Louw v Porter among five key player match-ups that will decide Bulls v Leinster URC final
Bulls wing Canan Moodie has all the tools to place Leinster counterpart James Lowe under tremendous pressure in the URC final. Photo: BackpagePix
Image: BackpagePix
Leinster are undoubted favourites, but the Bulls will be going all out to end their United Rugby Championship trophy drought by emerging victorious in Saturday's final against Leinster in Dublin.
Here are five terrific player match-ups that will have a major influence on proceedings at Croke Park (6pm SA time kick-off)...
Canan Moodie v James Lowe
Springbok wing Moodie has spent quite a bit of time at outside centre this year, but is back in his favourite No 14 jersey in what will be a thrilling duel against Irish star Lowe.
Moodie's biggest strength will be contesting the ball in the air, and he will be chasing those up-and-unders from Embrose Papier and Johan Goosen with glee.
The 22-year-old from Paarl must also take on Lowe with ball-in-hand, as his 1.9m frame will be hard to mark for Lowe.
But the former Chiefs speedster from New Zealand has the pace and huge kicking game to be a constant threat on attack for the hosts too.
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Embrose Papier v Jamison Gibson-Park
While the forwards will feel they decide the results of rugby matches, the two scrumhalves will have a massive effect on the final.
Papier is in the form of his life at the moment, and he produced an outstanding display in last week's semi-final win over the Sharks with his incredible speed.
Papier has improved his box-kicking significantly in recent seasons as well, and always provides an extra layer to the defence due to his pace.
Gibson-Park has revolutionised his career in Ireland after leaving the Auckland Blues, and his ability to maintain a high tempo on attack is what makes Leinster tick.
Marcell Coetzee v Jack Conan
Coetzee has been in superb form for the Bulls this season, which has even resulted in calls for his return to the Boks.
The experienced loose forward has excelled at openside flank, but will also bring his energetic approach to No 8, where he will be more involved in the carrying.
Coetzee puts his body on the line on attack and defence, and will need to fill the boots of the injured Cameron Hanekom to stop the physical Conan, who is one of the hard men of Irish rugby and never shirks his defensive duties.
Johan Grobbelaar v Dan Sheehan
Grobbelaar produced arguably his finest performance against Sheehan in the 2022 semi-final at the RDS Arena, and will hope to carry those memories into the Croke Park final.
He has fallen out of the Bok reckoning this year, and will want to prove to Rassie Erasmus that he should be in the national squad by getting the better of Ireland's first-choice hooker once more.
Both No 2s are quick across the pitch and have a high work-rate, and are renowned for their accuracy with their lineout-throwing.
But Grobbelaar may have the edge in contesting the breakdowns...
Wilco Louw v Andrew Porter
If ever Louw wanted to secure the Springbok No 3 jersey this year, this is the game to do it.
The Bulls stalwart has been destructive throughout the campaign, with his powerful scrummaging earning a series of penalties and inspiring the rest of the front-rowers in Pretoria.
Louw is a serious unit at 144kg, and those massive thighs will go to work on Porter, who has a 21kg weight disadvantage, in the set-piece.
But Porter has built a long Test career in refining the 'dark arts' in the front row, coming up with all sorts of tricks to keep much bigger tightheads in check.

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The Citizen
34 minutes ago
- The Citizen
Marcell Coetzee says these four things will be key for Bulls in URC final
The Bulls have highlighted areas they have worked on and things fans can expect from them in their final against Leinster. Bulls stand-in captain Marcell Coetzee and captain Ruan Nortjé will keep the side level-headed during the URC final. Picture: Johan Orton/Gallo Images Bulls veteran Marcell Coetzee has highlighted four areas they have been working on for their United Rugby Championship final against Leinster on Saturday (kick-off 6pm). The teams clash at Croke Park in Dublin after Leinster finished first on the table in the regular season and the Bulls finished second. Leinster beat Scarlets and defending champions Glasgow Warriors in their play-offs toward the final, while the Bulls beat Edinburgh and the Sharks. Coetzee said that Leinster, who have never won the URC in its current format though they have always been favourites after strong regular season finishes, are still a 'champion side'. 'It's a well-oiled machine. We need to nullify that as best as possible by certain things we've identified,' Coetzee said. Better discipline Coetzee said the squad had addressed discipline after receiving three yellow cards against the Sharks in the semi-final. 'It makes things harder for you, playing against a quality side like Leinster, you can't afford to have one guy in the bin or two guys in the bin. We need all the feet on the pitch. It's going to take a work rate to stop their onslaught so you don't want to let the guy next to you down by being reckless. 'That and soft moments, we need to cut out in our game, and just keep building on our DNA that has been working for us all season.' Managing pressure Coetzee said, just as fullback Willie le Roux did, that the Bulls will need to manage the pressure of the big fixture. This will be the Bulls' third final though they have yet to win the trophy. Coetzee said the Bulls have grown in maturity since their 2022 defeat to the Stormers and last year's defeat to Glasgow. Veterans such as captain Ruan Nortjé, Le Roux and Johan Goosen will keep the team level-headed on the day. 'It is going to come down to moments and how we manage them. How calm and controlled we are. That comes with experience.' Controlling the controllables, forgetting everything else Coetzee said the Bulls could not rely on mistakes from the opposition, nor allow referee decisions that go against them to get them down. 'It's all about managing your controllables. Sometimes in rugby, there are uncontrollable but it's the ability to adapt after that that makes the difference.' Bulls to increase work rate in every area 'Without oversharing, it's going to come down to work rate, being composed – making the right decisions at the right time – and just handling the kicking game as well,' the Bulls veteran added. He said they needed to work hard while still being mindful of the momentum and flow of the game. 'There's a lot of factors that also contribute to whether we get the result or not – whether the set-piece is strong, whether the game management is on-par, the kicking game… There will be times when we want to make the game quick and control the tempo but there are also times to settle and see where we can go from there.'

IOL News
an hour ago
- IOL News
URC final preview: Bulls have the firepower to conquer Leinster ‘mission impossible'
SPARK Scrumhalf Embrose Papier will hope to ignite the Bulls attack in his duel with Leinster star Jamison Gibson-Park. Photo: BackpagePix Image: BackpagePix The Bulls haven't lost in the United Rugby Championship in eight matches. They also have an excellent away record this season, having won five out of seven encounters, with the only defeats coming against the Scarlets and Sharks. The most significant of those victories were against the Stormers in Cape Town, Munster in Limerick and Glasgow in Scotland. That is why today's URC final against Leinster at Croke Park in Dublin (6pm SA time kick-off) is not a 'mission impossible' for Jake White's team. They will take heart from the fact that they have beaten Leinster in Ireland before, in the 2022 semi-finals in what was an epic 27-26 triumph, and enjoy a four-out-of-six win record against the Irish giants. Sure, it wasn't always a full-strength Leinster, but those results are in the history books, and it should provide the visitors with the necessary belief that they finally end their URC title bogey after losing two previous finals. 'I must say we've actually toured quite well this year, and our win record is better than most. I don't know why it is, we happen to have played really well away from home,' White said after naming his match-23 this week. 'It's a little bit reminiscent to when I was at the Brumbies. We went through 11 games unbeaten away from home. Video Player is loading. Play Video Play Unmute Current Time 0:00 / Duration -:- Loaded : 0% Stream Type LIVE Seek to live, currently behind live LIVE Remaining Time - 0:00 This is a modal window. Beginning of dialog window. Escape will cancel and close the window. Text Color White Black Red Green Blue Yellow Magenta Cyan Transparency Opaque Semi-Transparent Background Color Black White Red Green Blue Yellow Magenta Cyan Transparency Opaque Semi-Transparent Transparent Window Color Black White Red Green Blue Yellow Magenta Cyan Transparency Transparent Semi-Transparent Opaque Font Size 50% 75% 100% 125% 150% 175% 200% 300% 400% Text Edge Style None Raised Depressed Uniform Dropshadow Font Family Proportional Sans-Serif Monospace Sans-Serif Proportional Serif Monospace Serif Casual Script Small Caps Reset restore all settings to the default values Done Close Modal Dialog End of dialog window. Advertisement Next Stay Close ✕ Ad Loading 'Sometimes when you've got that recipe going for you, it counts in your favour because you enjoy being together, enjoy the players spending time together. 'And when you win, obviously those sorts of memories and those sorts of feelings that you have when you get back as a group is something that's special as well. 'But also, there's no doubt guys, it doesn't matter when we play Leinster. 'Quality team... I've said it to you many times: they're the benchmark of not just the URC, of club rugby, I think all over the world. 'The Toulouses and the Leinsters are the two teams that everyone wants to try and emulate. So, it didn't matter where we played. 'Let's be fair, whether it's at Croke Park – whether it's Aviva, whether it was at RDS, whether it was in South Africa – I think the challenge is exactly the same.' And that challenge is dealing with the relentless nature of the Leinster approach. They play an up-tempo game, with wave after wave on attack – usually out wide to James Lowe and Jimmy O'Brien, but also up the guts via Joe McCarthy, Dan Sheehan and Jack Conan. The Bulls, though, can fight fire with fire. The front row of Jan-Hendrik Wessels, Johan Grobbelaar and Wilco Louw don't have to stand back for any opposition in the tournament in the scrums and tight-loose, while lock Cobus Wiese has played himself into Springbok contention. Playmakers Embrose Papier, Johan Goosen and Willie le Roux have the magic in their hands and feet to put on a dazzling show, and strike-runners abound in Canan Moodie, Sebastian de Klerk, David Kriel and Harold Vorster. Perhaps the greatest test for the Pretoria outfit will come in the loose trio, where the injury-enforced absences of Cameron Hanekom and Elrigh Louw will be most felt. Conan, Josh van der Flier and Ryan Baird are an outstanding Leinster combination – even though Ireland stalwart Caelan Doris is injured. So, captain Ruan Nortjé will have to produce arguably his finest performance in a No 7 jersey to put the Bulls on the front foot in the collisions to complement Marcell Coetzee and Marco van Staden. 'I was lucky enough to coach Pieter-Steph (du Toit) when he was a youngster, and I moved Pieter-Steph from lock to flank – and Ruan's got the same attributes,' White said. 'He can run for 80 minutes, he can, as I said, he has all those attributes of being a loose forward. 'I'm glad he says he enjoys it. I would have hated it if he had sat here and said, no, I don't like playing flank. 'He's got a work-rate, he's unbelievable. He's covered defence and understanding rugby, and then running a lineout as a loose forward as well is a massive attribute, which gives us, as I said, gives us another, that string to our bow.' The skipper himself is not concerned about moving away from his primary role as a No 5 lock and lineout-caller either. 'I must say, I really enjoy it a lot. It's a bit more loose, a bit more on the edge,' Nortjé said. 'It just makes you a bit more versatile. I just enjoy being at the side of the scrum in a different position.' There is no doubt that Leinster have the edge among the replacements, boasting Bok star RG Snyman, veteran French prop Rabah Slimani and the exciting outside back Jamie Osborne. But the Bulls have been highly effective as a squad, and the likes of Akker van der Merwe, Nizaam Carr and Keagan Johannes can make vital contributions in the second half too. 'What all teams want to do is make sure that when the last three weeks come about, that you can put your best players fit and available on the field, and play your best rugby,' White said. 'It's simple: we play our best rugby on the weekend, and we win.' Teams For Dublin Bulls: 15 Willie le Roux 14 Canan Moodie 13 David Kriel 12 Harold Vorster 11 Sebastian de Klerk 10 Johan Goosen 9 Embrose Papier 8 Marcell Coetzee 7 Ruan Nortjé (captain) 6 Marco van Staden 5 JF van Heerden 4 Cobus Wiese 3 Wilco Louw 2 Johan Grobbelaar 1 Jan-Hendrik Wessels. Bench: 16 Akker van der Merwe 17 Alulutho Tshakweni 18 Mornay Smith 19 Jannes Kirsten 20 Nizaam Carr 21 Zak Burger 22 Keagan Johannes 23 Devon Williams. Leinster: 15 Jimmy O'Brien 14 Tommy O'Brien 13 Garry Ringrose 12 Jordie Barrett 11 James Lowe 10 Sam Prendergast 9 Jamison Gibson-Park 8 Jack Conan (captain) 7 Josh van der Flier 6 Ryan Baird 5 James Ryan 4 Joe McCarthy 3 Thomas Clarkson 2 Dan Sheehan 1 Andrew Porter. Bench: 16 Ronan Kelleher 17 Jack Boyle 18 Rabah Slimani 19 RG Snyman 20 Max Deegan 21 Luke McGrath 22 Ross Byrne 23 Jamie Osborne.


eNCA
8 hours ago
- eNCA
Mametsa confident Bulls will bring United Rugby Championship title home
PRETORIA - The Bulls are all geared up for their all-important grand final in the United Rugby Championship, against Irish side Leinster this weekend in Dublin. This will be the Bulls' third appearance in the final, but they have never won the title. So they will be hoping the third time will be the charm for them. Leinster, by contrast, have won eight times, their most recent victory in 2021 against Munster. Former Bulls wing John Mametsa is confident the Pretoria franchise can write their names in the history books, as eNCA's Siphokazi Malinga had a sit down with Mametsa, to get his expectation as his former side heads to the final.