The Borneo Post

Enigmatic Waratahs symptomati­c of Australian sides

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JOHANNESBU­RG: The New South Wales Waratahs getting over- run by an abrasive and relentless Lions side in their Super Rugby semi - f inal in Johannesbu­rg would not have surprised many g iven the performanc­es of the Australian team this year.

The Waratahs had started strongly with two early tries before the South Africans got back to 19- 19 by halftime and then overpowere­d the Sydneybase­d side in the second half to win 44-26 and set up a final with the Canterbury Crusaders.

The Waratahs’ run to the semifinals was due in part to some good luck and the side’s resilience and showed how much they have improved in 12 months after finishing 16th out of 18 teams last year with only four wins.

“In terms of the season it’s definitely a massive improvemen­t on last year,” flyhalf and captain Bernard Foley said of their nine win, one draw, six loss results and Australian conference title.

“Whether it was good enough? A couple of games cost us in terms of where we could have been. We could have given ourselves a better chance in the tournament.

“But in terms of the whole squad, everyone wanted to be better, trained hard, and put the work in, and I think it showed, especially in the squad and staff.

“They chal lenged us to be better.”

While they were better than last year, the semi-final, however, showed how inconsiste­nt they were this season.

It was also reminiscen­t of a similar performanc­e by Daryl Gibson’s side when they blasted out to a 29- 0 lead against the Crusaders in Christchur­ch before being ground down and overhauled to lose 31-29.

The following week, however, t hey d e mon s t r a t e d h ow dangerous their backs were given some space, when they overwhelme­d a 14- man Otago Highlander­s 41-12 to snap a 40game losing streak for Australian teams in matches against their trans-Tasman rivals.

The Waratahs also produced arguably the best 17 minutes of their season in the 30-23 quarterfin­al victory last week against the Highlander­s.

Sparked by the combinatio­n of Foley and inside centre Kurtley Beale they exploited a Waisake Naholo yellow card to score three tries in the 10 minutes he was off to overturn a 23- 6 deficit. They then defended resolutely after Paddy Ryan was sinbinned for the last seven minutes.

Those 17 minutes, however, papered over the cracks the Highlander­s had exposed with a control led and composed p e r fo rmanc e when t hey dominated the forward exchanges and built scoreboard pressure.

The Lions ensured they did not repeat the Highlander­s’ mistakes and were far too clinical for the Waratahs with hooker Malcolm Marx and flanker Kwagga Smith relentless­ly driving their side forward. — Reuters

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