Edinburgh v Sharks: Five takeaways as Makazole Mapimpi snatches unlikely victory while Jamie Ritchie sends ANOTHER Lions message

Adam Kyriacou
Makazole Mapimpi scored at the death for the Sharks.

Makazole Mapimpi scored at the death for the Sharks.

Following an 18-17 victory for the Sharks against Edinburgh in the United Rugby Championship (URC), here’s our five takeaways from the clash at Hive Stadium.

The top line

The Sharks will be mightily relieved to escape Edinburgh with four points as a last-ditch Makazole Mapimpi score saw them snatch a crucial victory despite being second best.

John Plumtree’s men had been behind since the 11th minute and the hosts were inches away from picking up a maximum before the visitors launched one last foray downfield.

Earlier, Edinburgh scored tries through James Lang, Jamie Ritchie and Ewan Ashman but Ross Thompson could only convert one of those, the latter from his hardy hooker.

The Sharks hung on in there and somehow remained within touching distance thanks to Aphelele Fassi’s try on 41 minutes before Mapimpi sealed a dramatic away success.

Jamie Ritchie shines once again

The Scotland international just keeps on putting in high quality performance after high quality performance for both club and country and this tonight was of the same ilk.

Ritchie was everywhere for his team and it is the all-court game that most impresses us as he mixed the dark arts and breakdown work with his attacking link play further wide.

He got his reward when scoring in the 28th minute after a perfect one-two with Matt Currie and seemed to relish facing this Bok-heavy pack in front of him. Lions worthy?

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Andre the giant

A hulking performance from the inside centre as defensively he was excellent, utilising his considerable size to halt Edinburgh or at worst limit their gainline success in attack.

He pounced for two breakdown penalties in the opening half before in the second he was a brick wall as three Edinburgh players attempted and failed to make the try-line.

In a match when few Sharks covered themselves in glory, especially with ball in hand, Player of the Match Andre Esterhuizen really stood up and was counted in a key win.

Captain’s example

Eben Etzebeth simply must do a lot better in terms of his discipline as a skipper as his yellow card early in the second half for a scuffle with Sam Skinner was unnecessary.

The whistle had blown when he threw his weight into the Scotland forward and thus followed pushing and shoving that ultimately saw Etzebeth pull Skinner to the ground.

The melee followed of course before the pair were yellow carded but during their walk to the near touchline it looked very much as though things could boil over once more.

Etzebeth has to separate this negative part of his game from the physical aspects he brings and also set a better example, as his team-mates were similarly guilty of this.

Unfortunate Edinburgh

Edinburgh will be wondering how they did not win this game as they were the better side for the majority of a pulsating contest and can take plenty from this URC defeat.

That will no doubt mean very little to Sean Everitt’s outfit but the shoots are there for a positive run-in, this despite them missing several players due to injury at the moment.

They bested a team that had 12 Springboks in their starting line-up in all but the final scoreboard as a slick attacking game and stoic defence were on show throughout.

Edinburgh have Zebre away next and simply must bounce back with a win and if they do their top eight hopes will be back on track before the Challenge Cup semi with Bath.

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