Du Preez Steps into the 10 Shirt as Sale Navigate Ford Absence for Glasgow Clash
The Investec Champions Cup arrives at the CorpAcq Stadium on Friday night, but for Sale Sharks, a familiar face will occupy a pivotal, unfamiliar role. With England fly-half George Ford ruled out of their Pool One opener against Glasgow Warriors, the spotlight falls squarely on Rob du Preez, who makes a strategic shift from inside centre to command the number 10 jersey. This late reshuffle, forced upon Director of Rugby Alex Sanderson, transforms a high-stakes European fixture into a compelling test of squad depth and tactical adaptability.
Sale’s preparations are shadowed by the absence of key international talent. Alongside Ford, the powerful young prop Asher Opoku-Fordjour is also unavailable, depleting Sale’s resources for a bruising encounter with a Glasgow side known for its ferocious physicality. The 27-26 home Premiership loss to Exeter last weekend, a match where Du Preez lined up in the centres, already highlighted fine margins. Now, Sanderson must recalibrate his backline against one of Europe’s most in-form teams, turning a potential crisis into an opportunity for a player intimately familiar with the Sharks’ DNA.
The Du Preez Pivot: From Power Runner to Playmaker
Rob du Preez is no stranger to the fly-half berth. In fact, he amassed over 600 points for the club primarily from that position before Ford’s arrival. However, his recent tenure at inside centre has redefined his role, leveraging his formidable carrying power and defensive heft in the midfield channels. Shifting him one position inward is not a desperate gamble, but a calculated recall to a familiar function.
The challenge lies in the nuance. At 12, Du Preez’s responsibilities are more direct: crash ball, distributing off second phase, and providing a secondary kicking option. At 10 against Glasgow, he must become the primary game manager. His tasks expand exponentially:
- Controlling Territory: His boot will be crucial in a likely wet-weather battle, challenging Glasgow’s back three and turning their powerful forwards.
- Unleashing the Backline: He must seamlessly connect with the likely centre partnership of Sam James and Rohan Janse van Rensburg, ensuring Sale’s potent outside backs see quality ball.
- Game Management: Navigating the big moments—when to press for points, when to pin Glasgow back—will be paramount against a side that thrives on tempo.
His familiarity with the systems and players is a huge advantage. “He’s run this ship before,” Alex Sanderson will likely affirm. The question is whether the muscle memory of playmaking can instantly override the more simplified, abrasive instincts of a centre.
Glasgow’s Onslaught: A Brutal Litmus Test
Sale’s reshuffle could not have come against a more demanding opponent. Glasgow Warriors, under Franco Smith, have developed into a relentless, multi-phase machine. They arrive with a game built on high-speed possession and brutal breakdown efficiency, led by the likes of Scotland flanker Rory Darge.
They will undoubtedly target the Du Preez channel, testing his defensive organization and communication from the front line early and often. The absence of Opoku-Fordjour also pressures Sale’s scrum, a traditional area of strength, turning the set-piece into a critical battleground. Glasgow’s half-back pairing of George Horne and Tom Jordan (or the experienced Duncan Weir) will look to play at a pace designed to disrupt Sale’s restructured playmaking axis.
For Sale, the mission is clear: impose their physical identity. Even without Ford’s pinpoint tactical kicking, the Sharks must dominate the gainline through their forward pack, featuring the Curry brothers and the immense Emmanuel Iyogun. They must manufacture the front-foot ball that makes any fly-half’s job easier, turning Du Preez from a creator under pressure to a conductor of a powerful, direct orchestra.
Key Battles and Tactical Implications
The individual duels across the park will decide whether Sale’s adaptation is successful.
- The Breakdown War: Tom Curry vs. Rory Darge. This is ground zero. If Sale can secure quick ruck ball, Du Preez’s task simplifies. If Glasgow slow it down and win turnovers, the pressure on the Sale 10 becomes immense.
- The Kicking Chess Match: Without Ford, the territorial kicking duties will be shared between Du Preez, full-back Joe Carpenter, and scrum-half Gus Warr. Their collective accuracy must be exceptional to handle the threat of Glasgow’s back-three counter-attack.
- Midfield Power vs. Guile: If Du Preez’s direct running is now from first-receiver, who provides the subtlety? Sam James’s distribution skills at 12 become even more vital as a linking player to exploit any spaces out wide.
Alex Sanderson may also instruct a simplified, territory-first game plan, relying on mauls and pressure to accumulate points, reducing the creative burden on his new fly-half. This would be a pragmatic approach for a must-win home fixture in a brutally competitive pool.
Prediction: A Forge of Character for Sale
European nights at the CorpAcq are defined by grit, noise, and northern defiance. This fixture, layered with unforeseen adversity, is set to be a classic of that genre. Glasgow are favourites on form; their cohesive, settled side contrasts sharply with Sale’s late reshuffle.
However, write off Sale Sharks at your peril. The return of key leaders like Tom Curry bolsters the pack’s intensity, and Rob du Preez possesses the innate talent and big-match temperament for this challenge. His performance will be the defining narrative.
Expect a ferocious, error-strewn, and emotionally charged arm-wrestle. Home advantage, the desperate need to start their European campaign with a win, and a collective desire to overcome the odds should see Sale through—but only just. We predict a narrow, hard-fought victory for the Sharks, built on forward dominance and defensive resolve rather than backline flair. A scoreline in the vein of 22-19 or 24-20 feels likely, a result that would be celebrated not for its beauty, but for the sheer character required to achieve it.
Conclusion: More Than Just a Stand-In
Friday night under the Salford lights is about more than one positional change. It is a statement game for Sale Sharks’ squad resilience and for Rob du Preez as a footballer. Successfully navigating Ford’s absence against a contender like Glasgow would send a powerful message to the rest of Europe: this is a squad with depth and fortitude.
For Du Preez, this is a chance to remind the rugby world of his pedigree as a game-controller, to evolve his game by blending the power of a modern centre with the vision of a fly-half. The Investec Champions Cup is the ultimate proving ground, and this unexpected twist has set the stage for a personal and collective examination. Tune in for what promises to be a compelling, brutal, and defining chapter in Sale Sharks’ European journey.
Source: Based on news from BBC Sport.
Image: Source – Original Article
