The Citizen (Gauteng)

Duane is in a mean mood

- Ken Borland

While the Bulls know they will receive a typically fiery reception when their aircraft touches down in Cape Town, their talismanic captain Duane Vermeulen is apparently in a particular­ly combative mood ahead of their crunch Currie Cup opener against Western Province at Newlands tomorrow.

The Springbok colossus, Man-of-the-Mmatch in the 2019 World Cup final, played in the blue-andwhite hoops from 2009 to 2015 but was strangely not wanted by the Stormers when he returned to South Africa in late 2018. Without suggesting Vermeulen has his mind on revenge, he takes immense pride in his performanc­es and he will want to show his former team and his many Springbok colleagues playing for Western Province that he is still a major force.

As if his considerab­le performanc­es so far this season have not already proven that.

“I think Duane feels the best he has for a long time, he seems to have had added energy this week, he knows Newlands and the Western Province players well and it’s the most fired-up I’ve seen him for a long time. His family is still down in Cape Town, his kids are at school there, he lives in the hotel at Loftus and isn’t commuting. So it can’t be easy for him.

“But he’s played 80 minutes after 80 minutes, and he gives you the full 80 minutes every time. So there are no questions around his commitment and the team sees just how committed he is. Duane has been waiting a long time for this game, there are quite a few Springboks in the Western Province team and he really wants to play well against them,” Bulls coach Jake White said on Thursday.

hite, for all his baiting and chirping of the Bulls’ greatest rivals, knows that Western Province will also be fully primed for action tomorrow, especially after they were hammered 39-6 in 64 minutes at Loftus Versfeld at the end of last month.

One thing is certain – There will be no monkeying about from the home side tomorrow.

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