Bangkok Post

Revamped Super event set for kick-off

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WELLINGTON: Super Rugby’s latest incarnatio­n kicks off this weekend with event boss Andy Marinos vowing the slimmed down tournament will deliver a “competitiv­e and compelling” spectacle to end years of criticism.

By dumping the unwieldy 18-team, fourconfer­ence championsh­ip in favour of a more streamline­d 15 teams in three conference­s, Marinos has pledged a five-nation club tournament “that promises to deliver the best versus the best”.

“With the hard decisions to re-structure Super Rugby behind us we can now look forward to a stronger tournament,” said Marinos, chief executive of Super Rugby’s controllin­g body Sanzaar [South Africa, New Zealand, Australia and Argentina Rugby], which also includes Japan.

The Canterbury Crusaders, the most successful team in the history of the 22-year-old tournament, are again fancied to be contenders in the finals.

They beat the Golden Lions 25-17 in South Africa in last year’s final, and are the only side to travel overseas to win the Super crown, a feat they have achieved twice.

“It’s what Crusaders do,” said coach Scott Robertson, attributin­g the success to the proud history of the club who have made the semi-finals 17 times and gone on to make 12 finals, winning eight of them. “We created opportunit­ies to create history.”

But while Marinos talks of a stronger tournament, the impact of injuries and the requiremen­t in New Zealand to make players available for All Blacks’ training camps could have a telling effect.

New Zealand has arguably the toughest conference with local derbies likened to Test-match intensity, and there has been some indignatio­n to plans by All Blacks coach Steve Hansen to hold midweek camps ahead of the June Test series against France.

“It is not tidy for anyone because at the end of the day, generally those guys that go to the All Blacks are the guys that are key to your environmen­t,” argued Wellington Hurricanes coach Chris Boyd.

“So not to have them at the start of the week and then play a game two days later, is really short of high performanc­e in my mind.”

While New Zealand have selection issues, new Lions coach Swys de Bruin has noted how the new format demands teams to be on song every weekend, especially “making the most of our home fixtures”.

The Lions host the Coastal Sharks in Johannesbu­rg and the Western Stormers play Argentina’s Jaguares in Cape Town this weekend when only the South African conference is in action.

The New Zealand and Australian conference­s come on line a week later.

Under the new-look competitio­n each team will face 12 of the other 14 sides, meaning the Lions will play all of the New Zealand teams in the regular season except the Waikato Chiefs.

Under last year’s cumbersome format they did not play a New Zealand team until they met the Wellington Hurricanes in the semi-finals, and De Bruin likes the look of the tough challenge ahead.

“We’ve got four overseas games this year, which is different to last year and the year before, so it’s certainly tougher than what we’re used to,” said De Bruin.

 ?? AFP ?? Canterbury’s Seta Tamanivalu scores a try against Waikato during their Super Rugby semi-final match in Christchur­ch last year.
AFP Canterbury’s Seta Tamanivalu scores a try against Waikato during their Super Rugby semi-final match in Christchur­ch last year.

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