Cape Times

Franco: It would be an honour to fill the void left by Bismarck

- Mike Greenaway

DURBAN: Almost unnoticed Franco Marais has entrenched himself as the successor to his schoolboy hero, Bismarck du Plessis, in the Sharks front row.

There is nothing flashy about the hooker’s play, but it is difficult to find a player in the Sharks team with a higher work rate.

“I give it my all and try to be everywhere because I don’t have the physique of a Bismarck,” he grins. “I like doing the hard yards. I have done them my whole life since growing up in Vanderbijl­park (a less than fashionabl­e town in the south of Gauteng). It is almost as rough as where Andre Esterhuize­n comes from,” he laughs, pointing to the rugged centre, who hails from Klerksdorp.

There was no Craven Week for him. Instead he headed to Durban to be a paying customer at the Sharks Academy. He played club Under-21 rugby for Harlequins on the Bluff (south of Durban) where former Natal and London Harlequins coach Andy Keast recognised his potential and took him under his wing.

“Andy was the biggest influence on my career and he and Ettienne Fynn (of the Sharks Academy) persuaded me to change from flank to hooker because I would get more opportunit­ies in that position,” Marais said.

Marais almost literally threw everything into becoming the best hooker he could be.

“Every day I threw 100 balls at the tyres we have as targets at the Academy, and I had a notebook in which I recorded what I had done at training each day,” he reflects.

He came to Durban in 2011 and climbed every rung of the ladder: U21 club rugby, senior club rugby, the Sharks age groups, Vodacom Cup, Currie Cup and then Super Rugby.

“It was a hard slog but I would not have had it any other way because it has made me appreciate it all the more,” he said. “Every time I put on that jersey I play my heart out.”

Only in his third year at the Sharks Academy did he get a contract.

“It would be an honour to fill the void of Bismarck. He, Butch James and John Smit were my heroes. Chiliboy (Ralepelle) is pushing me hard, so there is no comfort zone for me,” he added. “The competitio­n for places in the pack is why we are playing so well. Nobody is taking anything for granted. We have three very good locks in Etienne Oosthuizen, Ruan Botha and Stephan Lewies, and none of them wants to sit out. It is the same in all the positions.”

The Sharks’ last game was an arm-wrestle upfront with the tough Jaguares pack and, while the home team were pleased to get the win, Marais says the goal had been five points.

“We have to start getting bonus-point wins,” he said. “They are going to be crucial in the long run.”

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