Cape Times

Without making excuses we are becoming thin upfront, says Mitchell

- Vata Ngobeni

PRETORIA: It will take nothing short of a miracle for the Bulls to make the Super Rugby playoffs.

The nightmare of another season of sitting and watching the knockout rounds from the sidelines had a semblance of reality when the Pretoria-based team sunk to their second successive defeat in a 38-28 loss to a 14-man Brumbies side at Loftus on Saturday.

It was a defeat that the Bulls weren’t expecting, but one they will know was of their own making.

With the Bulls firmly rooted at the bottom of the South African conference on 24 points, with three matches remaining and a slew of injuries that have been compounded by the latest casualties to loose forwards Marco van Staden and Roelof Smit, Bulls coach John Mitchell has accepted responsibi­lity for the team’s woes in recent weeks.

Even though Mitchell had been optimistic before the encounter against the Brumbies, he watched helplessly as his team capitulate­d to a fired-up Australian team that seemed to grow in confidence after losing hooker Folau Faingaa on the hour mark.

Mitchell says such defeats are part of the growing pains of a team still getting to grips with his methods and it doesn’t help that they have already lost key players to injury along the way.

“Whenever there is a poor performanc­e the first person to look at is myself,” said Mitchell. “I take responsibi­lity and look to see where we failed the group in preparatio­n.

“Without making excuses we are becoming thin upfront.

“We do have a lot of players developing in Super Rugby and we didn’t get what we thought we should have got out of finishing the game.

“Unfortunat­ely that is part of the evolution we are going to have to go through, there is no magic solution to this.

“We’ve lost Marco to a lengthy injury, I think, and Roelof as well. The numbers are climbing in terms of injuries to the forwards.”

While the June internatio­nal break will offer the Bulls some reprieve from injuries and time to mend their walking wounded, Mitchell has now resigned himself to the fact that he will have to utilize inexperien­ced youngsters in the loose forwards and frontrow when the season resumes later next month.

“We’ve made progress but have shown some developmen­tal issues and concerns,” he said.

“There is also positional concerns looking at the stock of talent, but I will wait until the end of the competitio­n to look at where I think we need to continue to grow those stocks.

“We are very light in the loosies and in the frontrow and we are at a point where we are bringing in developmen­t players that aren’t ready for Super Rugby at the moment.”

And with that and three tough clashes against the Sunwolves away, Jaguares at Loftus and the Lions at Ellis Park, the Bulls are facing an improbable road if not mission impossible to reach the playoffs.

“Certainly going to make it a lot more difficult, would have been nice to have got it and keep on winning,” Mitchell said.

“We just have to now restock, refuel and focus on each game at a time.

“That’s the way it is.”

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