Ruthless Lions lay waste to Leinster
Lions (22) 44 Leinster (0) 12
Scorers: Lions - Tries: Emmanuel Tshituka (2), Morne van den Berg, Marius Louw, Quan Horn, Francke Horn. Conversions: Sanele Nohamba (2), Jordan Hendrikse (2). Penalties: Nohamba (2). Leinster - Tries: Ciaran Frawley (2). Conversion: Harry Byrne.
● Beguiling in attack and belligerent in defence, the Lions played themselves back into top eight contention in the United Rugby Championship (URC) with a 44-12 win over Leinster at Ellis Park yesterday.
The Lions stole the march on Leinster early on, before keeping the Irish blue bloods at arm’s length with one of their more defiant displays in defence.
In the corresponding fixture almost to the day last year, the Lions were an enthusiastic bundle of energy for much of the match. Like Labrador pups though, much of it was misspent, and they were as dejected as vetbound Basset hounds at the final whistle.
Yesterday, however, they evaded the traps like Greyhounds, and though the zing disappeared from their attack over the next halfhour, they maintained clear distance from the chasers.
Flank Emmanuel Tshituka was absolutely immense with and without the ball, scrumhalf Morne van den Berg directed operations with impulse and urgency, while props Ruan Dreyer and Morgan Naude helped establish a base from which the Lions would not budge.
They did what they failed to do against Leinster last year. Finishing the job this time was principally achieved through rugged defence, though it is worth noting the much changed visitors were far from the slick operators with the ball that one has come to expect.
Lions fans were in nirvana from the outset. The Lions scored a sensational try from kick-off when they regathered the ball, thanks to a Leinster error. Van den Berg’s skipped pass created space out wide before his wonderfully timed support run bore fruit as he was the recipient of the inside pass for a stunning score behind the posts.
Their second try perhaps topped the first, as they struck from deep with forwards and backs offloading with sheer élan. Again, it was an inside pass that delivered the coup de grace, with captain Marius Louw rounding off.
Sanele Nohamba then pounced on a Leinster error near halfway that allowed fullback Quan Horn to streak clear, leaving the sparse but vocal crowd in rapture.
Leinster, of course, were a little off colour, if not pale, and it wasn’t just due to their change in personnel. They played in all white instead of their more traditional blue, and for much of this game they were barely recognisable.
The Lions also had their measure in the scrum but the spoiling hand of visiting lock Jason Jenkins contributed to a frustrating time for them in the lineouts.
Leinster were uncharacteristically wasteful. On one occasion in the first half, a crooked lineout feed five metres from the
Lions’ tryline crushed their first proper incursion into the home side’s territory. Two more lineout feeds from the same spot also drew blanks for the visitors.
With 30 minutes on the clock, stout Lions defence prevented Leinster from opening their account under the crossbar. More frustration came four minutes from half-time when outside centre Liam Turner’s stretch for the tryline resulted in the ball being lost.
However, it was a period in which Leinster were laying more claim to the ball, and they were starting to gain metres by breaking tackles. Veteran loosehead prop Cian Healy was rolling back the years and the nearest Lions defender but Leinster’s first-half was summed up when after sustained attack deep inside the Lions’ 22, they spilled the ball forward in the final act of the half.
Four minutes into the second half, the luck of the Irish still did not apply to the visitors. Another “score” was chalked off, this time as a result of a forward pass. They eventually got on the scoreboard when Ciaran Frawley rounded in the 54th minute but that’s all they got.