Fiji Sun

Boyd Laments On Hurricanes Loss

- - Stuff & Sky Sports Feedback: leonec@fijisun.com.fj

At this rate it won’t be till after Anzac Day that the Hurricanes get off the mark for 2018.

Every man and his dog had them as bonus-point winners over the Bulls, at Loftus Versfeld yesterday morning. So on the back of their eventual 21-19 defeat in Pretoria, all bets are off.

The Hurricanes have the Jaguares in Buenos Aires, Crusaders and Highlander­s at home, Rebels (away) and Sharks and Chiefs at home, before the Sunwolves arrive at Westpac Stadium on April 27. You don’t want to sound alarmist but, if the Hurricanes make a habit of playing the way they did against the Bulls, you can’t take any game for granted this season.

“In the period of time that I’ve been coaching, I don’t think I’ve ever been involved in a game where we’ve prepared so well and delivered so little,” Hurricanes head coach Chris Boyd said from Pretoria.

For most people, the realisatio­n the Hurricanes wouldn’t win probably came late in the piece. Boyd knew they were in trouble “about three minutes in.”

“We’d been preparing to play the Bulls at altitude since the 25th of November and probably earlier than that, because we knew what we were faced with. We got here and basically we ran out of legs again at altitude very quickly and were unable to put our game together either defensivel­y or offensivel­y,” said Boyd.

“The things that we normally do, we just stopped doing. So our defence was passive and wasn’t well connected and when we started trying to play, we ran out of bodies to play with because guys weren’t getting there.

“I’ll have to go back and have a look at the video, but they were either getting tied up in rucks or they were tired. So they weren’t getting there and we resorted to kicking and we kicked the ball away too much.”

This performanc­e wasn’t unlike that in last year’s semifinal loss to the Lions in Johannesbu­rg. On that occasion the team ran out of puff, had limited intent in their tackling and kicked in the hope of catching their breath.

It didn’t work then and - despite the months of preparatio­n Boyd mentioned - didn’t pay dividends this time either.

The Hurricanes couldn’t put the Bulls’ ball-runners on their backsides, with locks RG Snyman and Lood de Jager both allowed to run freely. Tries to Johnny Kotze and de Jager helped the Bulls to a 16-12 halftime lead, with Ricky Riccitelli and Wes Goosen replying for the visitors.

The second half was a stop-start, scrappy affair in which the Hurricanes weren’t accurate enough to turn opportunit­ies into points. TJ Perenara had a try disallowed for insufficie­nt downward pressure. Beauden Barrett scored from close range and then Bulls prop Pierre Schoeman got the matchwinne­r eight minutes from time.

“It’s easy in these situations to start pointing the finger and trying to find a solution and there’s probably not one thing; there’s probably a whole bunch of things.

But, at the end of the day, that’s probably the worst performanc­e in the four years - or three and a bit years - that I’ve been involved in the Hurricanes,” Boyd said.

LIONS IN TRY-FEST VICTORY

The Lions outshone the Jaguares at Emirates Airline Park in Saturday’s Super Rugby clash, running in seven tries in a solid 47-27 victory.

The Jaguares started the game in fine form, scoring the opening 10 points and defending well. However, their discipline eventually let them down and the Lions ran riot towards the end of the first half, taking a 19-10 lead into the break. The second half was mostly oneway traffic, and despite a late fightback from the visitors, the South Africans comfortabl­y held on for the win.

The Lions had been heavily fancied to dominate on their home turf, but they got off to the worst possible start. A quick passing move from the Jaguares ended with Emiliano Boffelli scoring the game’s first try on the left in the third minute.

The hosts toiled for a response, but found themselves even further behind in the 18th minute. The Jaguares won a penalty near the halfway line and Boffelli stepped up to the tee, thumping it over the posts. In the 27th minute, the Lions were finally rewarded for their persistenc­e on attack. After they worked the ball out to the left, Aphiwe Dyantyi finished in style to score their first try, stepping inside one defender and handing off another. The Jaguares shot themselves in the foot shortly afterwards, when Bautista Delguy picked up a 33rd minute yellow card for a deliberate knock down, for which Jaco Peyper awarded the Lionws a penalty try.

 ?? Photo: Zimbio ?? TJ Perenara of the Hurricanes in action during the Super Rugby clash against Vodacom Bulls at Loftus Versfeld Stadium in Pretoria, South Africa on February 24, 2018.
Photo: Zimbio TJ Perenara of the Hurricanes in action during the Super Rugby clash against Vodacom Bulls at Loftus Versfeld Stadium in Pretoria, South Africa on February 24, 2018.
 ??  ?? Kwagga Smith played for Lions against Jaguares.
Kwagga Smith played for Lions against Jaguares.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Fiji