Mail & Guardian

Super Rugby: Quest for domination

Time will tell how the position logs will pan out but the leaders and laggers are already clear

- Andy Capostagno

It is always possible that one or two teams will find some lateseason mojo, but at the halfway stage in log play it seems fairly clear which teams will contest the quarterfin­als in Super Rugby this year.

In New Zealand, the unbeaten Crusaders, together with the Hurricanes and Chiefs, will be there. In South Africa the Lions, the Sharks and Stormers should make it. Australian rugby is in crisis, but the ridiculous rules of the competitio­n will ensure that one of their sides, probably the Brumbies, will host a quarterfin­al. That leaves one place to play for, and the contenders are the Jaguares, the Highlander­s and the Blues.

So the second half of the competitio­n will be about consolidat­ing log positions and finishing as high among the top eight as possible to ensure home advantage at the knockout stages.

The Lions are sitting pretty, because they have played consistent­ly well all season. Their only loss was when a deliberate­ly understren­gth team was sent to Buenos Aires. Johan Ackermann’s men now have a run of fixtures that should enable them to finish log play in the top two.

This week they host the Jaguares on the highveld, then they travel to Australia for three weeks, playing the Force, the Rebels and the Brumbies. Pride comes before a fall, but this pride is too good to succumb to either of the first two teams, and should have enough left in the tank to humble the Brumbies.

When they return they host the Bulls and the Kings in Johannesbu­rg, before a five-week break occasioned by a bye that is followed by the June internatio­nal window. Ironically, that may be the Lions’ Achilles heel, with a host of their players likely to be needed for Springbok duty in a three-Test series with France.

In July, the Sunwolves should be cannon fodder in Johannesbu­rg, and the final fixture of log play sees the Lions take on the Sharks in Durban. It is likely that there could be a lot resting on the result of that match.

By contrast with the Lions, the Stormers have it all to do. This week they face the Crusaders in Christchur­ch, followed by the Highlander­s in Dunedin and the Hurricanes in Wellington. The fourth Kiwi team in a row will be the Blues back at Newlands, followed by the Sharks in Durban. It is not unkind to suggest that the Stormers might lose all five of those games.

If so, they can thank the fixture secretary for a post-June run-in that features a trio of games against the Cheetahs, the Sunwolves and the Bulls. The last of those fixtures will be at Loftus Versfeld and, as with the Lions/Sharks game, there should be much to play for.

In the context of the bigger picture, then, this week’s match in Christchur­ch is probably an exercise in damage control. The Stormers’ carefully constructe­d bubble did not survive the controlled ferocity of the Lions at Newlands last week. Now they play an opponent that they have never beaten in 10 attempts in New Zealand.

The Crusaders are busy building a team to compare with those captained by Todd Blackadder at the beginning of the new millennium. They can field a pack made entirely of All Blacks and a backline full of the Bulls need to win well against the Cheetahs to keep faint hopes of finishing in the top eight alive. The Sharks are coming off a bye and play a Rebels side that shocked everyone last week with a narrow 19-17 win over the Brumbies.

Just as the statistica­l odds stack up against the Stormers in Christchur­ch, so it is hard to see anything but a Sharks win in Durban. The Rebels have never won a match in South Africa and the Sharks have won their last seven Super Rugby games at Kings Park. If they are indeed to be taken seriously as contenders, this is the sort of match the Sharks have to win, and win well.

Next week they have a tough propositio­n in Buenos Aires, but after that three in a row against the Force, the Kings and the Sunwolves. As with the Stormers, the next five weeks will define the Sharks’ season.

 ?? Photo: Martin Hunter/AFP ?? Captain’s crusade: Manasa Mataele of the Crusaders dives to score a try in the Super Rugby match against the Sunwolves.
Photo: Martin Hunter/AFP Captain’s crusade: Manasa Mataele of the Crusaders dives to score a try in the Super Rugby match against the Sunwolves.

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