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Bulls come from behind to beat the Jaguares

Hanro Liebenberg of the Bulls during the Super Rugby match between Vodacom Bulls and Jaguares at Loftus Versfeld on July 07, 2018 in Pretoria, South Africa.
Hanro Liebenberg of the Bulls during the Super Rugby match between Vodacom Bulls and Jaguares at Loftus Versfeld on July 07, 2018 in Pretoria, South Africa.
Image: Johan Rynners/Gallo Images

The Jaguares chose the worst possible time to have their seven-match winning streak when they succumbed to an inaccurate but desperate Bulls side.

Had the Jaguares won in Pretoria‚ they would have gone top of the South African conference ahead of Saturday's final round of league matches but they lost the match 43-34.

A massive march could have been stolen on the Lions (41 points)‚ who would have watched on nervously as a Jaguares triumph could have left them with the worst case scenario of finishing second and the dreaded proposition of an Australasian play-off.

The Jaguares still have the benefit of the late kick-off against the Sharks in Durban where they'll have an idea of whether they should fly across the Atlantic or the Indian Ocean for their play-off.

The Lions can't trust themselves to hold a lead and therefore‚ can't be trusted with the conference leadership position.

John Mitchell's side needed the win to atone for last week's abomination in Singapore where they lost to the Sunwolves but there was plenty room for improvement.

However‚ they will be severely punished by the Lions if they display the first quarter generosity that allowed the Jaguares to get a hefty lead.

Revenge though was well served after the 54-24 battering they received from the same team on May 19.

The Jaguares showed they meant business by taking a 19-0 lead in 19 minutes but somehow‚ they allowed the Bulls to have an undeserved half-time lead.

They didn't even have to work hard for their three tries‚ two of which were converted by flyhalf Nicolas Sanchez.

There was a serious dereliction of defensive duties from as early as the third minute from when Sanchez dotted down in the far right corner.

The initial tackle was missed by lock Ruben van Heerden and the cover defence simply didn't have enough gas and conviction to make the necessary try-saving tackle.

Jaguares captain Pablo Matera waltzed over for the second try two minutes later as the Bulls simply abdicated their tackling responsibilities.

The Jaguares were finding weak shoulders like ships with accurate sonar hunting down submarines in the open ocean.

What was frightening was that the Bulls weren't falling off tackles‚ but seemingly couldn't keep up with the early tempo set by the Jaguares.

It became even messier when Gonzalo Bertranou crossed the whitewash in the 19th minute‚ a try that left the sparse Loftus crowd in shocked silence.

They did well to brave the freezing conditions to support their under-performing team but the shambolic opening quarter did their hard-earned rands no justice.

The Jaguares though are prone to over-elaboration and this worked into the Bulls' favour.

They scored their first try in the 22nd minute through Johnny Kotze‚ who was the recipient of excellent work down the right hand flank by Handre Pollard and Warrick Gelant.

As the first half descended into a litany of errors‚ the Bulls built a good head of steam and scored a very good 35th minute try through scrumhalf Embrose Papier.

The second last pass from Gelant to Hanro Liebenberg looked suspiciously forward but the match officials saw nothing wrong with the offload.

Jesse Kriel then intercepted a pass in the Jaguares 22 and somehow‚ the Bulls were in the lead while the Jaguares had done all the spade work.

The Bulls extended their lead to five points through a 43rd minute penalty but Bertranou completed his brace two minutes later when the Bulls defence again fell asleep.

The hosts though got back into the stride they created for themselves through a 52nd minute Jamba Ulengo try created by a routine Pollard line-break that created space for Ulengo.

The Bulls finally gained some sort of ascendancy five minutes later when Marco van Staden rumbled over from close range after the Bulls had made a dog's breakfast of a lineout. Kotze then played a massive role in Ulengo's 64th minute try that effectively ended the contest.

Bulls (21) 43 Jaguares (19) 34 Scorers: Bulls: Tries: Johnny Kotze‚ Embrose Papier‚ Jesse Kriel‚ Jamba Ulengo (2)‚ Marco van Staden Conversions: Handre Pollard (5) Penalty:

Jaguares: Tries: Nicolas Sanchez‚ Pablo Matera (2)‚ Gonzalo Bertranou (2) Conversions: Sanchez (3) Penalty: Emiliano Boffelli

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