The Mercury

Power pack for tour finale

- Mike Greenaway

THE Sharks have picked arguably the strongest pack of their Australasi­an tour as they gear up for one last big heave before heading home on Saturday from Brisbane, where they play the Reds tomorrow.

Gary Gold’s charges are desperate to avoid the dubious distinctio­n of being the first Sharks team to be whitewashe­d on tour.

The forwards have been slowly coming together as a unit as players return from suspension and injury, and the all-Springbok front row of the Du Plessis brothers and Tendai Mtawarira has been restored after the latter withdrew at the last minute from last week’s match against the Waratahs because of an injury niggle.

It is a formidable pack, as it should be with only No 8 Renaldo Bothma uncapped at Test level, although lock Marco Wentzel’s three Tests were in 2002 and second row partner Stephan Lewies’s Test experience is limited to a substitute appearance off the bench against Scotland in Port Elizabeth last year.

Director of rugby Gold has never had an opportunit­y to put together his first-choice pack – there were pre-season injuries to Willem Alberts and Lewies, a campaign-ending injury to Pieter-Steph du Toit in round three and then a neverendin­g cycle of fresh injuries and suspension­s, notably to former captain Bismarck du Plessis, who is only now getting back to his influentia­l best.

It is one thing to have a Springbok-laden pack – it is quite another for them to play like Boks, and the players owe it to their supporters to all fire at the same time against the Reds.

The backline is unchanged, meaning Lionel Cronje continues to be preferred to Fred Zeilinga at flyhalf and young scrumhalf Stefan Ungerer continues ahead of the experience­d Conrad Hoffman.

It is the third match in a row that Cronje and Ungerer start as the halfback pairing.

The Beast is back for Dale Chadwick, who has had a good season and may well have continued at loosehead prop this week had he not suffered a nasty cut to the head at training this week.

“It was an extremely physical game against the Waratahs and a lot of the guys are sore, but the guys understand that is critically important that we break this losing streak,” Gold said. “We had a shocking opening tour game against the Highlander­s, then two good performanc­es where we weren’t on the right side of the scoreboard.

“On other days, those results might have gone our way, but the fact of the matter now is that the Reds seem to have turned the corner and it’s vital for us to do the same thing.

“We understand that there’s a huge amount of pressure on us, but I have to say, the guys are up for the task.

“The training has been very good this week and everyone is really looking forward to finishing off the tour on a high, and giving our supporters something to cheer about.”

That is not going to happen if the Sharks do not sort out their defence.

Defensive lapses have proved hugely costly all tour. Gold knows this only too well.

“We’re not fooling ourselves, we realise that we need a vast improvemen­t in our defence,” he admitted.

“But we have some young guys on the park who are learning a huge amount. I have no doubt we can only improve.

“I’m reasonably encouraged that the issues we’re getting wrong are very fixable.”

 ?? PICTURES: STEVE HAAG/ GALLO IMAGES/ GETTY IMAGES ?? Sharks scrumhalf Stefan Ungerer and flyhalf Lionel Cronje are the halfback pairing of choice for the third week running after Sharks director of rugby Gary Gold yesterday named his team to face the Reds in Brisbane tomorrow.
PICTURES: STEVE HAAG/ GALLO IMAGES/ GETTY IMAGES Sharks scrumhalf Stefan Ungerer and flyhalf Lionel Cronje are the halfback pairing of choice for the third week running after Sharks director of rugby Gary Gold yesterday named his team to face the Reds in Brisbane tomorrow.
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