Cape Argus

Bulls won’t get carried away by hype in capital

- VATA NGOBENI

ONE CAN never fault the Loftus faithful for believing that the glory days are around the corner, after their team’s heroics in their past two games.

It has been the wins against the Stormers and the Sharks that have almost every Bulls fan talking up their team as championsh­ip stock and that it is only a matter of a season or two before they see silverware at Loftus Versfeld.

But the Bulls themselves are not falling for that hype and weight of expectatio­n that is suddenly on their shoulders and has engulfed the capital because of their second position in the South African conference.

Instead, the men in blue along with their coach John Mitchell, are keeping their eyes firmly on the task at hand and making sure that they don’t look too far ahead.

With back-to-back victories in the bag, it will be important for the Bulls to back that up with another winning performanc­e at home against the Melbourne Rebels on Saturday and that is the only pot of gold and feeling of expectatio­n that Mitchell and his men will be chasing.

“It is very much about upholding our standards. As we surpass the standards we set ourselves we look to chase a better standard. That is how we go about it. It is more about our internal and new standards and upholding those than where we sit on the log and the nice pats on the back that we get from time to time.

“We are also savvy in understand­ing that if we don’t get it right, we understand what the other side looks like as well. We’ve experience­d that for too long so there’s enough motivation to stay on task. Then upholding standards is the right way to go,” Mitchell said.

Bulls captain Burger Odendaal also echoed Mitchell’s sentiments about the team wanting to achieve the weekly goals they set themselves but did acknowledg­e that it was certainly satisfying to see themselves in a better place on the conference log.

“We set the standards at the beginning of the year on what we want to achieve. It is still training progress for us, every week is a new challenge. If we can go in and meet our standards every week, we will be happy with it. We don’t like the tags that we get at the moment but we are not focusing on that,” Odendaal said.

And the Bulls will have their hands full on Saturday in trying to keep at bay a Rebels team that is fresh off a surprise loss at home to the Jaguares. The visitors’ South African-born coach Dave Wessels would also have thrown down the challenge of how important a win at Loftus will be in passing the character test needed to win the championsh­ip.

The Rebels have been the surprise package of the competitio­n this season and besides winning four out of their seven games and lying in sixth spot overall on the log, the men from Melbourne have played some enterprisi­ng rugby that will once again put the Bulls’ defence to the test.

“We’ve certainly done our homework on them and they’ve taken a bit more homework than other sides because of what they try to do.

“They’ll test us but it will be a good challenge,” said Mitchell, who made only one injury-enforced change to his starting team – Roelof Smit comes in at flank and Marco van Staden moving to No 8 for the injured Hanro Liebenberg.

 ?? BACKPAGEPI­X ?? JOB’S NOT DONE YET: Bulls captain Burger Odendaal says his team won’t get ahead of themselves.
BACKPAGEPI­X JOB’S NOT DONE YET: Bulls captain Burger Odendaal says his team won’t get ahead of themselves.

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