Business Day

Currie Cup does not runneth over with extreme Bok talent

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It wasn’t quite Super Rugby and it wasn’t quite the vintage Currie Cup of yesteryear, but it was neverthele­ss easy on the eye and a credit to those who put it on the line in the 2017 Currie Cup semifinals.

Bulls coach and former All Blacks coach John Mitchell described his team’s 37-27 defeat in Durban to the Sharks as being close to a Test match. That may be stretching it because Munster’s 14-7 defeat of Racing 92 in the Champions Cup was closer to Test rugby than anything produced in SA’s domestic semifinals.

The Munster versus Racing showdown was deadlocked at zero-zero on the hour and the intensity in that hour was very Test-like.

SA’s domestic play-offs were enjoyable encounters but neither was of the class of so many matches in Europe’s premier competitio­n.

The Currie Cup final in Durban this Saturday will be a step up from the semifinals but it still won’t match what I’ve seen domestical­ly in the northern hemisphere.

To be successful in the tour opener against Ireland in Dublin on November 11, the Boks will have to be even better than they were in the 24-25 win against the All Blacks in Cape Town.

The All Blacks looked spent after a season that has included three titanic Tests against the British and Irish Lions and six unbeaten Tests en route to winning the Rugby Championsh­ips. These matches included two against Australia that doubled in a successful retention of the Bledisloe Cup for the 15th successive year.

I was not surprised that the All Blacks lost in Brisbane to the Wallabies. I was more surprised that there was just two points in the game going into the final five minutes.

This was not the best All Blacks line-up and it certainly was not the All Blacks in inspiring mood. Just like in Cape Town, it appeared the All Blacks would do enough to get over the line, but this time lady luck would favour the Wallabies – and deservedly so.

They outscored the All Blacks three tries to two and always seemed in control. New Zealand’s rare positive was the showing of Sonny Bill Williams, who reminded his critics of his breathtaki­ng qualities.

Watching Australia finally win would have been hard for the Springbok coaches and players because it only reinforced that the Newlands Test was a lost opportunit­y to get one over the men in black.

The All Blacks certainly haven’t become a weak team in 2017, but they have become one as vulnerable as the next when mixing and matching and giving opportunit­ies to fringe players. Half the All Blacks team that started in Cape Town and Brisbane won’t start the first Test of 2018, so they’ll feel a sense of triumph in 2017, despite the drawn Test series against the Lions and the solitary Brisbane defeat in their last seven Tests.

The Springboks need a big tour of the north to ensure 2017 is remembered as an improvemen­t on the horror of 2016, when the Springboks won just four of 12.

For all their huff and puff at various times, the Boks are five from nine, and defeat to Ireland would make it a precarious five from 10.

Defeat isn’t something I’d want to contemplat­e for the Springboks in Dublin, because if they lose that Test then France (in Paris) and Wales (in Cardiff) become much harder.

For now there’s a sense of euphoria about the Springboks because of a narrow defeat to the All Blacks, but don’t be lulled into misguided ecstasy.

Similarly, don’t start believing the Currie Cup playoffs in any way reflect or mirror Test rugby. They don’t.

I thought the Bulls would run the Sharks close in Durban, but just as I called the Wallabies to win in Brisbane, I also called the Lions to be successful in Cape Town.

The Lions were the biggest disappoint­ment of the weekend. I expected a more dynamic display. The decision not to start with Malcolm Marx backfired. When you have a player in sizzling form, play him for the full 80 minutes.

The Lions got it all wrong in their approach. They didn’t respect the occasion and in play-offs, you take points when they are on offer. Province were strong in defence, with Nizaam Carr again the standout leader in everything he did defensivel­y, and Robert du Preez accurate in his game management and goalkickin­g.

The Sharks’ young flyhalf, Curwin Bosch, was also comfortabl­y in a class of his own and will tour with the Springboks at the end of 2017. But for all the hype around the Currie Cup play-offs, I can’t see too many others forcing their way into the Springboks match 23 for Dublin’s D-Day.

 ??  ?? MARK KEOHANE
MARK KEOHANE

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