Daily Dispatch

Domestic competitio­n will help SA entrants prepare for Europe

- LIAM DEL CARME

SA Rugby will launch its noname domestic eight-team competitio­n next weekend but how will it steel the country’s entrants in the Rainbow Cup starting in April?

Besides sharpening fitness and skills, the domestic competitio­n will provide the Bulls‚ Lions‚ Sharks and Stormers the opportunit­y to refine their game for the disparate conditions and opponents they are likely to encounter in the Rainbow Cup.

Their game management will be given a stern test in Europe and they will be using the domestic contests against the other northbound teams to improve that part of their make-up.

Allied to that it will be imperative to play a tighter‚ more controlled game in which risks are limited and territory is paramount.

Already the Bulls have started sharpening their focus on their tactical kicking.

Morné Steyn, who has the benefit of seven years’ playing experience in Europe, will be central to that plan.

It will be equally important to grease the wheels in the set piece, which is likely to come under the microscope in Europe.

Teams’ scrumming ability has to be beyond reproach in Europe and here, too, the Bulls have telling intellectu­al property in the shape of scrum coach Daan Human.

The former Bok‚ Cheetahs and Stormers loosehead prop represente­d French apex team Toulouse for eight years before quitting in 2012.

All four local Rainbow Cup franchises possess a solid scrum, with the Stormers perhaps the most consistent operators in that department‚ closely followed by the Bulls. They are likely to scrum a lot more north of the equator.

In normal circumstan­ces they probably would not want to get into protracted arm wrestles, but as preparatio­n for European combat they would not be averse to grinding out wins against the other Europeboun­d teams in the domestic competitio­n.

Against teams like the Elephants‚ Griquas‚ Pumas and potentiall­y even the Cheetahs‚ they are more likely to have an unshackled approach.

After all‚ when they meet European opposition on South African soil, drawing the visiting teams into a lung-busting 80 minutes will probably be the preferred approach.

Detractors will, of course, say there will be very little benefit for them in playing the EP Elephants, who will have to dig deep to field a team.

They could not have asked for a tougher entry into the competitio­n with an away assignment against the high-flying Bulls.

The Pretoria side have returned to the top of the pile in the local firmament, having secured the Super Rugby Unlocked and Currie Cup trophies under the stewardshi­p of Jake White.

In the opening weekend’s other matches the Pumas have a chance of catching the Lions cold next Saturday‚ while a day later the Sharks play Griquas and the Stormers take on the Cheetahs in Cape Town.

 ?? Picture: GALLO IMAGES/GORDON ARONS ?? GETTING READY: Currie Cup champions the Bulls are fine-tuning their tactics for the challenge of playing in the northern hemisphere’s Rainbow Cup.
Picture: GALLO IMAGES/GORDON ARONS GETTING READY: Currie Cup champions the Bulls are fine-tuning their tactics for the challenge of playing in the northern hemisphere’s Rainbow Cup.

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