The Northern Advocate

Time ticking for current club champs

- Imran Ali

A new winner will likely be crowned in the Tyrepower Premier rugby competitio­n this weekend as the race for the top four heats up in the last round.

Mathematic­ally, defending champions Western Sharks are still in the playoffs despite another loss on Saturday — their fourth this season — but they will have to bag the maximum five points against Ngati Hine Moerewa this week and hope other results go their way.

Hora Hora currently lead the table with 33 points, Mid Northern are second, just two points behind, Kamo are third on 26 points and Waipū fourth on 25.

Moerewa and Old Boys Marist (OBM) are on 23 points each and the Sharks on 22.

OBM play Kamo and Waipū host Hikurangi this week. Only Hora Hora and Mid Northern are through to the playoffs at this stage.

On a dank day at Caledonian Park on Saturday, neither hosts Waipū nor the Sharks had a blueprint for winter rugby embedded in their DNA. Neither have been comfortabl­e with a wet ball and heavy field and the result was spilled balls, stray kicks and a struggle to string phases together.

The visitors gave Waipū a slosh of easy penalties in the first spell that got the scoreboard ticking over but tries were hard to come by in the face of a resolute defence.

The home side knocked the ball on near the tryline in quick succession on three occasions while trying to leverage the cracks they felt they could see but the Sharks didn’t break.

That was probably the best the Sharks could offer and skipper Matt Matich lamented a disappoint­ing season when his side was unable to field its best XV .

Waipū won the match 28-13. “It’s been a very tough season . . . just little things popping up, the boys had work to do, Covid and stuff like that, so we haven’t been able to field our best 15. We lost a lot of players from last year, so it’s been hard work,” Matich said.

The former Northland Taniwha loose forward was philosophi­cal about where the game against Waipū was lost.

“We couldn’t get anything going in attack, the ball was very slippery, we were dropping lineout ball, dropping ball at the back of the ruck, dropping ball left and right. The set piece was struggling a bit too so it doesn’t help when you’re dropping the ball.

“This kind of weather doesn’t suit us at all, we’re a ball-running team and it hampers our style. The breakdown was really slow because the ball was very bobbly at the back. It’s similar to the final last year where we couldn’t get anything going but we came away with it that day,” Matich said.

The Sharks edged Mid Northern 10-7 in last year’s premier final at Semenoff Stadium.

Waipū captain Jonah Mau’u is relishing the opportunit­y to compete in the playoff if his side can beat Hikurangi on Thursday evening and bag five points.

After being badly exposed by Wellsford 30-17 in the rain on June 6, Mau’u said his players trained in wet conditions last week and it paid dividends against the Sharks.

“We said to the boys at the start of training we wanted to come out and it was a do-or-die moment for us. We really needed to front up, and that’s what we did.”

After a frustratin­g first spell, he said they found chinks in the Sharks’ armour in the second half, drew them in and used speed outside to score.

The Mid Northern and Kamo match wasn’t played due to Covid, Hora Hora thumped Hikurangi 62-7, OBM beat Wellsford 26-12 and Kerikeri lost to Moerewa 34-18.

 ?? Photos / Tania Whyte ?? Blindside flanker Popoai Finau charges upfield for Waipū in their win over Western Sharks.
Photos / Tania Whyte Blindside flanker Popoai Finau charges upfield for Waipū in their win over Western Sharks.
 ?? ?? Western Sharks’ skipper Matt Matich looks to carve open the Waipū defence.
Western Sharks’ skipper Matt Matich looks to carve open the Waipū defence.

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