Bay of Plenty Times

Crusaders have forgotten how to win — for now

- Jamie Wall for RNZ

Super Rugby Pacific needed some entertaini­ng games on another meagre round of fixtures at the weekend. Really though, the Waratahs’ unbelievab­le 43-40 win over the Crusaders on Friday night in Sydney had enough in it to satisfy anyone on its own. Anyone except Crusaders fans, that is, who must now be wondering if their win over the Chiefs was little more than a false dawn.

This weekend was supposed to be the start of a pressure release for Rob Penney’s side, with the underperfo­rming Tahs first, followed by fixtures against the Force and Rebels. But now they’re having to analyse their sixth loss of the season.

Credit to the Tahs, though. They’d already beaten the Crusaders once this year but committing to scoring as many tries as they could and not rolling over to the defending champions.

In a remarkable turn of events, the lead changed hands 12 times before locking up at 40-all at the end of regulation, then the 13th was due to Will Harrison calmly slotting a dropped goal in golden point extra time.

But Harrison should never have had the chance. Three brutal brain fades from the Crusaders basically handed it to him when, in this order:

Rivez Reihana didn’t seem to understand that referee Nic Berry was telling him that he just needed to wait for time to expire before converting Christian Liowillie’s 78th minute try that put them up 38-37.

That meant the game restarted, after which Johnny Mcnichol flung a hand out at a pass that he was never going to catch, giving away a kickable penalty that made the score 40-all.

Then, in golden point, the Crusaders executed perhaps the worst botched lineout of all time on their own 22, giving the Tahs the ball that they ultimately set up for Harrison’s moment of glory.

The action and intensity meant the game was an instant Super Rugby classic. But take away those three key moments and we’d be sitting here talking about how the Crusaders managed to ice a result, rather than flush it down the toilet.

The irony is that the game beforehand featured almost exactly the same circumstan­ce to end it, when Moana Pasifika dug deep to beat the Reds 17-14 in Whanga¯ rei.

William Havili scored the winning try right before the end but knew full well that, if he took his time as the clock ran down, the game ended then and there.

It wasn’t much of a game otherwise, as the aptly named Reds had Tate Mcdermott and Liam Wright sent off for stupid acts in the second half. Mcdermott, who is captain and has led the Wallabies, should really know better than to throw a swinging arm in frustratio­n.

That result means the Reds drop down to sixth, and the Rebels’ 47-31 win over the Highlander­s on Saturday night in Melbourne sees them all the way up in fourth. This was a good watch and the Rebels definitely deserved the result, but the Highlander­s shouldn’t be escaping any scrutiny for what’s a disappoint­ing season already.

They’re now 10th on the table and can’t really look at any fixtures coming up as guaranteed wins.

Meanwhile, are Hurricanes fans starting to believe yet? The clinical last 15 minutes against the Chiefs that resulted in a 36-23 win was more evidence that Clark Laidlaw’s side has what it takes to lift a trophy this season, but there was even more detail in the win that could have implicatio­ns later on.

TJ Perenara was outstandin­g at halfback and has to be part of the All Black conversati­on, while outside him Brett Cameron played the metronomic foil to Damian Mckenzie’s off the cuff brilliance and pressed his claim as well. — RNZ

 ?? Photo / Photosport ?? Rob Penney’s Crusaders threw away a likely win over the Waratahs in Sydney at the weekend.
Photo / Photosport Rob Penney’s Crusaders threw away a likely win over the Waratahs in Sydney at the weekend.

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