The Herald (South Africa)

Away defeats leave Bulls, Sharks in must-win territory

- Liam del Carme

The Bulls and the Sharks left themselves vulnerable to topeight exclusion with away defeats in the United Rugby Championsh­ip on Saturday.

The Sharks went down 3220 to the Scarlets in Llanelli and the Bulls followed their example with a 32-23 defeat at the hands of Ulster in Belfast.

Though the Bulls rumbled with intent in certain passages they weren’t able to contain Ulster in the moments that mattered.

They faded in the second half, partly due to poor discipline.

The visitors went into the break 20-12 up but that lead soon shrunk.

Elrigh Louw’s yellow card just after the restart did not help the Bulls’ cause.

Ulster immediatel­y made the most of their opposition being a man short when they scored a converted try.

The Bulls held out for the remainder of Louw’s time in the bin, but he had barely returned when Ulster struck again.

Though the Bulls stayed in the contest, a yellow card to Bismarck du Plessis also undermined them in the closing minutes.

The Bulls scored tries through Kurt-Lee Arendse and Zak Burger, while Chris Smit added three penalties and two conversion­s.

The Bulls, who are seventh on the points table, should secure a top-eight spot when they host struggling Zebre Parma next month, before closing their league commitment­s against Leinster.

In Llanelli, Sharks director of rugby Neil Powell lamented his team’s poor discipline that saw them slip to a third straight defeat in the URC.

“It was obviously a disappoint­ing performanc­e from us and the result as well,” Powell said.

“It was again a game where we let ourselves down because of our ill-discipline. Again, too many penalties that we put ourselves under pressure.

“We also had unforced errors.

“We knew coming into this game that Scarlets were feeding off those opportunit­ies and those scraps, and unfortunat­ely we gave them those scraps and they scored two of their tries off our mistakes.”

Earlier on Saturday, the Lions did them a massive favour by downing Benetton in Treviso and keeping their slim topeight finish hopes alive.

The Lions delivered a stinging rearguard action, trailing 28-13 at the three-quarter mark but scored three tries in seven minutes to bag an improbable but impressive win.

“To win away from home against a Benetton team that is flying is big for us,” head coach Ivan van Rooyen said.

“The message for us after the game was we should control what we can control and not leave the outcome of the game to other people.”

The Lions turned things around in the last 20 minutes.

“That is probably how we need to start against Racing,” Van Rooyen said about next weekend’s Challenge Cup knockout match against Racing 92 in Johannesbu­rg.

“They are travelling and we are travelling back. We will need to be really accurate in training. We need to start like a house on fire against them.”

The Lions’ resources will be stretched over the next few weeks with activity on three fronts in the Challenge Cup, the URC and the Currie Cup.

“We don’t have the luxury of splitting teams between URC and Challenge Cup. We spoke to the players about that.

“Hopefully we will do a bit of travelling still over the next four to six weeks which means we will be alive in those competitio­ns.

“It is important for us to keep it simple and just prepare the guys as well as possible.”

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