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Bulls clinch Currie Cup in dying minutes of match

Bulls win Currie Cup.

It took the Vodacom Bulls 98 minutes to clinch the Carling Currie Cup.

In a somewhat unusual and different Currie Cup final they scoop up the long-awaited trophy by beating the Cell C Sharks 26-19 on January 30.

The Bulls won the Carling Currie Cup for the first time since 2009 in a dramatic and nail-biting final at Loftus Versfeld in Pretoria, which only ended after a weather-enforced suspension in play and 20 minutes of extra time.
The men from Pretoria won a thrilling match and it was the first Carling Currie Cup final since the season-finale in 2006 that went to extra time, when the Toyota Cheetahs and Bulls shared the title, after the scores were tied at 19-19 after 80 minutes.

The score stayed unchanged until the 98th minute when a try by Springbok loose forward Arno Botha, who came on as a replacement, broke the deadlock and secured the Bulls their second title of the reworked season, after they also won Vodacom Super Rugby Unlocked two months ago.

Botha’s try, his second of the match, broke the hearts of a gutsy Sharks team, who held a 13-9 lead after lightning interrupted the first half.

Before that, the match was on a knife’s edge for most of the time, although the KwaZulu-Natalians were left wondering what might have been had their flyhalf, Curwin Bosch, landed all his kicks at goal.

The Sharks regularly unsettled the Bulls at the breakdowns and scored a brilliant try through Springbok wing Sbu Nkosi just before the break, but the home team never gave up, despite their kickers, Morne Steyn and Chris Smith, also missing a number of shots at goal.

They hit the ones that mattered though. A penalty goal by Smith two minutes before the end of regulation time pulled the scores level and forced extra time, and Botha’s match-winner ultimately allowed Bulls captain Duane Vermeulen to lift the Carling Currie Cup.

Although the Bulls conceded more penalties (15-14), they had the better of their coastal opponents in the set pieces. The men from Pretoria won 100 per cent of their lineouts and 90.9 per cent of their scrums, and disrupted the Sharks’ tall timber, with the visitors losing five out of 15 lineouts on their own throw.

The home team also outkicked their opponents and had the upperhand on defence, where Springbok flank Marco van Staden led their charge with nine tackles.

In total, the Bulls were successful with 90 per cent of their tackles, while the Sharks were close at 86 per cent.
Afterwards, Bulls director of rugby Jake White praised his team for their resilience and lauded the impact of their bench.

“I’m really proud of the way we stuck in there. We had a chance on the hooter to win and then they got a penalty [in extra time] and they missed it. It was incredible.

“The one thing I really enjoyed was the way our bench and the reserves actually came on and handled the pressure. Obviously, that’s the thing you want to see from a team going forward.

“The bench was really composed when they came on, but they get that because they have been on the field many times this season. They get comfort out of the fact that this isn’t the only game they have come from behind to win. It’s definitely something we are really happy about,” said White.

Sean Everitt, head coach of the Sharks, was a disappointed man afterwards, but refused to blame Bosch’s errant aim for the defeat.

“The players are gutted and I’m gutted for them. They fought hard for 100 minutes,” said Everitt.

“Everyone wrote us off, but we won our semi-final and today we pushed the Bulls all the way. I’m really proud of the guys and we still see the season as a success.

“But I’m not disappointed that Curwin didn’t kick everything over. He has done it time and time again for us this year. Maybe today wasn’t up to the standard we’re used to from Curwin, but the guy has been amazing us. He has pulled us out of the trenches before, but today it didn’t go his way.”

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