Rob Houwing
'New' Bulls come of age
2012-05-14 06:52
Sport24 chief writer Rob Houwing (File)
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Rob Houwing, Sport24 chief writer
Cape Town – Perhaps the time has come to finally allay all fears that
the Bulls might take a couple of years to regroup in street-wisdom and
composure terms after the mass departure of legendary Loftus figures
last year.
The Bulls team of 2012 continues to ride much higher
than some pundits might have predicted they would, following the exit of
such title-winning stalwarts as Victor Matfield, Fourie du Preez,
Bakkies Botha, Gurthro Steenkamp, Gary Botha and Danie Rossouw.
In
grinding out a come-from-behind 27-24 victory over the Waratahs in
Sydney on Friday, the supposedly rebuilding team from Pretoria again
displayed a remarkable cool-headedness that has been a hallmark of their
charge to the top of the South African conference in Super Rugby.
By
grabbing four points from this tight, seldom spectacular encounter,
after trailing at the break and then again by the advent of the 78th
minute, the Bulls only entrenched their status there and put pressure on
the Stormers to win again in their Saturday home derby against the
Cheetahs to stay in close touch.
The Capetonians could snatch
back top SA spot if they draw level with the Bulls on 46 points (by
virtue of more wins) by beating the Free Staters with a bonus point –
not something they have yet managed this season, mind.
Tighthead
Werner Kruger’s decisive late rumble over the line made all the
difference as the tourists left Australia for even tougher challenges in
New Zealand – Highlanders and then Chiefs – with the satisfaction of
snaring nine points from a possible 10 before crossing the ditch.
The
Bulls certainly won’t give the proverbial continental that Phil Kearns,
that dyed-in-the-wool former ‘Tahs stalwart and TV commentator, clearly
gutted that the home side had let this one slip, implied immediately
afterwards that the Australian outfit (now almost certainly out of the
playoffs picture) had been unfortunate.
Especially when you are abroad in this competition, you make your own luck wherever you can.
And
if the Bulls weren’t as potent as an attacking factor as they had been
in two or three games ahead of this one, you had to laud them for the
way they largely redressed their defensive shortcomings.
That was
in spite of ominously leaking a 16th minute try to Rob Horne when the
centre cut the opposition midfield defence to ribbons and waltzed over
beneath the posts.
But that composure I mentioned earlier was
much in evidence again from the Bulls, and captain Pierre Spies got it
right when he described the triumph as “an awesome effort right into the
last five minutes”.
There were plenty of imperfections in the
Bulls’ game, let it be said, with an annoying basic-error count at
times, whilst their scrum took a fair bit of heat – they still give away
engagement penalties too easily – and they will be only too happy to
welcome back first-choice loosehead Dean Greyling after a week’s
approved leave for the birth of his son.
Rather like compatriots
the Stormers, loose forward injury woes continue to play some havoc –
luckless fetcher Deon Stegmann, just back after several weeks on the
sidelines, left the park with an arm injury in the 33rd minute after a
fairly promising comeback appearance.
But young replacement Arno
Botha, not for the first time of late, brought useful energy into the
fray and it was certainly a day where everyone in the pack willingly did
their open-play donkeywork, even as the set-pieces served up some
difficulties.
Strong influencers of the win were the halfback
combination of Morne Steyn, who again kicked flawlessly off the tee and
almost as convincingly out of hand, and Francois Hougaard, who was
terrifically committed in the tackle, gave his partner a crisp service
and showed staggering leg strength as a ball-carrier who might easily
have been mistaken for a loose forward.
In one such instance, in
the first half, he basically bumped off both Benn Robinson and Rocky
Elsom, gnarly veterans of the Waratahs’ eight, in bulldozing his way
over for a try.
Bjorn Basson was a model of professionalism on
the left wing, including his customary, uncanny ability at fielding
high balls ... it is hard to think of another back-three player
comparable in that particular facet right now.
As for the
Waratahs, things do not get any easier as they must now fly to South
Africa to take on the Stormers next weekend at Newlands, with concerns
over the fitness of forceful No 8 Cliffie Palu as he was forced off
crocked against the Bulls.
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