The pressure on the four Currie Cup Premier Division semi-finalists – the Sharks, Western Province, Golden Lions and Blue Bulls – will reach boiling point on Saturday as they go head-to-head in their biggest match of the season for a place in the final.
The Sharks, who finished the pool stages as the top team, will take on 2016 runners up, the Blue Bulls, at Kings Park in Durban at 2.30pm, while Western Province will host the Golden Lions at Newlands in Cape Town at 5pm.
The clash in Durban is the KwaZulu-Natalians’ first appearance in a Currie Cup knock-out match since 2014. It’s also the first time the Sharks and Blue Bulls meet in the semi-final in five seasons.
Fuelling the hosts’ motivation, they won both encounters between the sides in the pool stages, while they have only gone down once against the Pretoria outfit at home in the competition in more than a decade – since 2006.
The visitors, meanwhile, will draw inspiration from the fact that the Sharks’ winning margins against them in the competition were by only eight and 13 points respectively, while most of their defeats in Durban have also been by less than 10 points. Adding to this, they have been fighting for their survival in their competition for several weeks, and will be up for the challenge.
The Sharks made three personnel changes to their starting team – flanker Jean-Luc du Preez, scrumhalf Louis Schreuder and winger Kobus van Wyk replace Jacques Vermeulen, Michael Claassens and Odwa Ndungane respectively, all three of whom were included on the replacements bench alongside Akker van der Merwe.
The Blue Bulls named the same starting team that defeated the Pumas to book their place in the semi-final. However, lock Aston Fortuin faces a late fitness test after picking up an injury last week. Should he be ruled out, Jannes Kirsten will start at lock with Eli Snyman on the bench, but should Fortuin be passed fit, Kirsten will start on the bench.
In Cape Town, the clash between Western Province and the Golden Lions will mark the sixth time the teams meet in the play-off stages since 2011 – two of which were in the Currie Cup finals of 2015 and 2014, with each of the teams winning one.
The results were similar in the pool stages this season with the Capetonians winning the clash at Newlands 39-3, while the Gauteng side won the return match at Ellis Park by 29-20.
The hosts have a good track record against the Golden Lions in Cape Town with their last home defeat in the competition being in 2012, but the Johannesburg team come off two wins a row, and they will want to build on this as they stake a claim for a place in the final.
Western Province made one change to their pack and three positional switches among their backs, with flanker Kobus van Dyk earning a start, while Dillyn Leyds moves from wing to fullback, with Ruhan Nel taking his place out wide and EW Viljoen returning to the midfield next to Huw Jones.
The Golden Lions in turn made only two personnel changes to their run-on team with Springbok hooker Malcolm Marx and prop Ruan Dreyer being included in the front row alongside prop and captain Jacques van Rooyen.
—African News Agency (ANA)