Rob Houwing
Sharks to tour in upbeat mood
2012-03-19 07:08
Sport24 chief writer Rob Houwing (File)
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Rob Houwing, Sport24 chief writer
Cape Town - The Sharks have stormed back into Super Rugby contention, a
satisfying thought for them as they embark on their four-match tour of
Australia and then New Zealand.
They produced a decidedly “two
moods” sort of performance in snapping the unbeaten record of 2011
champions the Reds in rain-lashed Durban on Saturday, but the thrilling
27-22 outcome left them on an immensely more even keel than they would
have been had they surrendered this match.
Three defeats from
four early-season matches would have left them at risk of losing touch
very badly with the pace-setters in the competition if their overseas
leg – traditionally a taxing ask for all South African sides -- was
going to be notably unproductive as well.
But they have a bit more breathing space now, following their back-to-back triumphs over the Lions and Reds at home.
And
as they undertake the long haul to Sydney for their first tour match
against the Waratahs next Saturday (06:35 SA time), John Plumtree’s
charges will also reflect on what might count as one of their best ever
come-from-behind conquests in Super Rugby.
Speaking afterwards,
simultaneously relieved and elated captain Keegan Daniel produced a bit
of an under-statement when he said: “We were a bit slack in the first 30
(minutes).”
Frankly, the Sharks seemed nowhere in that period
... outmuscled in the tight-loose, shunted backwards in the scrums,
messy in the lineout, and with their defence around the fringes at sixes
and sevens as the sniping, slick Queenslanders showed off some of their
title-winning pedigree.
Considering the challenging conditions, a
17-0 deficit just after the half-hour mark appeared pretty close to an
early death sentence and the relatively poor crowd was suitably muted.
But
with Daniel leading by example, that turned out to be as bad as it got;
the Sharks suddenly knocked themselves into shape in a major way and
were the better side over most of the remaining 50 minutes in a game
marked by multiple cases of injury disruption to both teams.
They
even came desperately close to a cherry-on-top bonus point for four
tries, but would have been delighted enough – you could see it in their
demonstrative body language at the final whistle – just to have
prevailed.
It was a wrench for them to see stalwart lock Steven
Sykes go off on the buggy in the 28th minute, but strangely that was
also the cue for a spate of their younger pack members – including his
replacement Jandre Marais – to begin to show their truest mettle.
Emerging
flank Marcell Coetzee got through a mountain of work, Anton Bresler
wasn’t too far behind, and a rather more established, anchor figure in
Springbok Bismarck du Plessis was again a physical specimen of massive
prominence in the uncanny way he engineered some seemingly unlikely
turnovers.
And once they did gain firmer front-foot traction,
halfbacks Charl McLeod and Pat Lambie and the consistently improving
midfielder Tim Whitehead also got the opportunity to be influential as
attacking factors.
The Sharks’ tour schedule does not look too
outrageously daunting: even less so, it might be argued, when you
consider that all of their quartet of opponents (Waratahs, Brumbies,
Hurricanes and Blues) lost this weekend.
Even if there may be a
new list of casualties to chew on after a bruising and energy-sapping
affair against the Reds, they will also have players like Jean Deysel,
Ross Skeate and Ryan Kankowski filtering back into their match-day ranks
very shortly.
Next round of fixtures (home teams first):Friday: Blues v Hurricanes, Rebels v Force.
Saturday: Waratahs v Sharks, Crusaders v Cheetahs, Brumbies v Highlanders, Bulls v Reds, Lions v Stormers. Bye: Chiefs.
*Follow our chief writer on Twitter: @RobHouwing