Herald on Sunday

Red alerts as Canterbury see off Taranaki

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Taranaki saw red after just five minutes and then Canterbury read the run riot act in Christchur­ch last night.

The Taranaki outfit have deposited a load of Ferdinand BS during the Premiershi­p rounds of the Mitre 10 Cup this season and it was the same at AMI Stadium last night after an early send-off saw them in a world of woe virtually from the getgo and the Cantabs banked a semifinal despite also having a man sent off in the second half.

Canterbury won 41-7 to push their case for a home semifinal but it was all downhill towards relegation to the Championsh­ip for Taranaki after their sixth straight loss.

In recent times in games between the two provinces wins have tended to go with the visiting team, most notably last year’s Ranfurly Shield win by Taranaki, but not this season.

A difficult task last night became mission impossible early when Taranaki lock Jarrad Hoeata was sent off for throwing a punch.

From there, the home side rolled forward in the six tries to one victory.

But Canterbury were far from clean-skins themselves in an often spiteful encounter.

Replacemen­t Canterbury forward Daniel Lienert-Brown was also given his marching orders after 55 minutes for a headbutt.

Lienert-Brown had been the victim of a push in the back but his Liverpool kiss left referee James Doleman with no option but to issue a red card.

Taranaki co-captain Mitchell Crosswell marked his 50th game for the province against Canterbury. With strong family connection­s he made his first-class debut for Manawatu. He had a season in Japan before joining Taranaki in 2013. The two-time Maori All Black won a national title with Taranaki in 2014.

But this was not a night to savour for Crosswell.

After leading 24-0 at halftime, the red and blacks struggled for cohesion early in the second stanza and lost No 8 Hugh Renton to the sinbin for 10 minutes as the visitors fought to stem the flow of points.

Taranaki’s resolve stiffened in the second 40 and they showed plenty of spirit, particular­ly when the sides went down to 14 men, but were unable to find their finishing touches.

After three first half tries, Canterbury sealed the game when secondfive Sam Beard scored in the 67th minute.

Wing Ngane Punivai put the icing on the cake with a five-pointer in the 70th.

Taranaki scored a consolatio­n try

in the 78th minute when replacemen­t Jayson Potroz grabbed and intercept and ran 50 metres to score.

Canterbury sealed the result in the 80th minute when centre Braydon Ennor touched down out wide after a suspect looping pass in the midfield.

The race for the Premiershi­p finals will head into the final week, with North Harbour comfortabl­y beating Counties Manukau 36-26 in Albany.

The hosts led 17-12 after a tight first half, with both sides trying to play expansive rugby in the sun drenched QBE Stadium.

Harbour then jumped out of the blocks early in the second half with tries to Daniel Hilton Jones and Shaun Stevenson before the 50-minute mark.

A penalty try for infringeme­nt at scrum time gave the Steelers fans hope, but a late try to flanker Dillon Hunt gave Harbour a lead they wouldn’t relinquish. The win pushes North Harbour into fourth and ahead of Wellington on the premiershi­p ladder, with both sides on 29 points.

Wellington have a tricky game against a desperate Taranaki side next weekend, while North Harbour will play top-of-the-table Auckland in the battle of the bridge next Sunday.

For Counties Manukau, they now have to hope Taranaki continue their losing ways, or they have to beat Canterbury in Pukekohe next Saturday to avoid relegation from the Premiershi­p.

That looks unlikely after yesterday’s results but stranger things have happened in the Mitre 10 Cup.

 ??  ?? Taranaki lock Jarrad Hoeata (headband) was sent off for throwing a punch last night.
Taranaki lock Jarrad Hoeata (headband) was sent off for throwing a punch last night.
 ?? Photo / Photosport ??
Photo / Photosport

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