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Plenty of log jeopardy in final URC round before break

rugby28 March 2024 07:30| © SuperSport
By:Gavin Rich
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Jake White © Getty Images

The top-of-the-table clash between leaders Leinster and the second-placed Vodacom Bulls is undoubtedly the biggest game of round 13 of the Vodacom United Rugby Championship, but in reality, there is log jeopardy everywhere you look.

The competition takes a three-week break after this to accommodate the round of 16 and quarterfinal matches of both the Investec Champions Cup and the EPCR Challenge Cup. But while some teams, such as the Hollywoodbets Sharks, who are really out of URC playoff contention, may have their European challenge as more of a focus, the logjam on the URC log introduces an element of desperation to this weekend’s matches.

The congestion on the log table means there could be significant shifts directed by this weekend’s results. And with just five games to go after this, they’d want to return to URC action feeling they are in a solid position.

Significant shifts happened last week, with Ulster dropping from the top four to eighth because of their defeat to the Hollywoodbets Sharks in Durban, and Edinburgh found themselves paying for their inability to pick up even a losing bonus point against the DHL Stormers in Cape Town by being passed on the log by the Cape franchise.

Those two teams play the other coastal team in round 13, meaning Ulster are this time meeting the Stormers while Sean Everitt is taking his Edinburgh team to his old stomping ground at Hollywoodbets Kings Park. If the losers from last week can win this time, it will set themselves up for a swing in the reverse direction on the log and they will head back to the cusp of the top four, which signifies home-ground advantage in the first playoff game.

At the same time though, the teams contending for top-four spots will need to keep close tabs on Munster and Glasgow Warriors, who could put some daylight between the top four and the rest this weekend if they beat Cardiff (home for Munster) and Scarlets (away for Warriors) respectively.

TREVISO GAME WILL LEAVE THE LOSER LAGGING

But with all-important Champions Cup places up for grabs for the teams positioned between six and 12, perhaps the game that comes closest to being a knock-out fixture in round 13 is the one in Treviso on Saturday afternoon.

Both ninth-placed Connacht and 10th-placed Benetton are still well in the race for the top eight, as they are effectively locked together on the same number of log points just one behind the eighth-placed Emirates Lions. Wins for the teams ahead of them though will leave the loser in Treviso more than a win behind the top eight, and with just five games to go after this, that gap could be potentially significant.

The Lions’ unexpected win in Galway, which was achieved with a try-scoring bonus point while Connacht got nothing from the game, certainly hurt the Irish province, who were mounting a strong challenge for not only a top-eight place but maybe even a place in the top four.

 

 

Top four will certainly be very distant if they lose in Italy, but ditto for their opponents, who inhabited the top four for most of the first half of the season before losing ground when their international players went away on Guinness Six Nations duty.

It was with an under-strength team that Benetton were upset by Scarlets in Llanelli last week in a game that was a reminder, along with the one in Durban, that log position often means nothing in the URC. Even the second Vodacom Bulls, although they won comfortably in the end, were in potential jeopardy against lowly Dragons until the final stages of their game.

DUBLIN GAME IS INDEED LIKE A TEST MATCH

The Bulls’ win set up a mouthwatering top-of-the-table clash against top-placed Leinster in Dublin on Friday night. Bulls coach Jake White is talking about it being a test match and in one sense he is certainly right - all the indications are that his opponents will have their Ireland internationals back in action. And that means Leinster will be pretty much a shadow Ireland team as they had 16 players in the Ireland 23 for the last Six Nations game against Scotland.

Leinster did comfortably win against the Bulls in the very first meeting between these sides in the inaugural season, but since then, it has been the Bulls who have prevailed - they notably upset Leinster in the 2021-22 semifinal and then of course they scored what was a record defeat for Leinster at Loftus last season.

Leinster were significantly understrength for that game but they should still be smarting at the ignominy of that moment in their history, and it should add to the motivation for their first-choice players to make a point on Friday night. Although the Bulls are far from being a quasi-Springbok side, the game could still be an interesting appetiser for the July series between the No 1 and No 2 sides in the world on South African soil.

If the Bulls can win away against Leinster, and for a second time, it will certainly help erode any aura of invincibility in an Irish international team that hasn’t lost a game to the Boks since the 2016 series decider in what was then Port Elizabeth and is now Gqeberha.

Regardless of what happens in Dublin though, if the Lions can cement their place in the top eight by beating Ospreys, and the Stormers can maintain their position, South African rugby could derive further confidence ahead of the international season from the state of the URC. At this point, three teams in the top four is not beyond the realms of possibility.

VODACOM UNITED RUGBY CHAMPIONSHIP ROUND 13 FIXTURES

Leinster v Vodacom Bulls (Dublin, Friday 21.35)

Dragons v Zebre (Newport, Friday 21.35)

Benetton v Connacht (Treviso, Saturday 15.00)

Hollywoodbets Sharks v Edinburgh (Durban, Saturday 15.00)

Ospreys v Emirates Lions (Swansea, Saturday 17.05)

DHL Stormers v Ulster (Cape Town, Saturday 19.15)

Scarlets v Glasgow Warriors (Llanelli, Saturday 21.35)

Munster v Cardiff Rugby (Limerick, Saturday 21.35)

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