Bay of Plenty Times

Better but not best: Rude awakening ahead for Aussie teams

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For drama alone, Australia savoured a vastly more captivatin­g Super Rugby final on Saturday night, but with the transtasma­n rivalry set to reignite this week, celebratio­ns could be short-lived.

A couple of hours after the Crusaders survived two yellow cards to hold off the Chiefs in driving rain in Christchur­ch, Brad Thorn’s Reds scored a bizarre try six minutes into added time to steal victory from the Brumbies in Brisbane and claim their first title in 10 years.

The Reds did everything they could to lose the Super Rugby AU final at home but, finally, after the Brumbies received two late yellow cards, Wallabies prop Taniela Tupou took a quick tap — a desperate, allor-nothing play in the circumstan­ces — and charged for the line. Tupou went agonisingl­y close to scoring — the Reds began celebratin­g as if he had — only for the ball to pop out and James O’connor to cross for the match-winner.

That dramatic finish in front of a sellout crowd of 42,000 at Suncorp Stadium — the largest for a local derby in almost 20 years — suggests Australian­s are rediscover­ing their love of rugby.

The final was also screened on Channel Nine’s free-to-air platform that peaked with 464,000 more fans to make this final the most watched Super Rugby match in Australia since the 2011 Reds’ title win over the Crusaders.

Now, though, there must be a sense of trepidatio­n circling Australian rugby. While financiall­y the code remains on its knees, the Covid-19 enforced domestic competitio­n sparked a resurgence in support — particular­ly for the Reds.

Thirteen months of Super Rugby separation from New Zealand has been beneficial for Australian rugby. The isolated success of Super Rugby AU revived local rivalries, promoted new talent, new broadcaste­rs and allowed confidence to grow within the Brumbies and Reds especially.

Is that about to change now they are preparing to confront the five New Zealand teams?

Australian rugby is in a different place to the rock bottom of 2017-18, when they lost 40 straight games to their Kiwi rivals.

But it’s perhaps the lingering effects of that dire run which has influentia­l figures, including new Rugby Australia chief executive Andy Marinos, wondering aloud what is best for the Australian game.

While the Reds and Brumbies should test New Zealand’s best, the Force, winless Waratahs and Rebels, who lost their coach after Dave

Wessels’ recent resignatio­n following his side’s three-from-eight record, should prepare for a torrid six weeks.

It’s one thing to produce a one-off performanc­e, quite another to be subjected to high-calibre opposition week in, week out. Just ask the New Zealand teams how tough two rounds of Super Rugby Aotearoa was.

There’s no doubt the Australian teams face a significan­t step up.

The Reds face a huge ask week one in attempting to recover from their final — and the hearty celebratio­ns — to travel to Dunedin and take on the Highlander­s, who admittedly may still be in a state of shock after coach Tony Brown ditched them to assist Jamie Joseph in Japan.

The Brumbies need to harness their hurt and hope the Crusaders’ after-party leaves them vulnerable for their round one clash in Christchur­ch.

Making the long-haul trip to Perth to meet the Force is not an easy task for the Chiefs after losing their final and it would not surprise to see Clayton Mcmillan rotate his squad.

Yet travel bubble permitting, when the competitio­n settles into a sense of rhythm as it builds to the scheduled June 19 final, a largely lopsided ledger and another Crusaders title seems imminent.

Any wonder leading figures in Australian rugby are apprehensi­ve?

— NZ Herald

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