Sunday Times

Dyantyi: A star is born for Lions

- By LIAM DEL CARME

at Ellis Park

● If you never hear the name Aphiwe Dyantyi again, chances are you are about to be abducted by aliens, or worse.

The Lions winger made an electrifyi­ng entry into Super Rugby here against the Sharks yesterday and it would not be a stretch to suggest his name in the not too distant future will glow in blinding light.

He had limited opportunit­ies but the one half chance he got in the first half he grabbed with hands and feet.

The assured manner in which he collected a pass destined to go out behind him, his turn of speed, deft stab through with the boot and regather were hallmarks of a player imbued with skill and emboldened with confidence.

The injured Courtnall Skosan, you sense will find it extremely difficult to wrest the No 11 jersey off him.

That try had tongues wagging and it also served to get the Lions' tails up after a mildly subdued start.

The Lions, on the back of crucial rearguard interventi­ons and ruthlessne­ss in attack, eventually had the measure of the persistent Sharks.

The hosts gradually got a foothold in this game but made heavy weather of not going beyond the Sharks' reach in the closing stages. Elton Jantjies' errant boot is partly to blame.

They also made mistakes that proved costly.

When Malcolm Marx, South Africa's most recent inductee to the ranks of player of the year, failed to find his intended target for a second time, it presented the Sharks the platform from which to set up camp close to the Lions' tryline in the first half. Concerted attack by the Sharks ultimately brought reward when Robert du Preez burst through a Jantjies tackle to score.

Du Preez is a splendid fit for the Sharks' direct, all too often, confrontat­ional approach. He engages defenders and possesses the passing game to deliver a threat in wider channels.

Though the loss of Pat Lambie is huge, the addition of Du Preez seemed to have handed the Sharks an extra arm and a leg.

Lions fullback Andries Coetzee picked up where he left off for the Springboks in Cardiff. He hoofed his first touch down the middle of the field and the ball bounced merrily into the in-goal area before the North Stand mercifully brought it to a halt.

A more obvious Coetzee blemish cost the Lions dearly. He got his wires slightly crossed with Jantjies and grassed the kick-in just after the Lions establishe­d a nine-point cushion following a second try by centre Lionel Mapoe. That was a move in which Coetzee was instrument­al but by failing to gather the resultant restart he handed the Sharks prime position to attack and the visitors duly profited when Makazole Mapimpi went over unchalleng­ed.

Early on the Sharks looked the more assertive as they hustled and scrapped for every ounce of possession.

Lukhanyo Am proved a cul-de-sac for some of the Lions' advances but the Sharks generally did a sterling job in keeping home team ball carriers from going to ground.

The Lions' composure and patience eventually wore them down, however.

The result may prove significan­t within the context of the South African conference, which is likely to be more closely contested than last year.

It had been suggested that the Lions may no longer be the force they were for the past two seasons and that their time in the vanguard of the domestic challenge had passed. With just one defeat in their last 22 derby matches it would appear the rest may yet have some catching up to do. Picture: Gallo Images

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