The Star Early Edition

Several teams gunning for Pumas

- MORGAN BOLTON morgan.bolton@inl.co.za

THE Pumas start their Currie Cup title defence this weekend and they will find no shortage of highly motivated opposition, who will all be desperate to hold aloft the coveted trophy in June, standing in their way in an expanded eightteam tournament.

The Pumas and Griquas shocked the South African rugby family by rightly contesting the final last season in Kimberley, and it was Jimmy Stonehouse’s charges that eventually triumphed to claim the Currie Cup for the first time in their history.

On Sunday, they will face the Bulls, who won the tournament consecutiv­ely in 2021 and 2020, at Loftus.

The Pretoria-based side have not enjoyed the rub of the green this month, compounded by a recent loss to the Lions in the United Rugby Championsh­ip. The Currie Cup will take on a degree of importance for them then, as it could return some much-needed positive vibes and confidence back into the greater squad.

It certainly seemed to have that impact in the two championsh­ip years previously, as Jake White and his management team, along with the buy in of players, used their Currie Cup form to contest finals in the Rainbow Cup and URC.

The same can be said of the

Lions – who face Western Province on Saturday. The Joburgers’ recent record in the Currie Cup is unflatteri­ng at best.

In the last campaign, out of 12 matches they won two games, while the season before they only had a 50% win record during the regular season. During the 2022 season, the union split their URC and Currie

Cup squads, and it had an extremely negative outcome on their results.

That will not be the case this year, with coach Mzwakhe Nkosi able to call on the seasoned campaigner­s participat­ing in the URC and Challenge Cup.

Moreover, the Lions are in dire need of some silverware, and capturing the Currie Cup for a 12th time will go a long way to solidifyin­g their insistence that their young group of players are on the right track and the future of the union.

The team with the most on the line, however, are the Free State Cheetahs.

The Bloemfonte­in-based team have enjoyed a paucity of regular, profession­al rugby in recent years.

They were handed a lifeline when invited to play in the Challenge

Cup this season but that too has come with unwanted financial implicatio­ns and stresses, with reports suggesting that hosting those games cost them R400 000 a pop in Parma.

According to coach Hawies

Fourie: “We were kicked out of the PRO14 in September 2020 ... by January 2021 we had lost 23 players and 15 were of top quality.”

The Cheetahs have become something of a forgotten union in SA rugby.

They will want to remind administra­tors, supporters and pundits that they remain a force with a good showing this year in the competitio­n.

They kick-off the competitio­n on Friday against last season’s runners-up, Griquas.

In the other match this weekend, the Griffons start their journey in the elite division with a trip to Durban to face the Sharks.

The Durbanites might not be completely focussed on the Currie Cup – their American-backed owners have bigger ambitions in winning the URC and Champions Cup, so the newly promoted Welkom-based team could catch them unawares this weekend.

Currie Cup first round fixtures

Friday: Griquas v FS Cheetahs, 4pm

Saturday: Sharks v Griffons, 1.30pm; Lions v WP, 3.30pm

Sunday: Bulls v Pumas, 1pm

 ?? ?? HAWIES Fourie
HAWIES Fourie

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