The Sharks played their best match by far this season to destroy the high flying Stormers. The Stormers now have a must win situation against the log topping Bulls, with much for Schalk Burger’s men to ponder about.

In all honesty the scoreboard does not tell the true story  of  this game.

 

With Compliments from Rugby365

What an enthralling match! What a victory for sheer will and determination! It was a victory for strength of will, mind, heart and sinew. It was the Sharks’ best performance of the year as they beat the high-flying Stormers 20-14 at the Absa Stadium in Durban on a warm Saturday.

The result has a lot to boost Sharks’ pride and plenty to destroy Stormers’ complacency, for they are no longer assured of a home semifinal or even of a semifinal just at a time when a well-oiled gate of gold was opening for them.

The Sharks thoroughly deserved their win, even if one of their tries  was as bizarre as any you will ever see.

The Sharks did all their basics with strong efficiency and then they tore into tackles and whatever came after the tackles.

From the first whistle they had the Stormers rattled, and it was their sheer determination that kept the Stormers out when a score seemed inevitable.

There was a tide flowing with the Sharks that simply would not be denied and the Stormers spent much of the match fighting to stay off the rocks.

There was also the matter of Big Match Temperament. Maybe because it did not matter all that much if they lost, the Sharks were the ones playing with confidence, with BMT, even young Patrick Lambie. Whereas the senior Stormers did not make an impression, every single Shark, however ordinary, made a full contribution. The Stormers were the ones that were jittery. It showed from the start.

Dewaldt Duvenage kicked his very first kick out on the full from outside of his 22.  And he did it again soon afterwards. Peter Grant, the most reliable of goal-kickers, missed a penalty from in front of the posts with the score 17-7 and a penalty would earn a bonus point. Skilful men like Gio Aplon and Duane Vermeulen had handling lapses, but nothing compared with Sireli Naqelevuki’s hand in the Sharks’ second try.

Ruan Pienaar kicked a ball from close quarters into the Stormers’ in-goal. It looked like a really bad kick. It turned out to be the best bad kick of the season. Naqelevuki ambled back to the ball. He had 10 metres’ start on Pienaar and seemed to think he had all day. As he, standing up,  went to ground the ball it did a little leg-break. He still had time to ground the ball but not the energy. He put a hand to the ball but failed to ground it and Pienaar arrived to dive on it for a try which gave the Sharks a 14-0 lead at half-time which happened just a minute later. During the match the Stormers made substitutions and replacements but Naqelevuki was not one of them/.

The other Shark’s try was an excellent one and it was started by a young man with genuine BMT. Rory Kockott started it with a strong, fast break on the left side of the field. The Sharks went right and Patrick Lambie gave to Jean Deysel who gave to Ryan Kankowski as the Stormers tight forwards scurried in defence. Odwa Ndungane was unmarked on the outside and Kankowski gave him the ball for an easy run-in for the try. Pienaar converted from far out.

The Sharks were putting immense pressure on the Stormers  who seemed to lack the wit or muscle to shake it off. The Sharks kept it up. A kickable penalty became a line-out. An even more kickable penalty became a scrum as John Smit kept the screws tightly turned.

The nervous Stormers nearly got away when Francois Louw broke strongly and gave to Jaque Fourie who raced down the field, but Ndungane stopped him and Andries Strauss won a turnover. Juan de Jongh broke and then grubbered ahead, as he had done against the Crusaders for a try. This time Ndungane was there and counterattacked.

Kockott had another break, from a scrum this time, and Pienaar kicked a high diagonal for Lwazi Mvovo. The speedy wing won the air contest against Aplon but knocked on in in-goal. They were close again when they went through phases and Ndungane knocked on when a try seemed certain.

The Stormers started the second half with great promise. Jaque Fourie intercepted and raced downfield towards the Sharks’ line but Pienaar got him from behind. Fourie got the ball to Schalk Burger who was some five metres from the line when teenaged Lambie cut him down from the side and the Sharks won a turnover.

The Stormers mauled an attacking line-out and then freed up the ball going right. Tim Whitehead came off his wing as a decoy and Grant stepped inside Kankowski and Ndungane to score near the posts. 14-7 after 45 minutes. But it did not herald a Stormer revival as the resolute Sharks kept running into them.

In this half the Sharks kicked for goal. They decided that they were going to win. When Naqelevuki lost the ball forward before he was tackled and then held onto the ball, Pienaar kicked at goal but missed. But when Tiaan Liebenberg was offside, Pienaar goaled to take the score out of bonus-point range for the Stormers at 17-7 with 14 minutes to play.

Kockott then had a long break downfield and only a back tackle by Joe Pietersen prevented the try but Andries Bekker was penalised at the tackle and Pienaar made it 20-7 with 5 minutes to play.

Three penalties had the Sharks defending with might and main and then the try, when it came, was so simple. The Sharks were penalised five metres from their line and near their posts. Ricky Januarie tapped and gave to Francois Louw who charged straight ahead with Anton van Zyl riding behind him and, despite Deysel and Mtawarira, managed to ground the ball over the line. Grant converted and the Stormers had a point, just enough to keep them in second place, not enough to challenge the Bulls for first place.

Man of the match: There were lots of Sharks, including Jean Deysel Stefan Terblanche and Patrick Lambie. There was the next tier of Ruan Pienaar and the 15 points he scored and thy way he set his men running; and there was Rory Kockott with those telling breaks and his harassing of Duvenage. But our Man of the Match is John Smit – for the strength with which he played and for his calm, focused leadership. It is no surprise that he is the leading national captain in the history of the game.

Scorers:

For Sharks:
Tries: Ndungane, Pienaar
Cons: Pienaar 2
Pens: Pienaar 2

For Stormers:
Tries:
Grant, François Louw
Cons: Grant 2

Teams:

The Sharks: 15 Patrick Lambie, 14 Odwa Ndungane, 13 Stefan Terblanche, 12 Riaan Swanepoel, 11 Lwazi Mvovo, 10 Ruan Pienaar, 9 Rory Kockott, 8 Ryan Kankowski, 7 Willem Alberts, 6 Jean Deysel, 5 Alistair Hargreaves, 4 Steven Sykes, 3 Jannie du Plessis, 2 John Smit (captain), 1 Tendai Mtawarira.
Replacements: 16 Craig Burden, 17 Patric Cilliers, 18 Wilhelm Steenkamp, 19 Keegan Daniel, 20 Jacques Botes, 21 Andy Goode, 22 Andries Strauss.

Stormers: 15 Gio Aplon, 14 Sireli Naqelevuki, 13 Jaque Fourie, 12 Juan de Jongh, 11 Tim Whitehead , 10 Peter Grant, 9 Dewaldt Duvenage, 8 Duane Vermeulen, 7 François Louw, 6 Schalk Burger (captain), 5 Andries Bekker, 4 Adriaan Fondse, 3 Brok Harris, 2 Tiaan Liebenberg, 1 JD Moller.
Replacements: 16 Deon Fourie, 17 Eusebio Guiñazu, 18 Anton van Zyl, 19 Pieter Louw, 20 Ricky Januarie, 21 Willem de Waal, 22 Joe Pietersen.

Referee: Stuart Dickinson (Australia)
Assistant referees: Pro Legoete (South Africa), Andrew Lees (Australia)
TMO: Johann Meuwesen (South Africa)

I’m adding a Video Highlites clip here. If you have a slow Internet connection I suggest you let the clip buffer right through… then watch the video again, for the 2nd time, uninterrupted.

[youtube]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QMr1ZLC-zBo[/youtube]

116 Responses to Sharks show their teeth as they destroy the Stormers

  • 91

    Asgat, dis ‘n moosa drop daai…

  • 92

    68 – Blouste everytime I click on that it comes up. Internet cannot display this page?????

  • 93

    puma @ 85
    dont think burger tried to use that as an excuse, puma. have a look at the stormers’ players body language in that first few minutes. only other game they looked like that was against the force!!
    but
    i’m not taking ANYTHING away from your team here, bru!! IN FACT, you deserved to win
    and
    deserved to win by a bigger margin!!

  • 94

    84: link werk nie

  • 95

    searc rugbydump.com op google, gaan na home page en kyk daar, julle moet dit sien…

  • 96

    search…

  • 97

    bdb @ 94
    wat verwag jy?
    dis ñ bloubul watti link opgesit het!!

  • 98

    93: die slegte ‘body language’ van die Stormers, is omlat hul toe besef het hul moet die Bulle op Nuweland klop.

  • 100

    bdb @ 98
    ek praat van die begin van die game bru
    1ste paar minute!!

  • 101

  • 102

    93 – Ash, On All Out Rugby, They rubbished the press for saying Stormers just played poor, they said it was not the case but rather that Sharks just outplayed them on Saturday. They were not flat they were outplayed by a better team on Saturday.

    Blouste will look at the clip later mate.

    Have to go out for a hour or more. Catch up later.

  • 103

    I’ve added a Video Highlites clip of the Sharks / Stormers match, at the end of the Thread…

  • 104

    puma @ 102
    bru
    i’m not trying to make excuses or take anything away from the sharks’ victory. as i’ve said before, the margin of victory shouldve been much bigger!!
    its just that i looked at the stormers players in that opening minutes and thought “o, f*k”!!

    of course:
    you were the better team on the day
    you outplayed us in every facet of the game
    you gave us a lesson in how to keep possession away from the opposing team etc etc etc

    i cant argue with that!!

    i’m just saying that burger’s got a point if you look at the body language of his players in that first few minutes .. jeez, even that first few seconds.

  • 105

    #101 bdb

    Broer, you don’t have to try and convince me about that forward pass – you need to convince Naas. Just remember a Bulls legend is seldom wrong.

    Maybe GBS can put that clip of Maku’s forward pass and Naas’s comment and reasoning on it on the site as well?

  • 106

    fender @ 105
    now what is the odds that that will happen? 😀

  • 107

    fender, hoekom besoek jy nie die link wat bdb geplaas het nie ?

  • 108

    good morning all you dingbats

  • 109

    morning sharky
    thought i’d be in hiding, i see?

  • 110

    Good day Rugby talkers.
    I have been absent for a while, due to much business pressure, but am still around.
    Some observations:
    Rugby will always be a brutally physical game and the Stormers cannot match the Bulls or Sharks in this department.
    The real value of your forwards is only seen in the most brutal games, when those with the real mental attitude front up.
    Outside of Liebenberg, the Stormers tight five are pretenders.
    John Smit is far and away the best front row player SA have ever produced as well as our best captain ever.
    We may see the Bulls “B” team destroy the Stormers light five if they play the way the Sharks have shown them to play this week end.

  • 111

    So people HOW ABOUT DEYSEL ?????

    How many of the Stormer players did not feel the love from him, he was a brutal attacking mince make machine.

    I feel he has to be on the BOK squad.

  • 112

    treehugger @ 11
    so true hugs
    ON the bok squad
    but
    definately not IN it!! 😆

  • 113

    109: bly jy is nie ‘in hiding’ nie, maar die vraag is, is jy reg vir die saterdag se ‘hiding’ ? 😉

    111: Goeie opvolger vir Juan Smith, hoe oud is hy ?

    110: so jy sê die Stormers se ‘light five’ is besig om ‘n ‘come back’ te maak ?

  • 114

    Ashely am thinking of sending a retraction of my soulfull pleading letter to you 👿

    Am running around (literally) multi tasking and trying to blog at the same time.

    Dont you think he deserves a chance …. IN….. the BOK squad.

  • 115

    Interesting for me in the Sharks / Stormers match was how Beast managed to srum Brock Harris in his moer… and this after the majority of Bloggers here voted for Harris on the Poll about who the BEST tighthead IN SA is at the moment.

    Beast, a loosehead prop, is not known exactly for his scrumming strenght, but rather for his loose play.

    So, I guess we better get BJ in SA as quick as possible..

  • 116

    GBS
    It is funny how just last year he was “broken” Harris and even the WP supporters were scathing about their front row.
    They win games this year and get close to a semi final and everybody in Slaapstad seems to think the WP front row should all be Boks.
    We better hope that PDV and Gary Gold think differently, or else we will see our arses.

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