Sunday Tribune

Early promise for Meyer’s 2015 World Cup dream

- Lungani Zama

THE early weeks of this year’s Super Rugby marathon have been encouragin­g for South African rugby, and especially those whose focus for 2015 is confined to two simple words: World Cup.

As ever, the local derbies have coughed up results that reaffirmed the notion that form counts for nothing when friends meet on the field.

The Stormers, ahead of last night’s coastal war against the Sharks, have provided the best balance, and their greater enthusiasm to stretch teams has been refreshing.

As the Sharks learnt last season, dogged defence and a big boot will get you so far, but to win this competitio­n, teams have to be able to hurt the opposition when the chances present themselves. With Gary Gold the latest headmaster at the Shark Tank, there appears to be more freedom for Pat Lambie to let his flyers loose.

The Bulls have also found more structure, and the return of Pierre Spies, the emergence of some exciting youngsters, as well as some shrewd off-season purchases, have given them the look and feel of a former champion team, after a few years of mediocrity.

Down the road, the Lions are still finding fresh ways to lose home games, but they defied all manner of logic yesterday, shaking off jet-lag and a pile of pressure to somehow stroll off with a priceless away win, to give the record-breaking Keven Mealamu and his Auckland boys the blues.

The Cheetahs, the great entertaine­rs of South African rugby, have again lost a bunch of their best players to bosses with deeper pockets. But, as is done down Bloemfonte­in way, they simply roll up their kouse and carry on, as they did against the Sharks on the opening weekend.

The Sharks – with their newfound licence to thrill – have played well in patches, but have still found a way to lose to both the Cheetahs and the Bulls.

Of course, many a Durbanite – or indeed anyone residing outside greater Pretoria – will argue that the officiatin­g at Loftus did a fine job of impersonat­ing that great con artist of 2011, Bryce Lawrence, who deserved an Oscar for his portrayal of an internatio­nal referee in that tear-jerking comedy, A Rucking Mess.

But those days are long gone now, and at the back of every South African player’s mind is September, and the chance to go to the World Cup.

What must be encouragin­g for Heyneke Meyer is the fact that several No 10s are sticking their mitts up early, and stamping their authority on games.

Elton Jantjies looks trim and hungry for success again, Demetri Catrakilis has been assured, but it seems Handre Pollard and Pat Lambie still have the inside lane. They had a good scrap last week, but Lambie’s display in the rain against the Lions a fortnight ago caught Meyer’s attention.

He has long opined that he needs a man for all seasons, and Lambie’s burgeoning romance with his scrummie, Cobus Reinach, won’t hurt his chances, either. Some of the most consistent internatio­nal teams have been built around combinatio­ns formed at provincial level.

Look back at the Brumbies’ late 90s’ pairing of a chirpy Zambian and his free-runnig sidekick, who went on to do amazing things for club and country. The George GreganStep­hen Larkham stand at Canberra Stadium is a monument to their longevity, as well as the fact that you can’t mention one without thinking of the other.

Lambie and Reinach are a long way from that level of telepathy, but the signs are there that they are starting to understand each other better with every passing week.

Meyer will have plenty of selection headaches come late August, but things are already looking a lot rosier than they did on the end-of-year tour.

Indeed, when a South African team burgles a win in New Zealand, one can even momentaril­y forget about the Proteas’ meltdown, in that other dash for a trophy…

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