The English champions have not been able to triumph on the road in defence of their title this season, but they choose Pretoria, of all places, the most inhospitable of venues, home of the most abrasive of teams, to notch up a first away win. They do so with a bonus point to complete the opening two matches of their Champions Cup campaign with a maximum haul.
Quite how they did it defies analysis, other than to say this was a classic ambush. Hardly any ball, hardly any territory, but an absolute masterclass of obdurate defence in the face of an onslaught, allied with deadly accuracy when offered any glimpse of an opportunity. It helped that the Bulls, struggling to rediscover their form of last season, were all fingers and thumbs – very large fingers and thumbs – butchering chance after chance. They smashed Northampton at scrum-time in the first half, Emmanuel Iyogun shown a yellow card just before the break, but could do nothing with it.
Indeed, it was Northampton who snatched a try just after he had gone, turning over a loose Bulls lineout, before Alex Mitchell tapped and went when the Bulls infringed, darting and feeding Juarno Augustus a couple of phases later to send the No 8 over for Saints’ second and an outrageous 12-7 half-time lead.
Those of us of a more conservative bent held our head in our hands when Mitchell tapped that eminently kickable penalty, but the maestro had seen something beyond our ken. It was part of a tour de force by the England scrum-half, back from injury. Perhaps the Saints’ fortunes will turn in the Premiership too.
The Bulls were seething after their second-half capitulation to Saracens last Saturday in the freezing wind and rain of Barnet. At home, the temperature was in the 30s and the reading on the altimeter well beyond a kilometre. It seemed the Bulls themselves were as thrown by the contrast as their visitors.
They crossed early, but Devon Williams’s try was chalked off for obstruction, and they otherwise bludgeoned and fumbled their way to a scoreless half an hour, which meant a scoreless 100 minutes, if we include their barren 70 against Saracens. George Furbank left the field with a nasty looking arm injury, but his replacement, George Hendy, cut a beautiful line off Fin Smith to open the scoring with his first touch. Marcell Coetzee replied almost immediately, galloping home for the Bulls’ first, which set up those match-turning moments before half-time.
Northampton rode the opening eight minutes of the second half without Iyogun, before Smith extended their lead with a penalty. On the hour, Mitchell pulled off a classy 50-22. From the lineout Curtis Langdon fed Tommy Freeman on the charge for Saints’ third.
Cameron Hanekom, the feisty No 8, replied with the first of an identikit double in the final quarter, charging from the base of another dominant scrum. He did it again with 10 minutes to go to move Bulls to within a point, but Smith’s penalty, from just short of halfway, wide on the right, gave Saints some breathing space.
Finally, they claimed the bonus point and the win, when Rory Hutchinson’s delayed pass sent Freeman to the corner for his second.