The Citizen (Gauteng)

Crusaders straight back into stride

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Wellington – Super Rugby champions the Crusaders returned to action with their trademark efficiency yesterday when they put away the Hurricanes 39-25 in New Zealand’s domestic version of the competitio­n.

It was five tries to one for the visiting Crusaders, whose performanc­e was blighted only by a high penalty count.

The Crusaders are the dominant side in the southern hemisphere club championsh­ip, winning it for the past three seasons, and were again looking like the side to beat before Super Rugby was halted by the coronaviru­s pandemic in mid-March.

They had a bye when the five New Zealand sides launched their own tournament called “Super Rugby Aotearoa” last week, in front of unrestrict­ed crowds.

But despite being sidelined for more than three months they were immediatel­y into their stride and scored inside two minutes against a Hurricanes side desperate to bounce back from their loss last week to the Blues.

All Blacks wing Sevu Reece dived over in the corner after a brilliant handling move that started from a stolen lineout and swept more than 70 metres downfield.

Thanks to a succession of penalties, the Hurricanes stayed in touch for much of the game and were level at 25-25 with 10 minutes to play, before the Crusaders found another gear and sealed the match with two late tries.

“Our discipline was pretty poor in the first half,” Crusaders captain Codie Taylor said.

“We gave away countless penalties and a yellow card and that’s something we have to look at. Against New Zealand teams you can’t afford to do that.”

Hurricanes skipper TJ Perenara said the Crusaders’ precision could not be faulted. “They pounced on opportunit­ies in the first half and scored off all of them which is a sign of a quality team,” he said.

“In the second half we got back in the hunt, but gave away a couple of penalties and ended up at the other end.”

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