The Herald (South Africa)

Super Rugby appetiser for global f inale

● Mouthwater­ing prospect of 19 weeks of intense competitio­n

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The 24th season of Super Rugby gets under way this weekend, promising 19 weeks of highly competitiv­e action as the southern hemisphere along with Japan serve up an appetiser for Asia’s first staging of the Rugby World Cup.

For most of the 500-odd profession­als who will suit up for the matches to be played out across four continents, the focus will not only be on winning but also on earning a ticket to rugby’s showpiece tournament.

For some, a spot at the World Cup is no more than a pipe dream, for others it will be snatched away by loss of form or the cruel hand of injury.

A rejig of some sort seems to be permanentl­y on the drawing board at Sanzaar headquarte­rs but there is relative stability in a second year with the same 15-team format and a contiguous season running from Friday’s opener to the final on July 6.

As at the World Cup, more success for rugby powerhouse New Zealand looks like the safest prediction.

The Super Rugby case is, if anything, stronger with the five New Zealand franchises having won 16 of the 23 titles since the southern hemisphere provincial competitio­n was launched in 1996.

The defending champions, Canterbury Crusaders, have landed nine of those and will be strongly fancied to put together a three-peat of championsh­ips to match the one they managed from 1998 to 2000.

Scott Robertson’s team, who have lost three of 37 matches over the past two campaigns, have a fearsome pack married with a backline that showcases an apparently inexhausti­ble supply of fresh talent.

The 2016 champions, Wellington Hurricanes, have plenty of talent too, not least in the Beauden Barrett-inspired attack, but they might lack the depth to mount a title challenge in their first season under John Plumtree.

Otago Highlander­s, champions in 2015, and Waikato Chiefs (2012-2013) will always be tough to beat, while new coach Leon MacDonald will take up the task of getting results out of a talented squad at the three-time champions Auckland Blues.

A straw for the other four nations to cling to is that All Blacks players will be rested at stages throughout the season to ensure they are reasonably fresh when they pitch up in Japan.

This long-establishe­d policy may be why New Zealand have a marginally lower Super Rugby title success rate in World Cup years – 60% as opposed 70. Johannesbu­rg-based the Lions have looked the team most likely to break the New Zealand strangleho­ld in recent years but they have fallen at the final hurdle in three successive finals.

The stream of players heading north to the riches of Europe at the end of each season has deprived the Lions of a handful of key forwards but they again look like being the pace-setters in the South African Conference.

Inconsiste­ncy and the inability to reproduce their home form overseas have bedevilled the Durban-based Sharks but there are hopes that they might be able to put up a challenge.

The Stormers will have to do better than their zero wins outside Cape Town last year to compete, while the three titles the Pretoria-based Bulls won in the first decade of the century are fading fast in the memory.

New coach Pote Human will be relying on flyhalf Handre Pollard to fire his backline but internatio­nals will be rested in South Africa too to aid the Springboks cause.

The biggest challenge to the Lions in the conference may yet come from Argentina, where the Jaguares have been quietly building since joining an 18-team competitio­n in 2016.

Flyhalf Nicolas Sanchez will be missed but the core of the Argentina squad will be looking to improve on last year’s quarterfin­al exit as they prepare for their World Cup campaign.

Only in Japan does rugby need a pre-World Cup boost from Super Rugby more than in Australia with the game in crisis in the home of the twice world champion Wallabies.

The well-resourced New South Wales Waratahs should set the pace again after reaching the semifinals last year, while the Melbourne Rebels have brought in experience­d backline talent for what looks like a now or never season for them. –

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