Cape Argus

Things could get a whole lot worse before it gets better for Lions

- JACQUES VAN DER WESTHUYZEN

THE LIONS are in danger of crashing and burning after falling to the Jaguares for the third time in a row in Buenos Aires on Saturday.

The wobble that set in during the loss to the Blues a fortnight ago is now at full speed with the defending champions, the Crusaders, waiting for the Lions.

It has been a horror last three weeks for the two-time Super Rugby runners-up from 2016 and 2017, and it could get a whole lot worse before it gets better. After making a strong start to life without Johan Ackermann (and defence coach JP Ferreira) with wins against the Sharks and Jaguares at home and Bulls away, the Lions lost to the Blues, at home, just edged the Sunwolves at home, and lost to the Jaguares, away, at the weekend.

The 49-35 defeat on Saturday was the third in a row for the Lions in Argentina after Ackermann’s weakened team of 2016 and 2017 also lost in Buenos Aires.

This time though the Lions played their strongest available team even though some regulars such as Ross Cronje, Andries Ferreira, Warren Whiteley and Jaco Kriel were missing through injury. New head coach Swys de Bruin, pictured, was desperate for his side to hit back after the iffy few last weekends, and while they scored five tries on Saturday, they conceded six to go down in spectacula­r fashion. The Jaguares are a far cry from the side the competitio­n’s organisers hoped they’d be and have struggled for consistenc­y and this year alone have battled both home and away, registerin­g just two wins from six – one against De Bruin’s men.

Defence is obviously a major problem for the Lions at the moment.

While they have scored 34 tries in their six matches to date and played some sparkling attacking rugby – their trademark – they have struggled to keep teams out, letting in 26 tries. And they’ve gotten worse as the competitio­n’s gone on: they conceded three against the Sharks and Jaguares at home in rounds one and two, then they let in four againts the Bulls in round three, and that was followed by five each in the games against the Blues and Sunwolves. This weekend it went up to six.

Defence coach Joey Mongalo is a hard task-master and a hugely-respected man in Lions coaching circles and he’ll no doubt spend plenty of time in the coming days trying to get the Lions’ tackling up to scratch before the Crusaders arrive.

De Bruin will quickly have to get his charges focused on the next job at hand and he’ll also hope the likes of Cronje and Ferreira are fit to be considered for selection this week. The Lions need a major boost right now and the Crusaders provide them an opportunit­y to get just that. A win would be massive for their confidence, which has no doubt taken a knock in recent weeks, and also set them on the right path for the visit of the Stormers next week.

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