Bulls sweating over World Cup winning Bok's injury
The Bulls are counting the cost of their humbling 14-47 loss to Leinster in a United Rugby Championship outing at the RDS Arena in Dublin this past Friday.
The Irish powerhouse, Leinster, made a serious statement of intent with the comprehensive win.
The game was billed as the tournament’s No.1 (Leinster) against No.2 (Bulls).
However, after a competitive first half – with the visitors leading 14-12 at the break – the hosts turned the second half into a one-horse race.
Five unanswered tries saw the Irish province race clear and put daylight between then and their nearest rivals on the standings.
Leinster (54 points) are at least two wins ahead of the Bulls (45) – who are unlikely to keep their second place as the rest of Round 13 plays out.
To make matters worse, the Bulls suffered a potentially serious setback ahead of next week’s Round of 16 face-off against Lyon Olympique Universitaire in Pretoria.
At the end of the first quarter in Dublin on Friday, World Cup-winning Springbok Marco van Staden was replaced by Mpilo Gumede.
White said the 28-year-old injured his Medial Collateral Ligament.
However, he does not feel it was too serious.
“I took him off, because I need him for the rest of the season,” the Bulls boss said.
“I did not want him to do more damage.
“I know and MCL is not as bad as the other ligaments.
“However, he is very important for us and the Springboks going forward.
“We want to get him ready [to play again] sooner, rather than later.”
Looking back at the game itself, the Bulls boss parroted a statement he has made several times this past week to the South African media: “Leinster is probably the best club [provincial] team in this competition and has been for a long time.”
White pointed out, as he has done before, that the Bulls “require time” to build a team with the experience and depth that Leinster put on display at the RDS this past Friday.
“It is something we have to look at – how we will get to where we need to get to, to compete with these top sides every week,” he added.
Jack Conan was one of five second-half try scorers for Leinster in a dominant win.
This top-of-the-table clash was of Test match quality at times, with Leo Cullen’s men now nine points clear at the summit.
Johan Goosen impressed with three penalties and a try assist as the Bulls led 14-12 at half-time.
Leinster captain Luke McGrath was sin-binned for a high tackle on try scorer Kurt-Lee Arendse.
However, having touched down initially through Josh van der Flier and Ronan Kelleher, the home side secured their bonus point by the 48th minute.
James Lowe and replacement Michael Milne did the damage, with Dan Sheehan, Conan and Liam Turner adding further tries past the hour mark.
Latest Comments
There is this thing going around against Siya Kolisi where they don't want him to be known as the best national captain ever, so they strike him down in ratings permanently whenever they can. They want McCaw and reckons he is the best captain ever. I disagree.
Just like they refuse to see SA as the best team and some have even said that should the Boks win a third WC in a row, they will still not be the best team ever. Even if they win every game between now and the WC. That is some serious hate coming SA's way.
Everyone forget how the McCaw AB's intimidated refs, was always on the wrong side, played on the ground etc. Things they would never have gotten away with today. They may have a better win ratio, but SA build depth, not caring about rank inbetween WC's until this year.
They weren't as bad inbetween as people claim, because non e of their losses was big ones and they almost never faced the strongest Bok team outside of the WC, allowing countries like France and Ireland to rise to the top unopposed.
Rassie is still at it, building more depth, getting more young stars into the fold. By the time he leaves (I hope never) he will leave a very strong Bok side for the next 15- 20 years. Not everyone will play for 20 years, but each year Rassie acknowledge the young stars and get them involved and ready for international rugby.
Not everyone will make it to the WC, but those 51/52 players will compete for those spots for the WC. They will deliver their best. The future of the Boks is in very safe hands. The only thing that bothers me is Rassie's health. If he can overcome it, rugby looks dark for the rest of the rugby world. He is already the greatest coach in WR history. By the time he retires, he will be the biggest legend any sport has ever seen
Go to commentsWas it? I just brought it up in some of my posts to rub it in that the AB last year nearly put 100 on a top 6N side lol
I agree to be honest. The biggest key to me that they might be jadded was none of them had mom performances, or even as good as their last three games.
Go to comments