North Shore Times (New Zealand)

Harbour finally turn around fortunes

- HAMISH BIDWELL

Steve Jackson is entitled to enjoy the good times.

Provincial rugby success and North Harbour have been strangers for a long time. Particular­ly in the years immediatel­y prior to Jackson’s arrival from Counties-Manukau in 2014.

But they’re all on the verge of something quite special now, after beating Wellington 40-37 in Saturday’s Mitre 10 Cup semifinal at Westpac Stadium. Harbour will now meet Otago in Friday’s final in Dunedin, with a place in the top tier of provincial rugby up for grabs.

It’s a long way from the backto-back wooden spoons Harbour collected in the seasons before Jackson took charge.

‘‘It will be absolutely massive [to win the final],’’ Jackson says. ‘‘We were under no illusions when I first arrived that this was what I wanted and this is what I wanted our players to achieve. My job as a coach is to promote players for Super level and then All Blacks and winning a championsh­ip and getting into a premiershi­p will also attract players to the union, hopefully bring back the community and bring back crowds.’’

It sounds funny to say Harbour were the more clinical side on Saturday. But, despite conceding 37 points, they were the most accurate of the two. Wellington played a lot of good footy, it’s just that it was often followed by an inexplicab­le turnover or a poor decision. There were also some dreadful defensive lapses from set pieces.

Harbour led 10-0, after wing Tevita Li benefited from Lions lock Mark Reddish’s unexpected gift. Wellington replied with tries to hooker Leni Apisai and wing Wes Goosen and ought to have taken a handy lead into halftime.

Instead it was Harbour flanker Glenn Preston who had the half’s final say, barging over from close range. When prop Nic Mayhew did similar immediatel­y after halftime, then first five-eighth Bryn Gatland added a penalty, Harbour appeared to have kicked far enough clear at 30-18. There’s a reason why teams battle away in the premiershi­p, though. It’s because they battle to sustain 80 minutes of good rugby and things went tit for tat from there. Joe Hill and Asafa Aumua scored for Wellington, Li put Daniel HiltonJone­s in for Harbour’s reply, Gatland kicked a penalty and then a Sheridan Rangihuna try made the final score a little closer than it deserved to be.

 ?? PHOTO: MARTY MELVILLE / PHOTOSPORT ?? North Harbour celebrate a try during the Mitre 10 Cup semi final rugby match against Wellington.s
PHOTO: MARTY MELVILLE / PHOTOSPORT North Harbour celebrate a try during the Mitre 10 Cup semi final rugby match against Wellington.s

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