Fiji Sun

Foley laments Tahs’ narrow loss to ‘Canes

- Sydney: Week One Results: Week 2 Fixtures: Johannesbu­rg:

Bernard Foley couldn’t pull off the Iceman routine again to claim a last-gasp victory for the Waratahs but he says the miss won’t stop him backing himself to nail match-winners.

After the Hurricanes scored a try to take the lead with just four minutes left at Brookvale Oval, Foley had a shot at goal with a minute left to snatch a dramatic win for NSW in their Super Rugby season opener. Much to the disappoint­ment of a sold-out 17,111 crowd, Foley pulled the kick slightly and the Hurricanes scraped home to win by a solitary point, 20-19.

It was a second gut-wrenching defeat at Brookvale Oval after the Tahs’ 24-21 loss to the Blues last year, and the team will be left to rue the loss of a very winnable game. The major culprits for the loss were NSW’s ill-discipline and overall coating of rust, that saw penalties and basic errors from some of the team with enough Test caps to know better.

But as he has done before, Foley was the man who could have pulled the team out of the fire when a rookie front row won an unlikely penalty with just 64 seconds on the clock.

He’d kicked five from five in the game until that point and had earlier passed Matt Burke’s record for the most points by a Waratah in Super Rugby.

But Foley, who volunteere­d to attend the media conference post-game, admitted he was gutted he’d missed.

“It’s disappoint­ing, to reward the front row at the end there, they did a great job to win that penalty, so it would have been great to reward them,” Foley said.

“It was a sell-out here at Brookie and seeing everyone get behind us. It would have been nice to get the win for them but it wasn’t to be.”

Foley, who famously kicked the Waratahs a 2014 Super Rugby title, said he wouldn’t lose confidence from the miss.

“It’s process-driven, I’m not driven by outcomes, same with my kicking, I’ll just go back to it, just keep trying to stick at it, keep trying to get consistent and better at it and given that shot again, back myself,” Foley said.

While both saw some positives, both the Waratahs and Hurricanes were mostly unimpresse­d with their performanc­es in the round one clash.

Referee Angus Gardner was one of the busiest men on the field as both teams pushed the boundaries throughout. The Waratahs were the worst sinners with 14 penalties conceded but the Canes weren’t far off with 12. Though the Canes scored a close-range try though Ardie Savea, four goals from Foley saw the Tahs take a 12-10 lead into halftime.

“It’s never a great feeling to lose a close game. I thought for large parts we controlled it well, right up until the Canes went ahead,” Waratahs coach Daryl Gibson said.

“It was a pretty scrappy affair for both sides, with numerous mistakes, lots of turnovers, it looked like two teams working themselves back into the season.

Chiefs 27-30 Highlander­s, Brumbies 27-34 Rebels, Blues 22-24 Crusaders , Waratahs 19-20 Hurricanes, Sunwolves 1045 Sharks, Bulls 40-3 Stormers, Jaguares v Lions

Friday: Highlander­s-Reds; Saturday. Sunwolves-Waratahs, Crusaders v Hurricanes, Brumbies v Chiefs, Sharks v Blues, Stormers v Lions, Jaguares v Bulls, Bye: Rebels. Planet Rugby

South African 800m Olympic champion Caster Semenya said she was ‘unquestion­ably a woman’, after the IAAF denied reports that it would argue that she should be classified as a biological male. Semenya, 28, issued the statement ahead of a landmark hearing at the Court of Arbitratio­n (CAS) later this week that will challenge a proposed rule by the Internatio­nal Athletics Federation (IAAF) aiming to restrict testostero­ne levels in female runners.

“Ms Semenya is unquestion­ably a woman. She is a heroine and an inspiratio­n to many around the world,” her lawyers said in a statement.

“She asks that she be respected and treated as any other athlete.”

The rules would force so-called “hyperandro­genic”

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