| Sharks too good for Lions; WP ease past Boland |
The Sharks moved to second place on the Currie Cup standings, following a 30-19 win against the Golden Lions in Johannesburg on Saturday.
The victory came as a result of the Sharks' greater discipline, under immense pressure, in defence and the attacking blunders of the plucky Lions.
It defies logic that the Lions, who dominated the first half, had more than their share of the second half and played some exciting, attacking rugby were 0-23 behind in the 70th minute - which is when they got their first points through a try by captain Cobus Grobbelaar.
Earl Rose's missed conversion was also the first shot at goal by the Lions in a match where the Sharks were forced to make 70-odd tackles - twice as many as the Lions - who had more than 70 percent of the territorial advantage.
Three tries - the same number as the Sharks - in the last 10 minutes were not enough to make up the leeway and the Lions were left to rue a match which they could and probably should have won.
What didn't work under former coach Eugene Eloff was again the Lions' downfall on Saturday.
They created opportunities aplenty, but a lack of constructive play when it mattered and especially in their finishing saw a first half they completely dominated belong to the Sharks with a lead of 17-0 at the break.
The Lions had 58 percent of the possession in this half, dominated the territory stakes by more than 70 percent, had to make only 19 first-half tackles to the Sharks' 45 - and still contrived to let the important home win slip out of their reach.
The Sharks' first try came after a loss of concentration on defence. Running from their own territory, the visitors' forwards and backs combined well until Ryan Kankowski did some smart stepping to beat some tight forwards for a somewhat undeserved but outstanding Sharks try.
But there were earlier missed tackles in this move as well, and that in addition to the squandered chances put the Sharks in control on the scoreboard which made it 10-0 after an earlier penalty and the conversion by Monty Dumont.
It was Kankowski again, with a superb off-load this time, who was influential in the Sharks' second converted try by Craig Burden three minutes before the break (17-0).
In the second half, the Lions also had the better of the play - but knocks, discipline and poor options saw the Sharks score the only points in this third quarter through a second Dumont penalty (20-0).
It became 23-0 after a rare Sharks visit to the Lions 22, mainly because they had the numbers at the breakdown to force the successful Dumont penalty. With 17 minutes left the Lions now needed more than three converted tries to win - an unlikely assignment considering that they had not even had a shot at goal up to that point.
However, they continued to fight and dominate, and scored three tries.
First, they pulled the score back to 23-12 through two well-constructed tries by Grobbelaar and Derick Minnie, with Ruan Boshoff converting the second five minutes from time.
The Lions' chase for a losing bonus point was, however, denied when the Lions were forced to carry the ball back. The Sharks were awarded a penalty try as the Lions disintegrated from the scrum five metres out.
On the final whistle the Lions got a consolation try by Pieter Engelbrecht - his first in the Currie Cup competition - following an interception.
But three tries apiece is scant consolation for a home loss after all the dominance the Lions had enjoyed.
Man of the match: You could look at Ryan Kankowski's creative skills, the breakdown ability of Jacques Botes, or the physical presence of Jean Deysel and Steven Sykes. At the back there was captain Stefan Terblanche, as rock steady as ever. But it was hooker Craig Burden, with his high workrate and great skills that impressed us enough to win our award.
The scorers:
For the Golden Lions: Tries: Grobbelaar, Minnie, Engelbrecht Cons: Boshoff 2
For the Sharks: Tries: Kankowski, Burden, Penalty try Cons: Dumond 2, G Cronjé Pens: Dumond 3
Western Province's Currie Cup aspirations are on track after an easy and well-deserved 38-7 win against the Boland Cavaliers in Wellington on Saturday.
Province led 8-7 at half-time and secured a much-needed bonus point for their five try effort.
The bonus point came in the 76th minute when prop Brok Harris barged over in the corner.
But with the siren going, Province kept the ball in hand and a fine break by Sevens Springbok Gio Aplon saw young JJ Engelbrecht scoring the fifth and final try in the 80th minute.
Boland made life difficult for the visitors in the first half, but after half-time Province took control and Boland just had to defend for long periods.
WP had an early opportunity to take the lead in the 8th minute, but fullback Joe Pietersen missed a rather easy penalty.
Referee Marius Jonker awarded Boland a penalty try in the 19th minute after Province transgressed deliberately on their own goal-line - for Justin Peach to convert.
However, Province paid a double price when New Zealand lock Chris Jack was yellow carded for the incident (7-0).
Province got on the scoreboard in the 23rd minute when left wing Aplon scored an easy try in the corner with no Boland defender in sight (7-5).
Province took the lead for the first time in the 32nd minute when Pietersen succeeded with a penalty right in front of the Boland posts (7-8).
In the 33rd minute, Pietersen ran right through, but could not round off the move.
Province let themselves down at crucial stages and their execution was not what you would expect from a team of their calibre.
Province started to control matters in the second half and ran the ball with every opportunity - even if their execution still let them down too often.
Pietersen increased WP's lead to 11-7 with a straight-forward penalty then his next penalty increased their lead to 14-7.
In the 55th minute, exciting young centre Juan de Jongh scored WP's second try next to the posts for Pietersen to convert (21-7).
This was a fine effort by the youngster who grew up next to the Boland Stadium.
Right wing Tonderai Chavhanga scored WP's third try in the 64th minute after a well-aimed grubber kick by flyhalf Peter Grant to increase their lead to 26-7.
Then the Harris and Engelbrecht tries pinned the final nails in the coffin.
Province also excelled in defence and did not allow a single point in the last 62 minutes.
Man of the match: Juan de Jongh was dangerous on attack, as usual, Gio Aplon always tested the defence with his darting runs, Dewaldt Duvenage looked energetic throughout, Francois Louw provided the physical edge and Chris Jack again showed his international class - yellow card apart. But our vote goes to WP flyhalf Peter Grant for the way he dictated terms.
Scorers:
For the Boland Cavaliers: Tries: Penalty try Cons: Peach
For Western Province: Tries: Aplon, De Jongh, Chavhanga, Harris, Engelbrecht Cons: Pietersen, Grant Pens: Pietersen 3
Yellow cards: Chris Jack (Western Province, 19 - professional foul, in at the side of a ruck)
RUGBY365
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