05 May
SA Super 14 sides lead sin-bin count
The five South African franchises competing in the Super 14 have been responsible for 50% of the yellow and red cards issued to date this season – and the Lions as a team and Bulls flank Deon Stegmann as an individual are the frontrunners in these two categories.
With two of the three red cards in the competition going to Stegmann and Rory Kockott of the Sharks, 27 of the 54 cards (50%) so far issued by referees this year have involved South African players.
The third red card was shown to Highlanders skipper Jimmy Cowan.
Four of the five sides carded most in the season are South African with the Highlanders equalling the poor disciplinary record of the Sharks and Bulls in numbers (six each) but not severity, as the two top South African franchises’ transgressions include red-card offences among their six cards.
Stegmann received his marching orders for a spear tackle and his two sin-binning offences were for repeated technical offences at the breakdown.
Kockott was sent off for punching in Saturday’s match against the Highlanders.
The Lions lag on the log but lead the card race. Their players have been sin-binned nine times – four more than the Sharks and the Bulls, who both have red cards on their records, for a total of six offences.
The Lions’ Ernst Joubert (two yellows), Sharks scrumhalf Kockott (a red and a yellow) and Heinrich Brussow of the Cheetahs (two yellows) were the other South African players with more than one carding offence.
The nine cards shown to Lions players means that they have been one man short for 90 of the 880 minutes they have played in their 11 matches – more than 10% of their playing time.
In total the five South African franchises have played with a player short for 270 minutes, or 6.13%, of the time spent on the field by the five teams – and that excludes the longer time off that the red cards warranted.
Wycliff Palu of the Waratahs and David Hall of the Highlanders have also received two yellows to date.
The side with the best disciplinary record is Western Force, who have not been carded at all, while both the Stormers and the Blues have only been yellow-carded once.
The teams and their cards (all yellow except where indicated) are:
Lions 9
Hurricanes 6
Bulls 5 (1 red)
Sharks 5 (1 red)
Highlanders 5 (1 red)
Cheetahs 5
Crusaders 4
Waratahs 3
Chiefs 3
Reds 3
Brumbies 2
Blues 1
Stormers 1
Source: sport24.co.za
Tags: Super 14, yellow cards








May 6th, 2009 at 3:24 pm
The super14 is a bit of a joke this year! When can we start pumping our local provincial rugby like in the old days.