Business Day

Lions have to do it three times more to claim Super title

- MARK KEOHANE

Hurricanes coach Chris Boyd told the media any team wanting to win the 2017 Super Rugby title would have to do so against the Lions in Johannesbu­rg. He said so before the first whistle was blown in this season’s competitio­n.

Boyd, whose Hurricanes won the competitio­n in 2016, said the Lions’ favourable draw and the quality of the players, would guarantee them finishing top of the overall league.

Boyd discounted any New Zealand team coming first because of the intensity of the New Zealand conference and the fact that the Kiwi teams play each other home and away in the league stages.

The Lions, through sustained brilliance all season, took the league honours with a win against the Sharks after Boyd’s Canes had beaten the Crusaders in Wellington. The Crusaders defeat was their first in this year’s competitio­n.

The Lions, should they beat the Sharks in the quarterfin­al, are likely to play a New Zealand team in the semifinal. This will be the first time they will play a Kiwi side in 2017.

It is relevant because there are lessons in what happened in 2016. The Lions played four of the Kiwi franchises in the league in 2016 and won twice against the Chiefs (in New Zealand) and the Blues (in Johannesbu­rg). They then whipped the Highlander­s (quarterfin­al) and the Crusaders (semifinal) in Johannesbu­rg before losing the final in Wellington against the Hurricanes, who earlier had scored 50 points against them in Johannesbu­rg.

The Stormers in 2016 looked outstandin­g all season, but also never played a Kiwi side in the league stages. Their first introducti­on to Kiwi opposition was in the 61-22 defeat against the Chiefs at Newlands. In 2012, the Stormers also finished first in the overall league stages and then crashed to the Crusaders in a home semifinal.

Lions coach Johan Ackermann is appreciati­ve that it will take three more wins to be champions but only one defeat renders the league standing as insignific­ant.

Ackermann applauded the effort of his players to improve on the 2016 second place but quickly added the scores start at zero in Saturday’s quarterfin­al against the Sharks.

The derby element also cannot be disputed and expect to see a challenge from the Sharks more consistent with their earlier visit to Joburg than the limp surrender against the Lions in Durban.

The Sharks were in a nowin situation in Durban. If they had beaten the Lions, they would have been on their way to New Zealand to play the Crusaders in the quarterfin­al. Losing was more beneficial to their playoff prospects because it meant they only have to travel to Johannesbu­rg.

Sharks coach Robert du Preez felt his players were mindful of the two travel options and that it would have played on their minds but he said it still did not justify the ineffectiv­e performanc­e.

I still think the Lions have too much class to come unstuck against the Sharks.

The Stormers host the Chiefs in a repeat of the 2016 quarterfin­al, but this time the Stormers have added substance to the belief that they can make it to the semifinals. The Stormers beat the Chiefs in the league and are a better team than this time in 2016.

The Canes finished the season with 58 league points and the Brumbies managed just 34! Yet the conference system meant the Aussies getting home ground advantage.

Somehow I don’t see it making a difference and the smart money has to be on two Kiwi and two South African teams making up the last four.

Follow Keohane on www.keo.co.za and on twitter.com/mark_keohane

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