Manawatu Standard

Super Rugby hurts the All Blacks

- MARK REASON

The All Blacks failed to win the series off poor discipline. And I blame the Super Rugby refs. They are still hopeless at this stuff.

OPINION: On Friday night Super Rugby walked back into the room and everyone suddenly went very quiet. It had a been a hell of a party and then the too friendly bloke shows up. He talks in super closeup and little flakes of beer-soaked chippies keep getting fired out into your face by a machine gun of gobby enthusiasm. And every 30 seconds he asks in a very loud voice, ‘‘How the hell are you, mate?’’

The first game of Super Rugby’s return was an unwelcome intrusion, but it also told us a few things going forwards. Stop being nice to Aussies. Even George Smith and Quade Cooper were embarrasse­d by just how hopeless some of their team-mates were. Twentyfive losses in a row to New Zealand teams. Get out of here. A lack of competitio­n is hurting the All Blacks when a half decent team finally turns up.

But unfortunat­ely some of those Aussies looked good in comparison to referee Mike Fraser. In the opening couple of minutes Fraser blew his whistle, but then waved play on as several players stopped, and the Highlander­s ended up scoring.

There was some nonsense at a lineout when the Aussie halfback got penalised although the Highlander­s No 9 had committed the identical offence. Finally Fraser got cross with a couple of senior Aussies wondering why he had let a player continue to the tryline after he had put a knee on the ground and why he had then, unsighted, blown his whistle to award a try when the ball was still off the ground.

Glen Jackson completely lost the plot. In the period from the 15th to the 76th minutes Jackson awarded the Canes 15 penalties to four for the Crusaders. The worst example was when he penalised Mitchell Drummond for not releasing, completely missing the fact that Drummond’s support had been illegally held back. It should have been a penalty and a yellow card the other way. Jackson changed the result.

I mention this stuff because it is not helping the All Blacks. Let’s get one myth out of the way. They did not fail to win the Lions series because of the reffing. It was not only the best they will see all year, it went in their favour. The All Blacks were awarded 34 penalties to 25 for the Lions in the series. They enjoyed a favourable penalty count in four of the six halves and two out of the three matches.

Many of those penalties were crucial. Two of the All Blacks tries were scored on a penalty advantage. These advantages are very influentia­l because they let skilful sides roll the dice in an effort to double their points.

The only try they scored that did not originate from a penalty came from a Lions mistake when Liam Williams dropped the ball.

No, the All Blacks failed to win the series off poor discipline. The red card to Sonny Bill and yellow to Jerome Kaino were devastatin­g. And I blame the Super Rugby refs. They are still hopeless at this stuff. Why was Kaino not cited for again smashing into a man’s jaw at the weekend. He cost the Blues the match. And when Ngani Laumape did the same thing against the Crusaders, there was not even an award of a penalty.

If southern hemisphere officials are going to be this incompeten­t, then they are going to foster bad habits that will cost the All Blacks in big matches. On the other hand if you live by the sword ... Steve Hansen apparently saw nothing wrong with several of the tackles that happened in Dublin last year, and that permissive­ness came back to bite his side.

The All Blacks were also predictabl­y hurt by bad goalkickin­g. This is down to poor coaching. If Barrett had technical issues, as the coaches subsequent­ly claimed, then what the hell was he doing missing goals in the final test.

It was a series that busted a few myths. Hansen’s greatness as a coach was questioned. And Beauden Barrett is one hell of a player when the sun is shining but, unlike Aaron Cruden, his bad days sometimes lead to All Blacks defeats. Cruden does not reach the heights of Barrett but nor does he fall so low. Cruden has never lost in an All Blacks shirt when picked as a starter.

But above all the return of Super Rugby reminded me just what a joy the Lions series was. An American correspond­ent in Christchur­ch watched the Lions matches in a pub and tells me he has never heard noise like it at a New Zealand sporting event.

But hear this. It was all good-natured and at the end both sets of fans shook hands and agreed it was a fair result. So good on you Christchur­ch and cheers, New Zealand. It was a hell of a party.

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