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South African teams experience highs, lows in Super Rugby

Sport

South African teams experience highs, lows in Super Rugby
Sport

Sport

South African teams experience highs, lows in Super Rugby

2019-04-08 10:04 Last Updated At:10:20

The Sharks' 42-5 win over the Lions in the weekend's eighth round of Super Rugby threw light on a South African conference in which switchback changes of form have been the norm this season.

The Lions started the round atop the conference table, with the Sharks in third place. But after a series of surprising results, the two sides swapped positions, with the inconsistent Bulls separating them.

By the end of the round only seven points separated the table-topping Sharks from the last-placed Stormers. By contrast, 13 points separated the first and last teams in Australia, and there were 17 points between the first-placed Crusaders and fifth-placed Chiefs in New Zealand.

Tom English of the Rebels, right, is tackled by Ryohei Yamanaka of the Sunwolves during their Super Rugby match in Melbourne, Australia, Saturday, April 6, 2019. (Hamish BlairAAP Image via AP)

Tom English of the Rebels, right, is tackled by Ryohei Yamanaka of the Sunwolves during their Super Rugby match in Melbourne, Australia, Saturday, April 6, 2019. (Hamish BlairAAP Image via AP)

Every conference has contained intrigue this season. In New Zealand, the Auckland-based Blues have won four matches in a row for the first time since 2013. In Australia, the Melbourne Rebels have a become a dominant force. But the South African conference has had more plot twists than even the most action-packed potboiler, with predicting winners a testing chore.

For example, the Bulls beat the Stormers 40-3 in the first round of the seasons while the Lions — finalists in 2016 and 2017 — beat the Jaguares 25-16 in Buenos Aires. A week later the Stormers beat the Lions in Cape Town while the Bulls lost to the Jaguares in Argentina.

In week three, the Stormers beat the Sharks and the Bulls beat the Lions in away matches, dismissing to some degree the influence of home advantage on the changes in fortune.

The Bulls then beat the Sharks twice, 37-14 in Petoria in round five and 19-16 in Durban in round seven before the Sharks achieved an improbable 37-point win over the Lions in the round just ended.

Form fluctuations can be explained by injuries, by the imperative in World Cup seasons to rest top players, by home advantage and even by the weather. But even Lions coach Swys de Bruin was at a loss to explain how his team, which has risen so high in recent seasons, fell so low against the Sharks.

"I'm very disappointed," said de Bruin, who signed a two-year contract extension in the week before the match. "It was the same against the Bulls. Physically, they had us from the word go.

"It is a thing we have to get right. We were not up to it. We were never, never in this game. Why? I don't know. I'll start with myself and see what we did wrong. They were just all over us physically, especially at the ruck."

The Lions now face a tough tour to New Zealand and Australia in which they will play the ACT Brumbies, Hamilton-based Chiefs and the defending champion Crusaders. Wins may be hard to come by; in the first venture by a South African team to Australasia this season, the Stormers lost to the Hurricanes, Blues and Queensland Reds.

De Bruin is more interested in seeing his players demonstrate more character than they did against the Sharks.

"I'm not here for winning or losing," he said. "I'm here for effort, character and guts and I didn't see that. It is a real concern."

The Jaguares also pulled off a major upset in round eight, beating the Bulls 22-20 in Pretoria, though that was a result in part of the Bulls being reduced by yellow cards to 13 players in the second half.

Domingo Miotto, who made his debut off the bench, scored two tries while the Bulls were under-manned to lead the Jaguares to a win which bounced them off the bottom of the South Africa conference.

Bulls coach Pote Human had no difficulty in putting his finger on the cause of his team's defeat.

"You can't play a team like that with 14 guys and then 13 at the end," he said. "It was just ridiculous . the stupidity of the players. I really thought we had them, and we let it slip."

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BERN, Switzerland (AP) — Snowboarder Ueli Kestenholz, who won a bronze medal in the sport’s first Olympic race, died after being trapped in an avalanche, the Swiss ski federation said Tuesday. He was 50.

Kestenholz was third in snowboard giant slalom at the 1998 Nagano Olympics — a debut event that became a story of the games when Canadian gold medalist Ross Rebagliati fought to keep his title after a positive test for cannabis.

The Swiss racer competed at two more Winter Games, was twice snowboardcross champion at the X-Games and continued a professional career in extreme sports.

Kestenholz was snowboarding with a friend who was skiing Sunday in the Lötschental valley of Valais canton (state). The avalanche started at an altitude of 2,400 meters (7,900 feet) for unknown reasons, Valais police said in a statement.

Kestenholz was trapped by snow and helped by his friend before being airlifted by helicopter to the hospital, first to Visp then to Sion which is close to Crans-Montana.

Swiss daily Berner Zeitung first reported Tuesday the victim was Kestenholz.

AP Winter Olympics at https://apnews.com/hub/milan-cortina-2026-winter-olympics

FILE - Gold medalist Ross Rebagliati of Canada, center, silver medalist Thomas Prugger of Italy, left, and Ueli Kestenholz of Switzerland celebrate after the Men's Giant Slalom snowboarding competition Sunday, Feb. 8, 1998 in Yamanouchi, Japan. (AP Photo/Robert F. Bukaty, file)

FILE - Gold medalist Ross Rebagliati of Canada, center, silver medalist Thomas Prugger of Italy, left, and Ueli Kestenholz of Switzerland celebrate after the Men's Giant Slalom snowboarding competition Sunday, Feb. 8, 1998 in Yamanouchi, Japan. (AP Photo/Robert F. Bukaty, file)

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