Sharks underdogs against Lions

Curwin Bosch of the Cell C Sharks is partly held in the tackle by Jan Serfontein of the Vodacom Bulls with Jesse Kriel of the Vodacom Bulls ready to assist during the 2017 Super Rugby game between the Sharks and the Bulls at Growthpoint Kings Park Stadium. Photo: Gerhard Duraan/BackpagePix

Curwin Bosch of the Cell C Sharks is partly held in the tackle by Jan Serfontein of the Vodacom Bulls with Jesse Kriel of the Vodacom Bulls ready to assist during the 2017 Super Rugby game between the Sharks and the Bulls at Growthpoint Kings Park Stadium. Photo: Gerhard Duraan/BackpagePix

Published Jul 22, 2017

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DURBAN 

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EN-GB;mso-bidi-language:AR-SA">– The Lions and the Sharks approach this quarter-final Super Rugby clash at Ellis Park on Saturday from very different ends of the spectrum.

The Lions are expected to win, the Sharks to lose, but expectation is a funny thing and it can often wreak havoc on a side.

Because no one has given the Sharks a shot at toppling the Lions, a team that has only been bested this season by the Jaguares in Argentina (much to the Lions’ own doing), the Sharks’ motivation coming into this match has been akin to the Vikings.

“We will burn our boats,” Sharks wing Kobus van Wyk said in the week, alluding to the ancient Scandinavian seafarers’ practice of burning the boats they arrived in at a foreign land before battle.

The idea is that there is no going back for the Sharks, it is all or nothing; this is their final. They will either reach the shores of Ellis Park and conquer, or they will die by the sword in this competition.

“There is nothing to lose,” coach Robert du Preez said, surprisingly jovial at his team announcement.

“The pressure is on them. The whole of South Africa expects the Lions to win. So we have nothing to lose.”

The mindset then is to give it their all, something they certainly did not do last week when the teams met in the final group stage game of the competition.

That game had very different outcomes for a Sharks win, and while no team wants to lose, the men from Durban won’t be hurting about the outcome it has led to.

But how can the Sharks beat the Lions if they have not managed to do so in two occasions already? The only hint that

Du Preez is giving away is territory.

“In last week’s game we did not get the territory we wanted, and the last time we played up there Curwin (Bosch) did really well for us and we are hoping for a repeat performance and that is why we have brought him in,” Du Preez explained, while also making clear why rising star Bosch was back in the No 10 jersey as the only significant change for the Sharks.

The Lions meanwhile have been far more open with their plans and tactics. They plan to do nothing different. Why would they if it has worked twice before? There is no point in fixing what isn’t broken.

“My players are like race horses,” a proud Johan Ackermann said in Johannesburg.

“They’ve been groomed and drilled to play a certain way and it would be unfair on them if I asked them to change now.”

The Lions have the luxury of selecting an identical match-day 23 for this clash.

@DarrynJack216

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