence was also given a workout and proved impressively up to the task.
A threatening Specman run was brought to an end by a high tackle, allowing Pollard to stretch the lead to 20-5 and then the outstanding hooker Schalk Brits, whose dynamism was the start of so many good things for the Bulls, earned a breakdown penalty, his flyhalf converting from 53 metres out.
The Bulls were 23-5 up going into the final quarter, but the Lions did manage to stay in the game with one more try. Schoeman burst from a ruck and loosehead prop Dylan Smith was up in support to take the try-scoring pass.
Apart from the dominance of the pack, one of the key strengths of the Bulls on Saturday was how quickly and effectively they came up to contest Pollard’s accurate tactical kicks and their final try was due to the pressure their chase exerted.
A quick lineout throw by the Lions deep inside their own 22 went horribly wrong, Pollard sized up the situation quickly and got the ball wide to fullback Warrick Gelant, who went haring off for the corner.
Pollard said after the game that the win was up there with the best he has experienced with the Bulls and nobody will argue that the visitors were hugely impressive at Ellis Park on Saturday.
Now, if they can maintain that momentum and intensity, we might just start talking about a changing of the guard in terms of South African SuperRugby supremacy.