Fiji Sun

Canterbury win 14th national provincial title

- Christchur­ch: -Rugby Heaven -AAP Feedback: leonec@fijisun.com.fj

“Not again.” You can just about hear everyone outside of Canterbury muttering the words after the red and blacks emphatical­ly beat Tasman 35-13 last night to win the Mitre 10 Cup premiershi­p.

It was their third straight title, ninth in 10 years and 14th in history. Only Auckland (16) has won more, but Canterbury’s dynasty is fast closing in. Canterbury first-five eighth Richie Mo’unga put on a clinic at AMI Stadium, scoring two quite remarkable individual tries and showing exactly why All Blacks coach Steve

Hansen is keeping a close eye on him.

Last week, while providing injury cover for the All Blacks, he was a nervous wreck in a Brisbane hotel room as he watched the red and blacks win their semifinal against North Harbour.

Not making Hansen’s 37-strong squad for the northern tour had a silver lining - he didn’t have to go through something similar.

A year after he scored two tries in last year’s 43-27 win against Tasman in the final, the visitors must have been ruing his availabili­ty.

Particular­ly after his second try - a sparkling 48m dash after fielding a kick - put Canterbury 12-10 up after 25 minutes.

Mo’unga, who gassed half the Makos on his way to the line, finished with 25 points, and chalked up 143 metres on 17 carries. His 25-point haul also surpassed former Canterbury first-five Tom Taylor’s (23 points) record for most points scored in an NPC final. The defeat marked Tasman’s third finals defeat since 2014, when they came up agonisingl­y short against Taranaki.

With a handy breeze behind them in the first half, a 19-13 halftime deficit is the last thing Tasman coach Leon MacDonald would have wanted. But that’s precisely what happened after Canterbury vice-captain and centre Tim Bateman crashed over as the halftime hooter rang out into the fresh Christchur­ch night.

Mo’unga bashed over three penalties to put Canterbury 28-13 up after 65 minutes, as the visitors, who at one stage defended 35 consecutiv­e phases, struggled with their set piece. Their lineout was particular­ly wonky and cost them a bunch of opportunit­ies, while their scrum also struggled against the much vaunted home side’s pack.

Tasman weren’t helped by losing bruising flanker Jordan Taufua at halftime, who finally succumbed to what appeared to be a shoulder injury.

Melbourne:

The glamour girl of Australian racing galloped her way into equine immortalit­y when Winx scored her third Cox Plate win, equalling the feat of Kingston Town.

But Chris Waller’s wonder mare was forced to dig deep and almost to the bottom of her reserves to fight off the gallant run of Humidor, who came closer than any other horse in Winx’s three triumphs to defeating her.

An emotional Waller choked back the tears as he described his happiness at clinching this rarely seen feat with a galloper who has now stretched her winning sequence to 22 races.

Godolphin challenger Folkswood fared best of the rest and finished third ahead of the three-year-old Royal Symphony in the famous $3 million weightfor-age event.

Jockey Hugh Bowman was overjoyed after he rode back. “I am lost for words,” he said.

Starting a prohibitiv­e favourite, Winx held off long shot Humidor to win by a long neck with Folkswood finishing 4-1/4 lengths away.

Bowman was caught wide in the early stages before easing Winx to settle fifth in the running line. Winx began to improve her position from the 900m and had the lead on the turn with Humidor the only horse giving chase.

“She has gone down, she will go down as one of the greatest to grace the Australian turf,” Bowman said. “She would have before today but it has so much meaning to everyone in our industry.”

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