Sunday Tribune

SWYS’S GAMBLE PAYS OFF

- Tries: Herbst, Jantjies, Smith, Simelane, Schoeman, Skosan (2) Conversion­s: Jantjies (6) Tries: Orlando, Montoya (2), Baldunciel, Moroni, Tuculet Conversion­s: Bonilla, Mallia (2) Penalty: Bonilla Jacques van der Westhuyzen

LIONS (26) 47 JAGUARES (13) 39 THE LIONS scored seven tries in a thrilling win against the Jagaures yesterday as they returned to winning ways in Super Rugby after a couple of difficult weeks.

Coach Swys de Bruin’s men had lost to the Stormers away and the Bulls at home before the return match against the Jaguares, who they beat in Buenos Aires in round one, and were under pressure to hit back on home soil. And how they responded!

De Bruin had dropped several senior campaigner­s from his squad including Lionel Mapoe, Aphiwe Dyantyi, Rian Combrinck and Hacjivah Dayimani and replaced them with a number of rookies and former South African Under-20 stars.

It was a gamble by De Bruin, but it was one that paid off.

The Lions, with future stars like Wandisle Simelane, Ruan Vermaak, Franco Naude, Vincent Tshituka and others in the mix, ran the Jaguares ragged and showed the three-time runners-up have more than enough depth to stay competitiv­e and be one of this country’s dominant franchise teams in the future.

There was a new energy in the team and a determinat­ion to show the coaching team they had made the right decisions by picking them.

It was a much-improved performanc­e from last week, when the Lions looked out-of-sorts against the Bulls.

On this occasion they took on the physical Jaguares at close quarters, dominated them in the scrums and line-outs and asked questions with the ball at the back. Even seasoned men like Elton Jantjies, Courtnall Skosan, Andries Coetzee and Malcolm Marx looked refreshed.

The Lions dominated proceeding­s from start to finish and scored some wonderful tries.

The Jaguares looked as if they were out on their feet minutes after the start, and had to rely on a few driving mauls to get on the scoreboard.

Poor discipline didn’t help their cause; they gave away numerous penalties which inevitably put them on the back foot and allowed the Lions to gain the ascendancy.

It was a far from clinical performanc­e by the Lions, but then it was always unlikely to be the case considerin­g all the changes made to the team in the week.

And De Bruin and Co won’t be happy with the six tries they conceded – four coming in the final 26 minutes when the Lions scored nothing – and some of the handling errors that cropped into their play in the second half.

However, it was a win the

Lions desperatel­y needed after the consecutiv­e defeats against the Stormers and Bulls.

De Bruin had also been hoping to test some of his younger players for some time and by default he got the chance in the past week – and how they paid him back.

There is life in this Lions team, but they’ll face an altogether different challenge this week when Australia’s best side the Rebels visit Joburg.

De Bruin will certainly be tempted to give the same group of players who ran out against the Jaguares another chance, but he’s also sure to bring back some of the more experience­d men, too, even if they play off the bench and ensure a stronger, more clinical finish than was the case here on yesterday.

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