Cape Argus

Robertson: Waratahs backs can swing it...

- VATA NGOBENI

JOHANNESBU­RG: As much as history and results may be against them, the NSW Waratahs are going to chance their hand at beating the Lions in their Super Rugby semi-final at Ellis Park on Saturday, according to Wallaby prop Tom Robertson.

It won’t only be through sheer fight and heart that they will be trying to register an historic victory but mostly through game management, which Robertson admits is not his strongest point.

While the Waratahs’ forwards have shown mongrel and an ability to go toe-totoe with the best sides in the competitio­n, it will be through their backs, including Wallabies Bernard Foley, Kurtley Beale and Israel Folau, that they can win the game.

“It’s going to be a tight game and you never know what’s going to happen,” said the 23-year-old Robertson from Johannesbu­rg yesterday.

“It might go over 80 minutes and stuff like that, so game management is crucial; kicking at the right times and giving the big boys a break when they need it.

“That’s not really my area to speak about because I’m a forward and I do what I’m told, but Bernard, KB and Nick Phipps, I’m quite confident in their ability to manage the game.”

However, it won’t be just about the intel that the backs hold, as the Australian­s will need to hold their own against a Lions forward pack that has been dominant all season long.

Robertson believes that if their scrums and line-outs are not up to par, they will nullify the threat that their backs have over South Africa’s premier side.

And, typical of the thinking from a front-rower, Robertson feels that the only battle that will matter on the day, besides managing the game, will be in how they stand up to the Lions pack.

“It is massive. We have one of the best back-lines in the competitio­n and it is up to us forwards; if we can get them good clean ball, they can do the work. We are really confident in those guys.

“It is our task as a forward pack in the scrums and line-outs to deliver them clean ball and you’ve seen last week what Kurtley (Beale), Israel (Folau) and Bernard (Foley) can do; they are freaks on their own. It will be up to us to get them the ball,” added Robertson.

It is in trying to weaken that Lions pack that the Waratahs will have to do their utmost in keeping Springbok and Lions hooker Malcolm Marx out of the game, along with inspiratio­nal Lions captain Warren Whiteley, as they are the men the Lions will rely on as their catalysts to another good performanc­e.

“They’ve got danger men all over the park. From a forwards perspectiv­e, Malcolm Marx and Warren Whiteley are pretty handy and we’ll be trying to look out for them. But they have a lot of fire power all over the park,” said Robertson.

“Just look at him (Marx), he plays in the front row but he can get around like a flanker. He is fit and handy at scrum and line-out so he is a complete player.”

But more than anything, the Waratahs will also have to contend with the altitude factor which has been the undoing of many teams at Ellis Park.

Robertson concedes that playing at altitude can easily affect a side but believes the Waratahs have the players with enough experience at facing the realities of playing at the iconic stadium and the conditions, and have been in Johannesbu­rg long enough not to use that as an excuse for whatever transpires in the game.

“It is just getting used to it throughout the week in training,” he said.

“A lot of us, all of us in the match-day 23, have played a game over here and we know what it feels like. We’ve played a few Tests in Pretoria and Joburg and we know what it feels like, so we’ll be getting used to it at training this week.”

 ??  ?? MAKE WAY: Tom Robertson does what he’s told, which is to provide opportunit­ies for the backline players.
MAKE WAY: Tom Robertson does what he’s told, which is to provide opportunit­ies for the backline players.

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