EPaper

Errors are a no-no for Lions overseas, says Van Rooyen

George Byron

More clinical game management will be crucial for the Lions if they want to bag a big haul of log points on their three-match United Rugby Championship (URC) tour, says coach Ivan van Rooyen.

After going down in their first match against the Bulls at Ellis Park, the Lions face a tough game on the road against the Ospreys on Saturday.

After the Ospreys game, they face Cardiff and Edinburgh on a tour that will test their skill and endurance.

“The biggest lesson from our first trip overseas last season was that you are probably going to play against 10-plus internationals in European teams,” said Van Rooyen.

“Their game management and understanding are top notch. So you can’t afford to make errors as we did against the Bulls last week. “We need to be a lot more clinical in terms of game management.

“Ospreys have a handful of British & Irish Lions in their spine, Cardiff are a tough, tough team and Edinburgh will threaten you with speed of play and a massive attacking game as well.

“Pretty much those last 2025 minutes is the area we need to be squeaky clean in the next few weeks.

“Against the Bulls, there were in patches some incredible things happening on attack, defence and in fightback.

“Now we need to fix the small disciplines to stay in the moment and understand the moment.

“In those last 20 minutes, we lost a set piece on our ball and through a little ill-discipline, we gave them penalties.

“They ended up in our 22 and they are probably the best team in the competition in the opponents’ 22,” said Van Rooyen. He said that his team would have to adapt to playing on 4G synthetic pitches in Europe.

“The second and third games are against Cardiff and Edinburgh on the 4G pitches,” said Van Rooyen.

“I wouldn’t say that’s new, but it’s very different from Ellis Park.”

Bulls coach Jake White said that he was happy his team had started their season on a winning note against the Lions before Saturday’s home game against Edinburgh.

“The Bulls opening game would have been one of the Lions’ priorities, and I knew it was always going to be tough,” he said.

“It always is tough at the Lions, and it is a difficult place to win. They play a style that suits them, and it’s a difficult side to break down and get rhythm in your attack.”

SPORT

en-za

2022-09-23T07:00:00.0000000Z

2022-09-23T07:00:00.0000000Z

https://bdmobileapp.pressreader.com/article/282007561257174

Arena Holdings PTY