The Star Early Edition

Sharks must cut down on the errors or they will suffer

- MIKE GREENAWAY

IT remains to be seen whether the Sharks can glean enough confidence out of their haphazard defeat of the Sunwolves at the weekend to have a full crack at the Stormers on Saturday in what promises to be an intriguing Super Rugby derby at Kings Park.

On the positive side were six well-taken tries and 38 points on the road t o lift morale after the Kings catastroph­e but the Sharks were also their own worst enemies, and if they are as charitable with turnovers this week as they were in Singapore, the Capetonian­s will take them to the cleaners.

Through thick and thin, the Stormers have stuck to their attacking guns and they feed off turnover ball. It is the high-octane fuel for their running rugby and on Saturday the Sharks will spend more time behind their posts than they would care to if they do not drasticall­y cut down their error count. Against the Sunwolves, they made 17 handling errors and lost three lineouts. Better teams would have made them pay. You could say that in this game there was plenty of the good, the bad and the ugly from the Sharks. Unfortunat­ely it was often the bad undoing the good and the result was the ugly reality of lost opportunit­y. Too often there was exciting forward surges, with the Du Preez twins especially prominent, only for the promising movement to break down with an elementary error.

After almost every game this season coach Robert du Preez,

pictured, has bemoaned his team’s poor conversion rate of entries into the opposition 22, and the ongoing problem was omnipresen­t in Singapore. Du Preez, though will be pleased with the performanc­es of many of the individual­s. Lwazi Mvovo was exceptiona­l at fullback and Garth April enterprisi­ng at 10.

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from South Africa