South African teams are utterly dominating this season's URC
South African teams are dominating the opening rounds of the URC with all four franchises populating the top eight of the league table.
To date, South African sides have won 19 from 20 fixtures, their only loss a self-inflicted defeat so speak - the Bulls defeating the Lions in Round 1.
This comes after the Stormers and Bulls faced off in last season’s URC final, toppling challengers from Ireland and Scotland in the playoffs.
That vein of form has sustained into the new season as, for the second game-week in a row, all four South African teams collected wins.
And of them, the Sharks were the only team to miss out on a try bonus-point, after they avoided a shock loss to Dragons on Saturday, relying on a late comeback to steal the win by a single point.
Dragons started the better of the two sides and managed to mount a 19-6 lead thanks to a try from Elliott Dee, only to see that advantage slowly slip away as Grant Williams and Thaakir Abrahams crossed the whitewash in the last 18 minutes to give the visitors a vital win at Rodney Parade.
A day before the Bulls clocked their third straight win, and second successive bonus-point victory, with a comprehensive 28-14 beating of Connacht in Pretoria.
Zak Burger was the man of the hour after he crossed the line twice to help the men in blue take the win.
The Stormers followed suit, holding firm in the face of an early Edinburgh surge to earn another full-house win in Cape Town. Emerging star Suleiman Hartzenberg shone for the reigning champions by scoring a second half double to topple their Scottish opponents 34-18.
South Africa’s perfect weekend was capped off by the Lions who have now completed an impressive Welsh double, picking up a majestic 31-18 win over Cardiff Rugby, a week after beating the Ospreys 28-27.
The men from Johannesburg burst alight in the second period at the Cardiff Arms Park, scoring 21 points, carried by the dominance of their scrum and maul in wet and windy conditions.
Of all the South African teams, the Lions are the only ones to have lost so far this season.
However, the 31-15 loss came at the hands of the Bulls in week one, meaning the URC’s four newest arrivals are yet to be beaten by foreign opposition.
It also means the league’s top eight is densely populated by these unflappable sides. The Bulls sit in second on 14 points with three wins from three and are equal on points with league leaders Leinster. The Stormers lie behind in fourth, with 10 points earnt from two games.
Right behind them in fifth are the Sharks who have nine points from two games and the Lions sit the lowest of the quartet in seventh with nine points from three games.
The one proviso is that none of the SA sides has yet faced the Irish big three of Ulster, Munster or Leinster.
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Which country do you think was instrumental in developing rugby in Argentina which then spun off into the rest of Latin South America? South Africa was touring Argentine in the 50's with their Junior Bok side on three months development tours. And they didn't do it to cultivare players for the Boks. Regarding Africa you are not taking into account that South Africa itself is an emerging nation. The rugby union has prioritised the development of rugby in South African rural communities with outstanding success.
It has taken 15 years to build the participation of rugby both in playing and watching. For South Africa on its own to build a viable international rugby competition in africa will take generations - not decades. New Zealanders seem to resent the fact that SA has doubled the income of the URC since their inclusion. If New Zealand Rugby hadn't insisted on have a disproportionate slice of the pie in Super Rugby, SA might not have fled the coop.
Go to commentsDon't think you've watched enough. I'll take him over anything I's seen so far. But let's see how the future pans out. I'm quietly confident we have a row of 10's lined uo who would each start in many really good teams.
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