Cape Argus

Credit to us for doing what we did in last hour, says WP coach

- WYNONA LOUW

WESTERN PROVINCE coach John Dobson says he’s impressed with how his team fought back against “the best team in the competitio­n” to secure a home Currie Cup semi-final.

Province returned to Cape Town with a 31-20 win that served as their reward for an improved second-half performanc­e against the Sharks in Durban – after they ruined a number of try-scoring opportunit­ies in the first half.

In the process, Province ended the Sharks’ 10-match winning streak, and the triumph booked them a semi-final date with the Golden Lions at Newlands on Saturday.

Dobson also said it’s “desperatio­n” for a home Currie Cup semi-final that fuelled their victory, and although he was happy with his team’s work, the WP coach also gave credit to the Sharks for the way they approached the game.

“I’m very pleased with the way we withstood the onslaught from what I think is the best team in the competitio­n,” Dobson said.

“I was impressed with the Sharks’ intensity at the start there – I thought for a dead rubber… 20 minutes in we were in trouble due to the sheer physicalit­y and momentum they were showing.

“I think we butchered a few scoring opportunit­ies, but I think we were just more desperate (than the Sharks), we had to get a home semi-final.

“I thought we got a little bit bullied earlier on – we gave them yards on defence and our carries weren’t getting yards. We knew we had to be more direct against them, and I don’t think either side played with much fluidity on attack. It was always going to be a physical fight, and I’m just glad we stayed in it.”

It hasn’t been Province’s finest Currie Cup campaign, and at the weekend, they secured only their second away win this season, with the other one coming in the form of a narrow 46-45 victory at Loftus a few weeks ago.

They’ve also lost matches that you would expect a team with WP’s personnel to win easily, and all of that added to the pressure of making it to the semi-finals.

“We were under a lot of pressure for a home semi-final. Talent wise, I think we’re probably one of the better teams in the competitio­n, and for us not to be at home in the semis would have been an underperfo­rmance. That’s why we were so desperate,” Dobson said.

“I don’t know many other teams that would have come with the intensity that they came with in a dead rubber, so Robert du Preez senior is obviously keeping very high standards. In that first half hour we were really on the back foot, we were clinging.

“If that game had gone to 17-3, as it threatened to, I’m not sure we would have come back. Even at half time with the drop goal I thought ‘geez, that’s a bit much’. So credit to us for doing what we did in the last hour.”

In the semi-finals on Saturday, Province will host the Golden Lions at Newlands at 2.30pm, while the Sharks will meet the Blue Bulls in Durban later in the day at 5pm.

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