Cape Times

‘Don’t worry coach, we have got this one’ ...

- Mike Greenaway

DURBAN: Two weeks ago, at halftime in the Currie Cup match between the Sharks and Western Province, visiting coach John Dobson admitted he thought his trailing team were dead and buried after having watched the Sharks dominate the game.

History repeated itself at the weekend in the final, but this time Dobson knew for sure his team would go on to win again after two of his players had a quiet word in his ear on their way into the change room. Province were 21-15 down.

“Wilco Louw and Robert du Preez both said: ‘Don’t worry coach, we have got this one,” Dobson said after his team’s 33-21 victory.

Louw was an ideal man to comment. The tighthead anchored a set scrum that demolished their Sharks opposition. Louw knew the Sharks had lost the battle up front.

And flyhalf Du Preez knew that once again he would be the chief beneficiar­y of the frontfoot ball. He was in the perfect position to see the Sharks were going backwards, and he went on to expertly guide his team home with the stream of quality ball coming his way.

“The scrum battle was an important part of our plan, but we didn’t expect to be as dominant,” Dobson admitted.

Nor did anybody, except possibly Louw.

“The first scrum was a Sharks put-in, and they went backwards. That laid down the marker. It was very encouragin­g,” Dobson said. “We knew our pack was underrated going into the match and we would be underdogs, but we really had the belief we could win.”

Captain Chris van Zyl was another who felt the Sharks had played their best rugby in the first half and that the momentum had shifted when centre Huw Jones scored just before half time to narrow the Sharks’ lead.

“We knew it was still in our hands, we felt we had set-piece dominance, and if we just kept the ball then things would start happening,” Van Zyl said. “So we just wanted to be a bit more direct and stick to the plan, and it all just came together from there.”

It did indeed. It was one-way traffic, with the Sharks failing to score points in the second half and the visitors running rampant.

 ??  ?? PACK MENTALITY: Western Province’s scrum has been outstandin­g all season.
PACK MENTALITY: Western Province’s scrum has been outstandin­g all season.

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