­
  • Home
  • Match Centre
  • British & Irish Lions
  • Videos
  • Supabets
  • Cars
    • Motoring News
    • Used Cars For Sale
    • New Cars For Sale
    • Demo Cars For Sale
  • Daddy’s Deals

SA Rugbymag

South African rugby news, fixtures, results, video, interviews, and more. Covering the Springboks, Bulls, Stormers/Western Province, Sharks, Cheetahs, Kings and Lions, as well as schools and club rugby.

Primary Menu Search
  • Home
  • Match Centre
  • British & Irish Lions
  • Videos
  • Supabets
  • Cars
    • Motoring News
    • Used Cars For Sale
    • New Cars For Sale
    • Demo Cars For Sale
  • Daddy’s Deals

You are here: Home ∼ Sharks squeak past Pumas

Sharks squeak past Pumas

Published on September 5, 2015 | Leave a response

Winger Wandile Mjekevu scored a brace of tries as the Sharks overturned a nine-point deficit to beat the Pumas 27-26 in Durban on Saturday. CRAIG LEWIS reports.

The Sharks failed to show appreciation for possession in the first half, while their lineout went awry in the second stanza, but they displayed impressive character to score 10 unanswered points late in the game.

In the opening round of the competition, the Pumas clinched a surprise win over the Sharks and at various times during Saturday's encounter it looked as if they might secure a third successive win over the Durban-based side.

A late drop-goal attempt from Pumas replacement Justin van Staden was charged down after the final hooter, ultimately allowing the home side to hold on for an important but unconvincing victory.

Returning Springbok Cobus Reinach created the first try for the Sharks in the 15th minute, with a sniping half-break and neat offload to put winger Mjekevu away in the corner.

However, the Pumas quickly hit back as they capitalised on a Sharks mistake and worked their way into the red zone, with lock Marius Coetzer dotting down to help level the scores.

Pumas flyhalf JC Roos knocked over a couple of penalties before half-time, while Sharks fullback Joe Pietersen added a solitary three-pointer as the visitors established a narrow 13-10 lead at the break.

Reinach, who had received a yellow card in the first half, was then on the receiving end of a stray boot from Jacques Momberg at the bottom of a ruck, which saw the Pumas hooker sent to the sin bin early in the second half.

The hosts virtually immediately capitalised on their one-man advantage as Paul Jordaan spun out of an attempted tackle to finish off a well-worked try that was created from a massive Sharks scrum, with Thomas du Toit having been deployed at loosehead prop for the second half.

The Pumas restored their lead before the hour mark, though, with JW Bell going over for his team’s second try, while Van Staden knocked over the conversion and a penalty to give his side a handy 23-17 lead.

With momentum having well and truly shifted, Van Staden knocked over his second penalty in the 66th minute as the Pumas opened up a nine-point buffer.

Yet the Sharks responded timeously as Mjekevu went over for his second try just a couple of minutes later, while Pietersen slotted a crucial conversion from an acute angle.

From almost the exact same position, Pietersen slotted his second penalty as the Sharks edged into a match-winning 27-26 lead.

Sharks – Tries: Wandile Mjekevu (2), Paul Jordaan. Conversions: Joe Pietersen (3). Penalties: Pietersen (2).
Pumas – Tries: Marius Coetzer, JW Bell. Conversions: JC Roos, Justin van Staden. Penalties: Roos (2), Justin van Staden (2).

Sharks – 15 Joe Pietersen, 14 Wandile Mjekevu, 13 Paul Jordaan, 12 André Esterhuizen, 11 S'bura Sithole, 10 Lionel Cronjé, 9 Cobus Reinach, 8 Philip van der Walt, 7 Dan du Preez, 6 Francois Kleinhans, 5 Marco Wentzel (c), 4 Etienne Oosthuizen, 3 Gerhard Engelbrecht, 2 Monde Hadebe, 1 Dale Chadwick.
Subs: 16 Kyle Cooper, 17 Thomas du Toit, 18 JC Astle, 19 Jean-Luc du Preez, 20 Stefan Ungerer, 21 Heimar Williams, 22 Garth April.

Pumas – 15 JW Bell, 14 Bernardo Botha, 13 Hoffman Maritz, 12 Stefan Watermeyer, 11 Rosko Speckman, 10 JC Roos, 9 Faf de Klerk, 8 Jason Colin-Fraser, 7 Uzair Cassiem, 6 Jaco Bouwer, 5 Marius Coetzer, 4 Rudi Mathee, 3 Vincent Koch, 2 Jacques Momberg, 1 Corné Fourie.
Subs: 16 Francois du Toit, 17 De-Jay Terblanché, 18 Khwezi Mona, 19 Giant Mtyanda, 20 Marnus Schoeman, 21 Justin van Staden, 22 Jerome Pretorius.

Photo: Steve Haag/Gallo Images

Posted in Currie Cup, Sharks

Post by Craig Lewis

Craig Lewis

MPU #1 - (DESKTOP SIZE 300x250 / MOBILE SIZE 320x50, 300x250, 320x100)
← Previous Next →

Ratings: Du Toit one of the few standouts for Boks

The Boks faded in the second half to slump to a 22-17...

Five key areas the Boks need to dominate for first victory

SA Rugby magazine highlights five crucial areas the Boks will need to...

Duhan should be celebrated for his Lions success

Duhan van der Merwe’s achievements should be truly appreciated by South Africans,...

JdV: Boks-Lions have everything to play for

Performing in empty stadiums will be a key factor in the series...

Dynamic Dayimani: Forward to back

While he has been signed as an ‘edge’ forward, Hacjivah Dayimani could...

Boks have muscle memory to rely on

Rassie Erasmus and Jacques Nienaber are experts at finding solutions to tricky...

Top six: Best and worst foreign imports

SARugbymag.co.za identifies six of the best and worst foreign players to play...

Column: When context is needed

As highlighted by the Argentina controversy, ‘cancel culture’ needs a spoonful of...

Dark cloud hangs over WP Rugby

The problems at Western Province Rugby are layered, and everyone involved needs...

From the mag: Foreign Favourites

As Vodacom Super Rugby turned 25 this year, JON CARDINELLI picks an...

Bulls rookies to watch

After a massive exodus of players the Vodacom Bulls will be eager...

Analysis: The new suffocate-and-strangle game

For the Boks to emerge as World Cup winners, they need to...

VIEW MORE
  • Team graphics: Springboks vs B&I Lions
  • Boks vs Lions (1st Test): Predict and WIN!
  • Lions team announcement: Duhan to front Boks
  • Teams: SA A vs Bulls
Boks

Why the Boks should be bullish

There is good reason for the Springboks to enter the British & Irish Lions series with confidence, writes MARK KEOHANE in the latest SA Rugby magazine.

  • Watch: Did Gatland’s words influence Jonker?


COVID-19 Corona Virus
South African Resource Portal

ABOUT

  • Contact us
  • Competitions
  • Videos
  • Player Features
  • Subscribe
  • Terms and conditions
  • Privacy Policy

TOURNAMENTS

    • Rugby Championship
    • Super Rugby
    • Currie Cup
    • Varsity Cup
    • Gold Cup
    • Schools
    • Six Nations
    • Champions Cup
    • World Cup

OPINION

  • Mallett on SuperSport
  • Cardinelli column
  • Lewis column
  • Xabanisa column
  • Borchardt column
  • Superbru

Primary Menu

  • Home
  • Match Centre
  • British & Irish Lions
  • Videos
  • Supabets
  • Cars
    • Motoring News
    • Used Cars For Sale
    • New Cars For Sale
    • Demo Cars For Sale
  • Daddy’s Deals
×