The Star Early Edition

It’s about time the Sharks walked the try-scoring talk

- MIKE GREENAWAY

THERE is a lot more to the Sharks’ match tomorrow night against the Jaguares than first meets the eye and it could be season-defining for the Durban team.

Coach Robert du Preez has made eight changes (six unenforced) to the side that was so poor against the Rebels last week and while the coach was quick to say earlier in the week that “there would be changes but not performanc­erelated ones”, we can take that with a pinch of salt.

The Sharks have been hot and cold all season and there have been highssuch as the performanc­e against the Lions at Ellis Park (where they should have won) but then curiously poor displays at home against the Kings and the Rebels.

More than anybody, Du Preez wants the real Sharks to stand up.

They have talked the talk about playing an attacking game but after the halfway mark they have scored just 17 tries, tie with the Force. Of the 18 teams in the competitio­n, only the Rebels have scored less tries than the Sharks and Force, while the Hurricanes have scored 56 in the same number of games.

Something with the Sharks is just not adding up .... It is time they walked the walk about this try-scoring game they keep banging on about. Tomorrow night’s game for the Sharks is as important for the log points they need to stay in play-off contention as it is to how they play the game.

The Sharks must rather stick to their attacking guns and lose than disintegra­te into a shambles as they did not last week when nobody seemed to know what to do. The ball was kicked away aimlessly, passes were made directly into touch, there were ridiculous drop goal attempts from the halfway line.

One comment from Du Preez after the game stood out more than his other caustic remarks: “The senior players did not stand up and take control.”

I don’t think it isa co-incidence that there are six changes, including a new captain, together with the change necessitat­ed by the suspension of Andre Esterhuize­n and the injury to Kobus van Wyk.

The Beast has been “rested” at loosehead prop and youngster Thomas du Toit comes in at hooker. Chiliboy Ralepelle gets a shot ahead of Franco Marais, who had a nightmare against the Rebels, and completing the new front row is Lourens Adriaanse, replacing Coenie Oosthuizen.

The captain against the Rebels, Tera Mtembu, has been dropped to the bench, as much due to his culpabilit­y for the performanc­e against the Rebels as to the need to get Philip van der Walt starting. The former Cheetah is also the new captain.

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