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Why Jake White believes this is Bulls' season to win URC title

David Kriel reacts to Bulls' URC final loss to Glasgow last June (Photo by Lee Warren/Gallo Images via Getty Images)

Jake White has outlined why he believes his Vodacom Bulls are now better equipped than ever to push for the BKT URC title. White’s team have twice fallen at the last hurdle in the first three years of the competition, losing finals to the DHL Stormers and Glasgow Warriors.

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For a variety of reasons, though, he feels they are in the best shape yet going into a campaign which for them begins on Saturday when they take on Edinburgh at Pretoria’s Loftus Versfeld. “Everyone in our circles would accept we have exceeded our expectations in the first three seasons having played in two URC finals, given we have had a very young and inexperienced squad,” he said.

“But we have made some good additions to our squad who have blended in nicely and we also now have eight or nine players in the Springbok set-up for the first time in a long while.

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“We have had relatively inexperienced players like Ruan Nortje, Elrigh Louw and Canan Moodie winning two Tests in a row against the All Blacks. The kind of confidence and learning they will have got there will help us going into big games and play-off matches in the URC where we need to win.

“In a short space of time, literally three URC campaigns, we have got nine players in the South Africa squad. That will make us so much stronger because we can almost pick a Springbok in every position now, which is a great situation to be in when you want to win this competition.”

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White also pointed to a recruitment drive that has seen the likes of second rows Cobus Wiese (Sale) and Sintu Manjezi (Glasgow), flanker Nama Xaba (Stormers) and prop Alulutho Tshakweni (Cheetahs) come on board, along with former Hollywoodbets Sharks backs Boeta Chamberlain and Aphiwe Dyantyi.

“You look for the right kind of player as a person, someone who fits into the way your club wants to develop,” he said. “We are very fortunate that we have added much more seasoned campaigners, guys like Aphiwe Dyantyi, who is coming in as a Springbok winger, a guy like Cobus Wiese coming in as a seasoned Premiership player and you saw what Akker van der Merwe did last year joining from Sale, you saw what Marcel Coetzee did coming back from overseas at Ulster.

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“The secret is making sure you get the balance between youth and experience and I would say this year is probably the closest we have been to the ideal combination we are looking for. We have got youngsters like Cameron Hanekom and we have got the middle age group sorted as well, which will make us much stronger and allow us to have much more depth in our squad selections.”

After beating Benetton and Leinster in the play-off quarter and semi-finals at the end of last season, the Bulls just came up short in the final at Loftus, losing 21-16 to Glasgow. “I reflected a lot with the group after the final and what really hit me and what hit the squad was we underestimated the value of playing,” said White.

“In the last game of the regular season, we played the Sharks who had a really strong Springbok-laden group. We then played Benetton that have a majority of the Italy players, then Leinster who have the majority of the Ireland players and then we played Glasgow who have lots and lots of international players as well.

“The collective attrition and the collective effort it took to play four consecutive games like that took it out of us in the final match. You wouldn’t play South Africa, Italy, Ireland and Scotland with the same group of players and you wouldn’t expect to win all those games.

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“That’s why I am talking about the depth in our squad, about the additions we have made to our team and about the average age of the group going up. That’s why I am mentioning Springboks guys that have now become a little bit more gun-hardened.

“Last season went well, the planning worked spot on, we got a home final. I think what happened in the last game was a collective thing of what happened in the last month of the tournament.

“It was probably a bridge too far, but I’m hoping that with the squad we have now we will be a little bit tougher to last four weeks at that level and we will also be able to change the squad around in the season, so we don’t lose our legs in the back end of the competition.”

White concluded: “Things that worked we will keep the same and when we need to change, we will change. Everyone in our club would be on the same page that we have exceeded where we should be up to now.

“This will be a nice time for us to kick on and actually learn from the lessons we have had over the last three years. I’m looking forward to seeing how we can kick on from last season. It’s very exciting times for the Bulls.”

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Comments

6 Comments
P
Petrus78 79 days ago

I'm a big Bulls fan in good and bad times.....but Jake White always has a good excuse to give....your a great coach Jake....but time for talking is over , it's now or never for the Bulls....stop concentrating on writing articles on other teams and start concentrating on winning silverware with the Bulls

S
SK 84 days ago

Reckon they start a little weaker than last year. More players in the Springboks mean more time spent without their number one combinations. Arendse is also off to Japan and Dyanti is not half the player he once was. If they can get through the first 6 weeks with 4 or 5 wins then it sets them up. Very important for them to get through the first 2 at home and then a tough tour in that time.

T
Teddy 84 days ago

Chokers.

B
Bull Shark 84 days ago

Jake White just can’t help but shoot his mouth off.


How about letting the winning do the talking. Quietly get on with it?


This ou suffers from serious verbal diarrhea.

F
Flankly 83 days ago

Yes. Jake should leave the commenting to the commentators, and put his energies into the details of the campaign. He can be a commentator when he is done with coaching, as Nick Mallett has done.


In the mean time focus on continuous improvement, from game to game. The score will take care of itself, and so will tournament results.

E
Ed the Duck 84 days ago

For sure, his whining post final was pretty pathetic. Ofc Glasgow had an easy run, only the Stormers, Munster away and late travel for a scattered squad to play the Bulls at altitude…

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Mzilikazi 1 hour ago
Does the next Wallabies coach have to be an Australian?

Great read on a fascinating topic, Nick. Thanks as always.


My gut feel is that Joe Schmidt won't carry on through to the next RWC. He is at the stage, and age, in his life , that a further two years in a very high pressure coaching job would not be a good thing for either himself or his family. The fact that he remains based in Taupo seems a significant pointer, I would have thought. I believe he has a round trip of 12 hrs driving just to get on a plane to Australia.


Amongst the many good things Joe Schmidt has achieved to this point is that the WB's are now a more enticing prospect to coach going forward.


Tbh, the only Australian coach I would see stepping up and developing the WB's further would be Les Kiss. He has far more in his CV than any other Australian. He now has 23 years of coaching Union,starting with a defence role with the Boks, then back to Australia with the Waratahs. Overseas again for nine years in Ireland, which included 5 years as defence coach with the national team, during which he was interim head coach for two games, both wins. His last years in Ireland were with Ulster, even then a team beginning a decline. So that spell was his least successful. Finally the spell with London Irish, where I felt Kiss was doing very well, till the club collapsed financially.


Of the other Australian options, Dan McKellar has a lot to prove post the year with Leicester. Stephen Larkham has not, in my view, yet shown outstanding qualities as a coach. Nether man has anything close to Kiss's experience. Some may see this as being harsh on both men, ignoring good work they have done. But is how I see it.


Looking outside Australia, I would see Vern Cotter as a strong possibility, if interested. His time with Scotland was outstanding. Ronan O'Gara, I would think, might well be another possibility, though he has no international experience. Jake White ? Maybe .

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