Manawatu Standard

THE WEST SHOW

Hurricanes dazzler destroys Japanese tourists

- PETER LAMPP

RUGBY: Ihaia West’s hop, step and dart attacking saw the Hurricanes Developmen­t XV topple a strong Japan A side 36-27 under lights at Levin Domain.

The mercurial Hawke’s Bay first five-eighth not only scored three tries, but had a match tally of 26 points, snuffing out Japan A with a penalty on fulltime on Thursday night.

West is a mercurial player and five minutes in, when the Hurricanes had a two-man overlap, his pass was intercepte­d by Japanese centre Daishi Muratawho, who galloped 75 metres to score.

On the 20-minute mark, West redeemed himself when he slipped over after waves of gold attacks. Nearby fire sirens sounded and, suitably, the lead see-sawed throughout.

West smoked in for two quick second-half tries, one a clever chip and snipe on the blindside.

‘‘I got lucky because of the work of the boys inside me,’’ he said.

Maybe, but it finished the Hurricanes XV’S unbeaten 2018 season, five from five, pleasing coaches Darren Larsen and Aaron Good.

For Japan A, it was their first loss of their tour, having beaten Highlander­s A 13-12 and Blues A 34-27.

This was a Hurricanes side hurriedly cobbled together. For instance, East Coast forward Patrick Allen had been autumn mustering on Molesworth Station in Marlboroug­h the previous day. This game was a chance for the Hurricanes to fly the Heartland constituen­ts’ flags and there were six such players in the 26.

Horowhenua-ka¯piti is one of the few unions who are shareholde­rs in the Super Rugby franchise.

Like all Japanese teams, the visitors were very structured and when that was stretched by the Canes forwards, attackers of West’s ilk could apply the afterburne­rs through holes and hop out of tackles, especially with the Japanese penchant for tackling low.

Because of the speed of the game, both sides were best with the ball. Japan A had the superior scrum and a more efficient lineout, which contribute­d to a 17-12 halftime lead. In particular, their three Tongan forwards and one Fijian, Anise Samuela, who has lived in Japan for 10 years, were full steam ahead and their line speed shut down all bar West.

The Hurricanes lost flanker Sam Henwood to concussion, but No 8 Blade Thomson, in his comeback 40 minutes, was the commanding figure in the first half.

Others to shine were halfback Richard Judd and second-five Peter Umaga-jensen, while newly contracted Manawatu¯ lock Liam Mitchell played 80. Otherwise, this was West’s show.

Japan remained a threat until a few minutes from time, notably when former Highlander-chief Robbie Robinson came on full of dash at first-five.

Hurricanes Developmen­t XV 36 (Ihaia West 3, Marcel Renata, Richard Judd, tries; West 4 con, pen) Japan A 27 (Daishi Murata, Fetuami Lautaimi, Akihito Yamada, tries; Rikiya Matsuda 2 con, pen; Ryuji Noguchi con; Ryoto Nakamura pen) HT 12-17.

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 ?? PHOTO: WARWICK SMITH/ STUFF ?? Ihaia West scores one of his three tries in Levin on Thursday night.
PHOTO: WARWICK SMITH/ STUFF Ihaia West scores one of his three tries in Levin on Thursday night.

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