Sunday Territorian

Rebels out of touch in poor show of tackling

-

MELBOURNE returned to their bad old ways yesterday, with flimsy defence handing the Blues a 36-30 win in their Super Rugby clash in Auckland.

In a game that pitted the top-placed Australian side against New Zealand’s bottom, it was the Rebels who looked like the battlers.

Melbourne’s defence was once their weakness and they wound back the clock with their worst effort of the year, missing 30 tackles, including 18 in the first half.

Surprising­ly the Rebels had a chance to win the game, with late tries to Colby Fainga’a and Sefa Naivalu getting them to within striking distance with just over 10 minutes left.

They had a lineout 5m from the tryline with two minutes on the clock and tried to drive the ball over but referee Craig

Joubert penalised them for obstructio­n, ending their hopes.

Melbourne skipper Nic Stirzaker said the missed tackles proved their undoing.

“We showed plenty of spirit and fightback ... but missed tackles in the first half really hurt us,” he said.

The Rebels started well, striking in the third minute when centre Reece Hodge pounced on the ball thrown back infield by Blues’ hooker James Parsons, who tried to stop it going into touch.

Parsons, who took over his team’s captaincy this week, made amends 12 minutes later when he spun out of a tackle and dived over the line.

That try opened the floodgates for the home side, who scored a further three tries in the next 16 minutes.

Melbourne flanker Jordy Reid gave his side some credibilit­y with a try just before halftime for a 24-18 deficit.

The score blew out to 36-18 in the second half before the Rebels mounted their fightback but fell agonisingl­y short.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Australia