Springbok Duo Charge Cell C Sharks To Shock Leinster
They are the dynamic and history-making duo
that ignited the 2019 World Cup final and combined to score the first ever
Springboks try in a World Cup final. For the Cell C Sharks to have any chance
of short-circuiting Leinster's Vodacom United Rugby Championship season,
Lukhanyo Am and Makazole Mapimpi have to be at their electric best. Leinster are unbeaten at home this season, with
a 22-all draw against defending champions the DHL Stormers the only blemish
when playing in Dublin. Everything favours a Leinster win, but a year
ago it also did when the Vodacom Bulls came calling in the semi-finals. The Vodacom Bulls scored a stunning upset. Rugby is a game traditionally won up front, but
every so often victory is fashioned because of the genius of a strike runner or
two. In Am and Mapimpi, the Cell C Sharks have two of the best in the world. The visitors have experienced an
indifferent season and lost matches they were expected to win, given the
quality of their squad. Injuries have hurt them. There is no Siya Kolisi and
Eben Etzebeth, but what they have lost in these two iconic Springbok forwards,
they have gained through the availability of Am and Mapimpi. Statistically, the strikes must come from these
two while the rest of the team must accept they will be on a constant gainline
collision course. To win in Dublin, players leave exhausted, battered and
elated. Few teams have experienced the euphoria, but most can describe the
battering and exhaustion. To illustrate Leinster’s excellent form at
home, they ended the league phase with a points-difference of +197, scoring 53
tries while conceding just 21. It would seem a lost cause, but the visitors
will take confidence that a Vodacom Bulls team that needed a last minute drop
goal to beat them in last season's semi-finals, did it. Aiding the Cell C Sharks in the recent return
of several Springboks, who were available to play for the last three rounds
after an international training camp. Neither Am nor Makazole Mapimpi were in Dublin
in October when the Cell C Sharks put up a brave fighting effort in a 54-34
reverse, conceding three tries in the last 15 minutes. Now, the two Boks backs will be aiming to make
a difference, as they have often done for South Africa in the biggest games. Best friends off the field, Am and Mapimpi form
a potent centre-wing combination on it. Am is the epitome of cool, calm and
collected, balancing out Mapimpi’s aggressive and high-energy approach. The two first started playing together at the
Eastern Cape-based Border Bulldogs in the first division of South Africa’s
Currie Cup, and their career paths eventually led to the Cell C Sharks. Both
have flourished since moving to Durban, the power of the partnership best
highlighted in 2019 when they combined for that first Bok World Cup final five
pointer. When asked about their relationship, Mapimpi
said: “Lukhanyo is a very good friend, you know it’s been a long journey
between the two of us. “He’s someone I trust and we’re very honest
with each other. If we make a mistake, or do something wrong, we aren’t afraid
to tell each other. But it’s done in a good way. “It’s important to have that sort of
relationship, and it keeps us honest. I’ve been very grateful to play with him,
and it’s also people like him who I think are an inspiration for other youngsters
back in the Eastern Cape.” Am’s no-look pass to Mapimpi against England in
the 2019 Rugby World Cup final demonstrated the trust the two share on the
field, as Am could easily have tried to run the ball in himself. The British & Irish Lions were the next
team to feel the ‘Am-pimpi’ pain, as both players scored a try in the second of
the three Tests to help South Africa bounce back from a series-opening loss in
Cape Town in 2021. They have owned rugby's biggest international
stage on a wondrous South African night in Japan in 2019 and on Saturday they
could own a Dublin stage that in recent years has never been kind to
visitors. But, if you want someone to crash a rugby
party, send in the 'Am-pimpi' pairing. You only have to ask England about the
duo and that night in Japan four years ago.
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