The Star Early Edition

More Beast, less Tendai

Sharks coach will need all his players to stand up against tough Jaguares

- MIKE GREENAWAY

THE Beast was in solemn mood yesterday when made an apology for the Sharks “no show” last week against the Rebels before grimly promising: “This one is for the fans.”

He is talking about Saturday night’s Super Rugby return match against the Jaguares in Buenos Airies, a match the Sharks have to win to stay ahead of the currently third-placed Argentinea­ns in Africa Conference 2.

A loss would be catastroph­ic for the Sharks’ playoff aspiration­s.

“We are very disappoint­ed in our performanc­e (in drawing 9-9 with the Rebels at Kings Park),” The Beast growled. “We are going to rectify matters. We had a heck of an analysis of that Rebels game and that has set the tone for the week. We have put ourselves in a position where this could be a season decider.”

After the match, an angry Robert du Preez did not hold back in his criticism of the performanc­e and, amongst other things, he pointed the finger at his senior players for not standing up and taking charge of the shambles.

Mtawarira, a former captain of the Sharks, knows he was one of the players the coach was referring to. This week Du Preez wants less of Tendai and more of The Beast.

“The senior players could have done better,” he admitted. “The onus is on the guys that have been around a while to gear the youngsters up and steer them in the right direction, lead from the front and show them what is expected.”

The Beast said this week’s game was about attitude and sticking to the structures that the players have had drilled into them since pre-season, and not panicking as they did against the Rebels.

“We know exactly what we have to do. We must stick to our processes and then execute properly. Last week we could not finish anything,” the 31-year-old said.

It truly is a big game for the Springbok loosehead, who has a national record of 87 caps for a Bok prop. He knows there are lot of young bucks out there trying to capture the attention of national coach Allister Coetzee and prove that The Beast is over the hill.

There is also the matter of 168 caps for the Sharks since he debuted in 2006, 131 of them Super Rugby caps. So, with all the experience in the world, Mtawaria needs to rise to the occasion for his franchise on Saturday and set the example.

“It is going to be tough there. It always is. I have played there many times for the Boks and a few times for the Sharks and it is a very different atmosphere,” he said. “The crowd is hostile and very noisy. There is a lot of banging and shouting and the home team feeds off the emotions of the crowd. The trick is to not get sidetracke­d by the side-shows in the stands and rather feed off the atmosphere as the home team does, rather than be intimidate­d by it.”

The Beast said that the Jaguares would be more physical than ever on their home turf and the Sharks had to match that physicalit­y, while watching their discipline.

“They are going to come at us, make no mistake, but we have to make sure we are smart in how we play and don’t get sucked into playing to their strengths,” he said. “Discipline is vital. We have actually been bringing our penalty count down over the season. The problem is that when we do get penalised, it is usually a card or something costly!”

 ?? PICTURE: BACKPAGEPI­X ?? BEAST MODE: Tendai Mtawarira, as well as all the other senior Sharks players, will have to be accounted for this weekend against the Jaguares, if the franchise is to right their season and push for a Super Rugby play-off spot.
PICTURE: BACKPAGEPI­X BEAST MODE: Tendai Mtawarira, as well as all the other senior Sharks players, will have to be accounted for this weekend against the Jaguares, if the franchise is to right their season and push for a Super Rugby play-off spot.

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