Sunday Tribune

Sharks left shellshock­ed

- MIKE GREENAWAY

at Kings Park

SHARKS ............................................... (10) 10 BULLS ...................................................

(21) 40

THE Sharks have elated and disappoint­ed in equal measure this season but even their most die-hard fans will find this performanc­e against the Bulls deflating in the extreme, mostly because nobody saw it coming.

It was critical for the Sharks to build on their recent form in New Zealand in this first of two home derbies before their bye, but they ran into a Bulls side that played with energy and hunger, not to mention skill in abundance.

The Sharks were outplayed in every department. It is as simple as that, and the Bulls will return to Pretoria primed to storm up the table of the SA Conference.

For the Sharks, it is back to the drawing board ahead of Saturday’s visit from the Stormers. Turning matters around in seven days is going to be a heck of a mental challenge for the Sharks after this rubbish. They lost by 30 points at home. That is embarrassi­ng.

From a national point of view, Springbok coach Rassie Erasmus would have been pleased with the individual performanc­es of some of the Bulls players, notably fullback Warwick Gelant, who has surely played his way into the Bok No 15 jersey after scoring three immaculate tries.

The Sharks best moment of the game was the three points kicked by Robert du Preez in the 2nd minute to give them the lead. It was downhill after that.

The Bulls responded in spectacula­r fashion. They took the ball through the phases to the Sharks’ danger zone where Handre Pollard produced a magical chip over the defence for fullback Gelant to catch and score. Pollard’s conversion made it 7-3.

Grubber

The visitors were just getting starting and in the eighth minute Gelant scored a fine solo try when he nudged a grubber through the defence into the 22 and gathered and scored.

The Bulls’ tactic of putting the ball behind the Sharks’ last line of defence was certainly paying off. Surprising­ly, as the game crept into the second quarter, the Sharks abandoned their tour policy of taking points on offer and twice kicked to the corner, with no profit.

They then reverted to what worked in New Zealand when Du Preez took a shot at goal but missed, to the disbelief of Sharks fans who had seen him successful­ly kick 20 out of his last 20 attempts at goal. If ever there was an omen that the Sharks were going to get a hiding, it was that end to Du Preez’s golden run.

The Bulls promptly added to that disappoint­ment when they kicked a penalty to the corner and Adriaan Strauss controlled the maul towards the line for the try and a 21-3 lead.

The Sharks’ vague hopes of fighting their way back into a winning position were given a timeous boost three minutes from half time when Andre Esterhuize­n muscled over following a lineout drive.

The whistle for the second half was greeted by an almost simultaneo­us break-out of heavy rain, and it proved more of a dampener for the Sharks than the Bulls, who proceeded to score seven minutes into the half when a siege on the Sharks’ line resulted in a penalty try.

The double whammy was that tighthead prop Thomas du Toit was carded for a profession­al foul. At 28-10 with just over half an hour to play, the Bulls were over the hill and far away. It remained for Gelant to complete his hat-trick and wing Johnny Kotze to complete the humiliatio­n.

SCORERS

Sharks – Try: Andre Esterhuize­n. Con: Rob du Preez. Penalty: Du Preez.

Bulls – Tries: Warrick Gelant (3), Adriaan Strauss, penalty try, Johnny Kötze. Con: Handré Pollard (3), Manie Libbok.

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