Herald on Sunday

Tasman grab chance to see if they are able

RUGBY Taranaki 29 Tasman 30

- Niall Anderson

This could become the greatest season in Tasman history, but there’s one more obstacle in their way.

A quality season has now turned into a potentiall­y historic campaign for the Makos, who have reached the NPC final for the third time, where they will take on powerhouse­s Canterbury in a rematch of last year’s final.

Led by 25 points from first-five Mitch Hunt, Tasman claimed an upset 30-29 victory over Taranaki in New Plymouth last night to book their spot in the final, making the most of the ill-discipline­d display by the competitio­n’s top qualifiers.

The clash was a repeat of the 2014 finale, coincident­ally the only time anybody has taken the title away from Canterbury in the past decade. That year, it was Taranaki’s name carved into the trophy, but now it’s Tasman’s turn to try to upset the history book and win their first Premiershi­p title.

They will be up against it. The Makos have lost their last four encounters against Canterbury, including a 39-0 drubbing to start the season, and a 43-27 defeat in last year’s final.

But, making the final is a success, and on the balance, they probably deserved to edge Taranaki in a game which lived up to its billing despite taking some time to spark into life.

To start, poor discipline led to penalties bogging down any chance of consistent running rugby, but the after-effects would only hurt one side. Tasman were given five shots at goal in the first 21 minutes alone, with Hunt nailing three of them to give Tasman the early advantage, but once Taranaki woke up, so did the game.

In a three-minute spell, both sides bagged their first tries through their right wingers, and the suddenly highoctane nature continued when Charlie Ngatai crossed after good work by the impressive Stephen Perofeta.

Taranaki had re-discovered their impressive brand of attacking rugby, but their discipline was allowing Tasman to stay in the contest, with Hunt continuing to bang over penalties to keep Tasman in front.

A quick double after relentless pressure put Taranaki in front, but just when they seemed to be wrestling the initiative away from Tasman, Hunt slotted his sixth penalty.

Still, Taranaki looked dangerous, but when Seta Tamanivalu was sinbinned for a head-high tackle, they were forced on to the back foot.

Their last attempt came when Marty McKenzie audaciousl­y attempted a penalty from 56 metres out, and while he had the distance, he pushed it to the left.

Taranaki 29 (D. O’Donnell, C. Ngatai, T. Tahurioran­gi, S. Tamanivalu tries; M. McKenzie 3 cons, pen) Tasman 30 (T. Faingaanuk­u, M. Hunt tries; Hunt con, 6 pens). HT: 17-17.

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