Bulls into third URC final with win over Sharks
The Bulls have qualified for their third United Rugby Championship final after a hard-fought 25-13 win over a stubborn Sharks side at Loftus on Saturday night in an exciting match between two teams laden with Springbok stars.
This crucial victory that was secured through tries from Sebastien de Klerk, Canan Moodie and David Kriel will see the Bulls take on Leinster in the anticipated decider away from home on Saturday in Ireland.
Leinster eased into a home final with a commanding 37-19 semifinal victory over defending champions Glasgow Warriors in Dublin in the other semifinal played earlier.
Bulls coach Jake White had experienced campaigners in his starting line-up with Boks Willie Le Roux, Canan Moodie, Embrose Papier, Cameron Hanekom, Ruan Nortje, Marcell Coetzee, Wilco Louw, Johan Grobbelaar and Jan Hendrik Wessels.
Also, Sharks coach John Plumtree had Springboks aplenty with the likes of Aphelele Fassi, Lukhanyo Am, Andre Esterhuizen, Makazole Mapimpi, Jordan Hendrikse, Jaden Hendrikse, Siya Kolisi, Vincent Koch, Bongi Mbonambi and Ox Nche in his starting XV.
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Daily Maverick
4 hours ago
- Daily Maverick
Bulls underline status as SA's best as they prepare to face Leinster in URC final
Leinster will host the Bulls in the United Rugby Championship final at Croke Park in Dublin next week. The Bulls will contest the United Rugby Championship (URC) final for a third time in four years, underlining their status as South Africa's leading club. Their 25-13 semifinal win over the Sharks at Loftus Versfeld on Saturday was a victory for character and nous, as much as it was for skill. Jake White's team were reduced to 12 men shortly before halftime, with the sin bin briefly resembling a bus queue with so many Bulls players in it. Yet they repelled waves of Sharks assaults on their line in the 10 minutes either side of halftime, which ultimately won the game. The prize for the Bulls is a trip to Dublin this week where they will meet Irish giants Leinster in the final at Croke Park. Leinster finally qualified for their first URC final after a resounding 37-19 win over Glasgow at the Aviva Stadium in Dublin in Saturday's first semifinal. It sets up a repeat of the 2022 semifinal when the Bulls surprised Leinster with a 27-26 win at the RDS Arena in Dublin. That day Leinster rested star flyhalf Johnny Sexton, thinking they could handle the Bulls on home ground, and found out the hard way the penalty for hubris. They won't make the same mistake again. Next step The Bulls finished second on the standings after the round robin phase, with Leinster top. The URC's top two seeds will contest the Grand Final for the first time. For Jake White and the Bulls the challenge will be a mighty one as Leinster, despite their recent trophy drought, are formidable. The Irish club have been in three Champions Cup finals in the past four years and have now qualified for their first URC final after three successive semifinal defeats. Despite losing those three Champions Cup finals, they are the gold standard. In a quirk of the URC, no No 1 seed has even won the title in its three completed seasons. Leinster could change that stat this weekend. While the challenge for the Bulls is difficult, White knows they are running out of excuses. The Sharks won the SA Shield, the prize for being the leading South African club in the URC group phase, but the Bulls are this country's standard bearers. For three seasons White has talked about his team 'learning' and 'gaining experience'. That excuse has run its course. They are ready to win, the building blocks have been put down and they are as complete as they are going to be even without a few stars. 'It is obviously a massive win for us as a club, and we are into another final. So, that is three finals in four years, and any club would tell you that is a massive achievement,' White said. The Bulls will be heading to Dublin without Bok No 8 Cameron Hanekom who sustained a bad hamstring injury in the semifinal victory over the Sharks. Kurt-Lee Arendse, thanks to his stint in Japan during the URC season, remains ineligible for the playoffs. Outside of that though, the Bulls are at full strength. 'When it (the leg) is swollen and there's blood on it, it is tough to see,' White said about Hanekom's injury. 'The doctors had a look and he won't play next week (in the final), that I can tell you. Cameron thinks he can. He said he might go to the same doctor (Johan) Goosen went to. 'He can't travel with such an injury. I'm hoping for his sake it's like Goosen – a short-term rather than a long-term injury.' Discipline One aspect is clear though – the Bulls will not win in Dublin if their discipline is as poor as it was against the Sharks at Loftus. Centre Harold Voster, Hanekom and flank Marcell Coetzee were yellow-carded between the 28th and 39th minutes, leaving them three men down at one stage, and two men down for nine minutes. The Bulls showed great character to defend their line in that period, as the Sharks pounded away in search of a try. It was a brilliant period of tenacity, but not something the Bulls will want to repeat against a team of Leinster's calibre. 'I think we won that game in the five minutes before halftime when we had 12 men on the field,' White said. 'In those five minutes before halftime with 12 men, it did not look like they were going to score and that is a massive boost to the defence coach and players. I told them in the changeroom that is where we won it.' Leinster pressure In a way the Bulls have nothing to lose as Leinster will be under pressure, given home-ground advantage and the scar tissue of three Champions Cup final losses in the past four seasons. Leinster led 37-5 against Glasgow but conceded two late tries when the game was won. Their finish left a sour taste for captain Jack Conan. 'Even though it was good today it was disappointing to concede those two ties close to the end, and there's lots of things we want to get better at,' Conan said after the match. 'It will all count for nothing if we don't go on and win again and show that level of dominance that we did today. We're not getting ahead of ourselves, we know it is going to be a tough task next week. 'We always knew we had it in us,' said Conan. 'It has obviously been a trying few weeks and a bit of disappointment and we said we want to go out there and be our best. We prepped well all week and the message from the coaches and players was spot-on.' Head coach Leo Cullen admitted the pressure is on Leinster. 'We always feel like we have a point to prove,' Cullen said. 'Certainly I do anyway. Because that's just the nature of the job I'm in and the team are in a pretty similar situation, so listen, we would love to go out and win every week. 'What have we played this season now? Eighteen regular season games and two knockout games, four pool Champions Cup games and three knockouts. What's that, 27 games, next week we get to play a 28th. A perfect season you get to play 29. 'We will get to play 28, we have lost three. Every week you play you feel like you have a point to prove. I don't think it's hugely different, to be honest.' DM Overall URC head-to-head between Bulls and Leinster (as of 8 June 2025) Match Results (most recent first)


eNCA
5 hours ago
- eNCA
Proteas seek end to trophy misery in WTC final against Australia
JOHANNESBURG - South Africa captain Temba Bavuma believes his team can put their shocking record in knockout games behind them when they face defending champions Australia in next week's World Test Championship final. The Proteas have won just one International Cricket Council trophy –- the ICC Knockout -- a forerunner of the Champions Trophy, back in 1998, alongside a list of agonising near-misses. By contrast, the top-ranked Australians, who beat India in the 2023 WTC final, have an enviable record at the sharp end of tournaments in the white-ball game. They have won the one-day World Cup a record six times, lifted the Champions Trophy twice and have also triumphed at the T20 World Cup. "It is different," Bavuma said ahead of the WTC final at Lord's starting on Wednesday. "Australia have had success. They know what they need to do." But the 35-year-old batsman is adamant South Africa will not be overawed when facing Pat Cummins' team. "For us it is about being confident in our ability," said Bavuma. "We haven't been handed this opportunity to play in the final, we have performed accordingly. We respect them (Australia) but it is still a 50-50 chance in our eyes." Heartache has been the recurring theme of South Africa's history at global events going back to the 1992 World Cup, when they returned to the international fold after two decades of exclusion as a result of the country's apartheid regime. South Africa reached the semi-finals only for a cruel rain rule, that left them needing 21 off one ball, to wreck their chances against England in Sydney. That set a pattern for the next three ODI World Cups. South Africa dominated their group stage in Pakistan in 1996 before falling to a Brian Lara-inspired West Indies in the quarter-finals. A farcical run-out with the scores tied in a 1999 semi-final against Australia meant they were eliminated on net run-rate. On home soil in 2003, rain and a miscalculation of the run-rate formula against Sri Lanka led to an embarrassing group-stage exit. Not until last year's T20 World Cup did South Africa reach a major final. Fast bowler Kagiso Rabada is the only current player who would be a contender for a place in a South Africa all-time team. But Bavuma has an impressive record of eight wins and a draw in the nine Tests in which he has captained. The skipper lauded coach Shukri Conrad for helping create a strong team spirit, saying: "We don't boast legendary names. For us to achieve what we have is a tribute to him." Conrad has spent time with Springbok coach Rassie Erasmus in a bid to sharpen his side's winning edge. Erasmus has guided South Africa to back-to-back Rugby World Cup titles, with the Springboks showing extraordinary mental strength in winning three successive knockout matches by a single point on the way to their 2023 triumph in Paris. "Obviously they are doing a lot of things right," said Conrad, who was clear about the key lesson he had learned from Erasmus. "Playing for the Springboks has got to be the biggest thing -- playing for the Proteas has got to be the biggest thing for our players," he explained. "That is what we have to hone in on."


The South African
6 hours ago
- The South African
Springboks call up Evan Roos after injury
On Sunday it was confirmed that Springbok coach Rassie Erasmus has called up Stormers No 8 Evan Roos to join his squad for the match against the Barbarians and the Incoming Series (against Italy and Georgia), increasing the size of his group to 55 players. The news comes after Bulls star Cameron Hanekom suffered a hamstring injury in the URC semi-final against the Sharks, and it seems that this has precipitated the need to add another option at eighthman. Roos, who attended the first alignment in Cape Town in February, has run out seven times in the green and gold. His last Test was against Portugal in Bloemfontein in the 2024 Incoming Series, before he was sidelined for several months due to shoulder surgery. The Springbok squad will report for duty in Johannesburg on Sunday afternoon and begin their on-field preparations on Monday, as the team gets the wheels in motion for the international season starting in under three weeks. Forwards: Cameron Hanekom, Wilco Louw, Ruan Nortje, Gerhard Steenekamp, Marco van Staden, Jan-Hendrik Wessels, Cobus Wiese (all Bulls), Eben Etzebeth, Vincent Koch, Siya Kolisi, Ntuthuko Mchunu, Ox Nche, Vincent Tshituka (Sharks), Neethling Fouche, Salmaan Moerat, Evan Roos (Stormers), Renzo du Plessis, Asenathi Ntlabakanye (Lions), Juarno Augustus (Northampton Saints), Jean-Luc du Preez (Sale Sharks), Pieter-Steph du Toit (Toyota Verblitz), Thomas du Toit (Bath), Lood de Jager (Wild Knights), Jean Kleyn (Munster), Malcolm Marx (Kubota Spears), Franco Mostert (Honda Heat), Kwagga Smith (Shizuoka Blue Revs), RG Snyman (Leinster), Marnus van der Merwe (Scarlets), Jasper Wiese (Urayasu D-Rocks). Backs: Lukhanyo Am, Andre Esterhuizen, Aphelele Fassi, Jaden Hendrikse, Jordan Hendrikse, Ethan Hooker, Makazole Mapimpi, Grant Williams (Sharks), Kurt-Lee Arendse, Willie le Roux, Canan Moodie (Bulls), Sacha Feinberg-Mngomezulu, Manie Libbok, Damian Willemse (Stormers), Quan Horn, Morne van den Berg, Edwill van der Merwe (Lions), Damian de Allende (Wild Knights), Faf de Klerk, Jesse Kriel (Canon Eagles), Cheslin Kolbe (Tokyo Sungoliath), Handre Pollard (Leicester Tigers), Cobus Reinach (Montpellier), Ntokozo Makhaza (UCT). SPRINGBOKS' FIXTURES 28 June: vs Barbarians, DHL Stadium, Cape Town. Kick off: 17:05. 5 July: vs Italy, Loftus Versfeld, Pretoria. Kick off: 17:10. 12 July: vs Italy, Nelson Mandela Bay Stadium, Gqeberha. Kick off: 17:10. 19 July: vs Georgia, Mbombela Stadium, Nelspruit. Kick off: 17:10. 16 August: vs Australia, Ellis Park, Johannesburg. Kick off: 17:10. 23 August: vs Australia, DHL Stadium, Cape Town. Kick off: 17:10. 6 September: vs New Zealand, Auckland. Kick off: 09:05. 13 September: vs New Zealand, Wellington. Kick off: 09:05. 27 September: vs Argentina, Kings Park, Durban. Kick off: 17:10. 4 October: vs Argentina, London. Kick off: 15:00. 8 November: vs France, Paris. Kick off: TBD. 15 November: vs Italy, Turin. Kick off: TBD. 22 November: vs Ireland, Dublin. Kick off: 19:40. 29 November: vs Wales, Cardiff. Kick off: 17:10. Let us know by leaving a comment below, or send a WhatsApp to 060 011 0211. Subscribe to The South African website's newsletters and follow us on WhatsApp, Facebook, X and Bluesky for the latest news. Meanwhile, here is an important reminder on ticket sales for the Springbok men's game against Argentina in the Rugby Championship at Twickenham in October. Ticket sales Tickets are on sale via and England Rugby, starting from just £55* for adults and £28* for Under-16s. (*booking fees apply)