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Johannesburg - Western Province got their Currie Cup campaign back on track with a resounding 38-23 victory over the Lions at Ellis Park on Saturday afternoon.

The Lions led 13-10 at the break.

Province outscored the home team by five tries to two, but more importantly showed that, although they were nowhere near their best, they could threaten at the business end of the competition.

Speedy left wing Zhahier Ryland was the hat-trick hero for the visitors, whenever the diminutive left-winger touched the ball he set pulses racing. He was named man-of-the-match.

Both teams were guilty of squandering possession
The first half was dull, but the second exploded into action and ultimately made for an absorbing encounter.

The Lions took the lead in the 3rd minute via a Tiaan Snyman penalty. Province though replied soon after when flyhalf Peter Grant levelled matters in the 7th minute.

Both teams were guilty of squandering possession in the opening quarter and the sparse crowd had little to shout about.

Whenever a move became promising it inevitably came to nought due to a plethora of dropped passes and wrong options. The defence of both teams more than did their respective duties and played a role in the fact that it took a further 18 minutes before the scorers were troubled.

It came from turnover ball when rapid Ryland, from Bo Kaap in Cape Town, snapped up the loose ball on his 10m line and kicked ahead.

He showed his blistering pace, beating both Wylie Human and a desperate Snyman before dotting down. Grant kicked the extras and the visitors led 10-3.

The Lions were stung into action and replied with their first try virtually from the re-start. Captain Wikus van Heerden, who had a fine game throughout, burst through the defensive line and fed Jorrie Muller who went over under the poles. Snyman's conversion again drew the teams level.

Grant missed a 33rd minute penalty attempt before Snyman kicked his team into the halftime lead with a late long-range penalty.

He increased that lead by three points four minutes into the second half, but it did not last long as the visitors hit their straps in spectacular style moments later.

A purple patch between the 51st and 58th minutes yielded three fabulous tries and took Province from 16-10 down to 31-16 ahead. The pick of that trio was undoubtedly the third to 23-year-old Ryland whose impressive turn of speed flummoxed Human, again.

Lions coach Frans Ludeke brought Nel Fourie on at flyhalf, but it was too little too late and the writing was already on the wall.

Oginga Siwundla did get his team's second try with 10 minutes left, but Ryland put the final nail in the coffin with his third three minutes from time.

Point-scorers:
LIONS 23 (13): Tries: Jorrie Muller, Oginga Siwundla. Conversions: Tiaan Snyman (1), Nel Fourie (1). Penalties: Snyman (3).

WESTERN PROVINCE 38 (10): Tries: Zhahier Ryland (3), Tonderai Chavhanga, De Wet Barry. Conversions: Peter Grant (5). Penalties:

Grant (1). - Sapa
Durban - In a tough, bruising and uncompromising Absa Currie Cup rugby encounter in Durban on Saturday, the Free State Cheetahs muscled their way to a 29-18 victory to end the unbeaten run of the Sharks.

Yet in the final analysis it was the Sharks who scored three tries to two, but were blown away by the accurate goal kicking of Free State flyhalf Willem de Waal. De Waal slotted two conversions and five penalty goals - two of them from long range - for a tally of 19 points.

In contrast Shark flyhalf Ruan Pienaar succeeded with only one out of his four shots at the posts.

But with the Lions having also lost a cross-section game to Western Province earlier in the day, the Sharks remain as contenders for one of the two top places in the Currie Cup log heading for the semi-finals.

High penalty count cause for concern
Pienaar and Deon Carstens scored two tries inside of three minutes early in the second half to put the home side into the lead 13-9, but in the end the Cheetahs replied with two of their own.

The first went to Ryno van der Merwe who took advantage of some slack defence on the part of the Sharks.

The second was the result of an extraordinary piece of soccer dribbling skill by wing Eddie Fredericks, that probably would have had him being offered a Bafana Bafana contract on the spot.

Thereafter it was De Waal who settled the issue.

In between there was some rugged defence on the part of both sides and some massive hits. Substitute forward Loutjie Louw got the Sharks third try on the whistle but it was too late.

A cause for concern though in the Sharks camp must be the high penalty count against them and too few in their favour on the day.

Scorers:
Cheetahs 29 (9)

Tries Van der Merwe, Fredericks, Conversions De Waal (2) Penalties De Waal (5)

Sharks 18 (3)

Tries: Pienaar, Carstens, Louw. Penalties Pienaar (1) - Sapa
Wellington - Griquas won an unimpressive Currie Cup Premier Division match in Wellington on Saturday when they beat Boland 36-20.

Griquas led 21-8 at halftime.

Boland came up short in every department of the game and were completely outplayed on the day. Boland fullback Justin Peach had a nightmare with the boot missing no less than four attempts at the posts.

The home side upped their performance in the second half, but will have to improve their performance twofold when they face the Leopards in Potchefstroom next Friday.

Griquas left with a valuable bonus point after crossing over for four tries.

Scores
Griquas:
Tries: Dries Scholtz (centre), Vuyani Dlomo (wing, 2), Gareth Krause (flank). Conversions: Tiger Mangweni (fullback, 2). Penalties: Quinton van Tonder (flyhalf), Mangweni (3).

Boland:
Tries: Tommy Dixon (prop), Jonghi Nokwe (wing), Rayno Benjamin (wing). Conversion: Justin Peach (fullback). Penalty:

Justin Peach (fullback).
Less than 30 minutes after they had been outfoxed by Western Province at Ellis Park on Saturday and beaten 36-23, the faces of Frans Ludeke and Wikus van Heerden told different stories.

Ludeke was looking ahead and Van Heerden was bitterly reflecting on a lost chance by a team that knows better and can play with more discipline.

The Lions, the form team in the Absa Currie Cup if you are to believe the hype that has surrounded them these past weeks, faltered when they had the
opportunity to secure a place in the semifinals.

Pressure, it has to be said, cooked them and they fumbled and fudged their way through the match, frustrated and confused by a defence led with
authority by returning Springbok De Wet Barry.

The race for the Absa Currie Cup semifinals is not over, but the Holy Grail of a home semifinal has edged a little further away.

They are second in Section X of this truncated and silly phase of the Currie Cup, three points behind the Blue Bulls, who won on Friday night, but, in these desperate financial times, a home semifinal is worth a small but much-needed fortune.

There is still every chance they can play at home in the semis, said Ludeke. “The only thing we can do is focus on the next game. If we start worrying about the game we lost then we definitely won’t make it. That’s negative pressure and you make more mistakes and you start panicking and we won’t panic.”

The most significant thing that happened at Ellis Park on Saturday afternoon was the emergence of Zhahier Ryland, the quickest man in South Africa, according to tests, who scored a hat-trick. Two of RylandÂ’s tries were from breakaways and one from a set move, but the pace of the man struck fear into the Lions and brought a knowing grin from Province coach Kobus van der Merwe and his captain, Neil de Kock.

“He’s an exciting talent,” said De Kock, “to lay a hand on him is quite difficult. He’s a very exciting prospect with ball in hand. If we can create opportunities for him, especially when it comes to turnovers and he gets the ball in space, then he’s very dangerous. He’s got a massive future ahead of him.”

“He came through our club system,” elaborated Van der Merwe. “Last year he played in the Vodacom Cup, but didn’t feature in the Currie Cup squad.

“This year again he played in the Vodacom Cup and we phased him into the Currie Cup team in the friendlies and the qualifying stages. With Egon (Seconds) not 100 per cent on top of his game, he’s not quite where we want him to be, and Tonderai’s position being on the right wing, Zahier hasn’t let us down in the competition so far.

“We knew that the Lions are playing a much more enterprising game than they did in the friendly match earlier this year,” added Van der Merwe.

“We thought that if we could control field position and not make errors in our area, then we could get turnovers because they try to move the ball around so quickly.
Hendrik Gerber was absolutely awesome today. We got two good tries from turnovers, which we expected.”

“It was a good defence,” said Van Heerden. “They closed us down well and when you look at the amount of big hits they put in compared to ours, it shows the speed with which they came off the line. It wasn’t something we weren’t prepared for.

“Yeah, they were close to the offside line, but I think we put ourselves under pressure by playing too deep. We should have kept our structure better. We know that Province are one of the better sides off broken play and we gave them those opportunities.”