Currie Cup latest (Thurs)

Currie Cup latest (Thurs)

Keo.co.za brings you the news from the Currie Cup.

Smit snubs Lions

John Smit has committed to the Sharks after turning down a lucrative offer from the Lions.

Smith has re-signed for the coastal union and will play for them in the 2011 Super Rugby competition. Insiders say Smit was offered a large sum to join the Lions, but turned the offer down.

The Bok captain is currently recovering from an operation and will not feature in the Currie Cup play-offs or South Africa’s Grand Slam Tour.

Van Heerden lends Lions bite

Former Bok flanker Wikus van Heerden will start against the Sharks.

Josh Strauss moves to No 8 to accommodate Van Heerden while Warren Whiteley falls out of the match 22.

Lions – 15 Jaco Taute, 14 Jannie Boshoff, 13 Waylon Murray, 12 Doppies La Grange, 11 Michael Killian, 10 Elton Jantjies, 9 Jano Vermaak, 8 Joshua Strauss, 7 Wikus van Heerden, 6 Derick Minnie, 5 Franco van der Merwe (c), 4 George Earle, 3 Ross Geldenhuys, 2 Martin Bezuidenhout, 1 JC Janse van Rensburg.
Subs: 16 Edgar Marutlulle, 17 Wayne Swart, 18 Johan Snyman, 19 Trevor Hall, 20 JP Joubert, 21 Burton Francis, 22 Deon van Rensburg.

Sharks stay the same

John Plumtree has been afforded the luxury of maintaining the same 22 for the Sharks match against the Lions.

Without any injuries in the squad, Plumtree admitted it was the first time in a while he didn’t have to worry about making any changes for the contest at Ellis Park on Saturday.

Sharks – 15. Louis Ludik , 14. Odwa Ndungane, 13. Stefan Terblanche (c), 12. Andries Strauss, 11. Lwazi Mvovo, 10. Patrick Lambie, 9. Charl McLeod, 8. Ryan Kankowski, 7. Willem Alberts, 6. Keegan Daniel, 5. Alistair Hargreaves, 4. Steven Sykes, 3. Eugene van Staden, 2. Craig Burden, 1. Patric Cilliers
Subs: 16. Kyle Cooper, 17. Wiehahn Herbst, 18. Michael Rhodes, 19. Jacques Botes , 20. Rory Kockott, 21. Andre Pretorius, 22. Riaan Swanepoel.

Mapoe worth a million plus

The Cheetahs have put a R1.5 million price tag on Lionel Mapoe.

Despite losing the legal battle to the Cheetahs, Mapoe still refuses to return to Bloemfontein and the Sharks are willing to pay a transfer fee.

However, the Cheetahs, who initially said they won’t accept any transfer fees for the wing, have demanded R1.5 million. This is R500 000 more than what the Bulls paid for Griquas speedster Bjorn Basson.

Bulls did it by the book

The Bulls are confident that they signed wing Bjorn Basson legally from Griquas.

This was according to High Performance manager Ian Schwartz after the Cheetahs announced they will take legal action against Griquas as they were not communicated in the transfer process. The Cheetahs, who pay a part of Basson’s wages, want to keep the wing.

Schwartz believes there should be no reason why the transfer should be stopped as they did it legally. The Bulls paid R1 million for Basson, who will join them on 1 November.

Eagles threaten to strike…again

The SWD Eagles’ players have threatened to boycott Friday’s clash against the Valke unless they are paid.

The players are angry as Saru has stopped all its funding to the union until the political infighting is resolved. Without Saru’s funding, the Eagles can’t afford to pay all their players.

The Eagles are second on the First Division log and this weekend’s match in George is supposed to be broadcast on TV.


110 Comments

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  • 101.grant10: Reply to this comment

    the master plan is in motion

    plod on way out

    succession planning….

    matter of time

  • 102.Heavens Game: Reply to this comment

    @gunther(gunther)-98: try premiership.co.uk

  • 103.Don't click on the reply button or you will be moderated: Reply to this comment

    @Grant: Isn’t next week the week for DIV?

  • 104.grant10: Reply to this comment

    stormersboy

    28th review for pdv

    i know bloggers will disagree, but this lod omission from eoyt a great opportunity for pdv to become the ‘boss man ‘…..get out of the shadow of Plod….start making the tough calls….best thing for pdv….mark my words.

  • 105.gunther: Reply to this comment

    @Heavens Game(Heavens Game)-104:

    yep that’s awesome if I want to know how many times rio ferdinand had his nappy changed last season.

  • 106.Don't click on the reply button or you will be moderated: Reply to this comment

    Grant

    I actually agree with you. As you know I’m a big JS fan, but what if this is the end? We need to know what our options are. We also need some more experience in the depth positions, like flyhalf, hooker (esp. if Bissie isn’t fit), and the tour is a good way of introducing them in a less “Smit-like” environment.

    But personally I’m no longer a PDV fan. Playing our players like he did, overplaying them in spite of knowing how much over the limit they already were was too much for me. That was a very unprofessional move, willing to sacrifice for a short term result that didn’t happen anyway.

    I think he’ll take VIC with him, I just don’t see him having another plan at this stage of the game. Maybe he’ll surprise me but that’s ok. I’ll hapily eat my words

  • 107.Heavens Game: Reply to this comment

    @gunther(gunther)-105: sorry, brainfart

    premiershiprugby.com

  • 108.Transformation: Reply to this comment

    @Heavens Game(Heavens Game)-107: hey Banshee’s Toy, here’s something that might interest you.

    Ethnic labelling still part of life in SA –
    Swartz

    2010/09/23
    Khanyi Ndabeni

    RACIAL or ethnic labelling is still a part of
    everyday life in South Africa, Nelson
    Mandela Metropolitan University vice-
    chancellor Prof Derrick Swartz said in Port
    Elizabeth last night.

    This was despite the clearest commitment to
    create a non-racial, democratic society as
    envisaged in the Constitution, he said in a
    public lecture at the Red Location Museum. It
    was part of the museum ’s series of Heritage
    Month debates.

    Touching on South Africa’s racial history,
    Swartz described multiculturalism as the
    recognition, acceptance and promotion of
    culturally diverse social norms in public
    institutional life.

    “The association of multiculturalism with
    apartheid might seem odd, if not perverse
    at first sight, given their starkly different
    aims.

    “Apartheid was based on the separation of
    people. It was conceived as culturally and
    socially incompatible for them to exist
    within the same geographical and
    institutional spaces. Multiculturalism is an
    idea born of an expressed commitment to
    enjoin cultural popularity within the same
    spatial and institutional contexts. Their
    political motives are quite different, ” Swartz
    told the audience.

    Since 1994, he said, the problem with group
    identity was whether its purpose was to
    represent individual life choices and beliefs
    in all aspects of identity, and if the
    autonomy of the individual was subsumed
    under a group.

    “This presents a significant problem if the
    bases of the assumed group formation are
    based on ‘racial’ grounds, seen as political
    communities. Not only would this reinforce
    what many consider to be a relic of racist
    19th century evolutionary biology – the
    idea that there actually exist different ‘races’
    – but it would also politicise these groups
    into political communities.

    “This is best illustrated in our current use of
    ethnic categories as legal categories of
    social recognition. These categories have
    been inherited from the apartheid era. They
    are now used as not only markers of social
    recognition, but as indicators of social
    advantage or disadvantage.”

    He said while there was ample evidence that
    affirmative action and equity measures
    taken in the past 16 years had hugely
    shifted the demographic patterns of
    employment and resource distribution to
    those previously discriminated against,
    most public and many private institutions
    did not look to function along the same
    racially defined lines as in the past.

    “Yet theses advances cannot be disputed.
    The use of these categories has also tended
    to reinforce group identities that make
    nation-building deeply problematic, ” Swartz
    said.

  • 109.Mighty Horua: Reply to this comment

    let all the untransformed vile f.off to the mud island and the swamp they call holland. Klabekke is contributing f.all to this country. Oh wait some dude in america invented something and the afriforum memberr claims it

  • 110.Mighty Horua: Reply to this comment

    These NP Afriforum keo members spoeg everyday their racist volkstaat swine kaka

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