Sunday Times

One-way traffic in battle of the cats

- By LIAM DEL CARME

● The Lions were barely recognisab­le in personnel and performanc­e from the team trampled by the Bulls a week ago.

If Lions coach Swys de Bruin wanted a reaction, the cubs he pushed into battle against the grizzled Jaguares announced themselves with claws fully deployed.

With a team laden with players from their youth structures as a direct consequenc­e of their gross underachie­vement against the Bulls, the Lions set about their task with alacrity. These cubs were eager beavers in a first half that yielded four tries which helped catapult the Lions into a 26-13 lead.

Whereas a week ago they were like rabbits in the headlights against the confrontat­ional Bulls, this time they were less resigned to fate. They used the width of the field to shift the point of attack, thus exacting a lungbustin­g toll on weary travellers. The Jaguares to their credit finished the stronger side.

The hosts though were less prone to error than they were a week ago but much of that confidence cascaded as a result of the dominance they were able to establish up front.

Despite the raft of changes the Lions kept their front row in tact. Good thing they did, because Dylan Smith, Malcolm Marx and Carlu Sadie were hugely instrument­al in slipping the Jaguares scrum into reverse. The confidence they derived from that facet permeated the rest of their game. Kwagga Smith roamed the open plains, Marnus Schoeman dug everywhere like a boxer pup with amnesia, and the backs stretched their legs properly for the first time this season.

De Bruin has had to answer questions about his backs’ absence from the scoresheet this season but that all changed yesterday.

The introducti­on of Wandisile Simelane at outside centre injected urgency and energy to the Lions cause. He was one of the firsthalf try scorers and he is likely to score many more in Super Rugby. Inside him Elton Jantjies was more assured, while Ross Cronjé was again a steadying presence.

Jantjies, who was two points short of 1,000 in Super Rugby, broke the four-figure mark with a try in the 26th minute.

If the Jaguares needed a quick score to get themselves back into the contest after the break, they found that things quickly escalated against them. The Lions were even more voracious after they re-emerged from the tunnel. They caught the visitors cold with tries by Schoeman and a brace by Courtnall Skosan to effectivel­y kill the game as a contest by the 50th minute.

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