/ 26 April 1996

Points pressure for Bulls, Natal

Every point will be precious for Northern

Transvaal and Natal in their scramble for a

place in the Super 12 semi-finals

RUGBY: Jon Swift

TO SAY that the run-in to the semi-final

stages of the Super 12 competition has reached

the critical stage for both Northern Transvaal

and Natal would be stating the obvious. And it

is of merit to examine the closing stages for

both sides with circumspection rather than the

expectation that either team’s chances of

making the last four is cut and dried.

There are, as has been said so often in this

three-nation provincial championship, no sure

things, no easy games and no room for

complacency.

It would be folly in the extreme to rely on

mathematical equations to determine the final

standings for Natal or Northerns, but, with

the four points on offer for a win and a bonus

point there for four or more tries in a match,

it is a consideration that must be weighed,

even if the most errant of betting men would

not use it as a staging point for wagering the

mortgage.

In essence, the Blue Bulls have three games

left and a theoretical maximum of 15 points,

Natal have four left to play and 20 points

available on paper.

Even the most foolhardy would hesitate to say

that all these points will indeed be earned by

South Africa’s leading contenders for Super 12

honours, and it is well to run the rule over

the run-ins which face the two provinces.

Northerns start the final lap at Loftus

Versfeld this weekend currently lying fourth

on the log table against a Wellington

Hurricanes line-up fresh from the wrong end of

a 35-25 come-from-behind by a resurgent

Western Province at Newlands in midweek. On

paper, this should add up to a win for the

Blue Bulls who have looked to be our best

combination despite a moderate 1-3 record on

tour Down Under. They will need the win, with

their toughest home match — against the

quaintly named Brumbies of Australian Capital

Territory — the following week.

The Brumbies have proved a refreshing surprise

throughout the series and the Canberra

combination represent the hardest task left

for Northerns, although it must be remembered

that Western Province — the last outing on

Northerns’ schedule at Newlands — are the

side who put the Blue Bulls out of the Currie

Cup final last season.

But Northerns have looked in awesome form of

late and Ruben Kruger’s forwards — Krynauw

Otto and Johan Ackermann have been a standout

combination at lock — have consistently

kept an eager and businesslike backline

supplied with good ball.

It is also interesting to see a stand-in of

the class of Botha Rossouw available to take

over when Kruger was forced to leave the

field. The depth at Northerns comes close in

some areas to the power of the starting sides

and substitute benches the draft system has

made available to the Australian teams.

Natal have by far a tougher haul to the semi-

finals and will be watching Friday’s top-of-

the-log encounter between the Auckland Blues

and Queensland Reds with some concern. The

outcome could dictate the final standings and

secure or give away home ground advantage in

the last four.

They are also the combinations Natal have to

face in their last two games at King’s Park.

Beating Queensland and Auckland is no easy

task at the best of times. Facing them on

successive Saturday’s and trying to run four

tries past them on successive weekends is not

a prospect for the faint-hearted.

But Transvaal’s 55-23 rout of Canterbury

Crusaders under lights at Ellis Park on

Tuesday evening must give Natal some

stimulation on two fronts for their meeting

with the New Zealanders this weekend. For,

like Natal, Transvaal’s final outings are

against the Blues and Reds. On the form they

showed against Canterbury, Transvaal are not

out of the running to win at least one of

these encounters and give Natal some breathing

space.

But, while Natal should beat Canterbury on

paper, they also have to face Transvaal in the

second of their final four matches.

Gary Teichmann and his side cannot rest easy

against Canterbury this weekend or Transvaal

the next if they have any real chance of being

there for the closing stages.