Marlborough Express

Central make most of home field edge to win first Tasman Trophy

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Blenheim’s Central have won their first Stuff Tasman Trophy, becoming the first Marlboroug­h side to win the competitio­n in eight years – and the first team in the region to win a playoff final on home soil.

More than 1000 people from both sides of the Whangamoas flocked to Lansdowne Park in Blenheim on Saturday afternoon to witness a piece of Tasman rugby history, as the top two teams of the 2022 season, Central and Kahurangi, clashed for a trophy which both were yet to have their names on.

Their only other encounter this season ended in a 33-22 Kahurangi victory, when Central travelled to Motueka in Tasman in May. This time, Central dominated to win 33-7.

Central began the playoff final explosivel­y, with wing Lani Fihaki scoring the first try of the day in the eighth minute, using a grubber kick down the right-hand corner of the pitch to slide past the Kahurangi defence.

The combined Motueka-riwaka side had their first chance of getting on the scoreboard 17 minutes in, but they were denied three points from a penalty shot when the ball bounced off the right post.

A try by Central and Moana Pasifika wing Timoci Tavatavana­wai was converted at the 23-min mark and a further five points came from No 8 Penisimani Fihaki 10min later, making the score 19-0 to Central at halftime.

Their dominance continued after the break, when a successful push after a lineout on the Kahurangi 5-metre line extended the lead again. A further try by captain Braden Stewart meant Central were up by 33 with less than 10min to go.

Kahurangi finally broke through the Central defence in the final minute of the game, with prop Luca Inch scoring under the post. The try and conversion left the final score at Central 33 Kahurangi 7.

The Blues bench players ran onto the pitch as they celebrated the final whistle, a moment Central prop Jeremy Foley said he’d waited more than a decade for.

‘‘I’ve been trying to win this trophy for 12 years. It’s been an unreal season. We set a goal in pre-season to make the final, and then we obviously finished top-of-the-table with a home final,’’ he said.

After a tough semifinal against Marist the weekend before, Foley said he was ‘‘over the moon’’ to win the trophy in front of a home crowd.

‘‘It was ours to lose, all the pressure was on us, and we fronted up,’’ he said.

Central player and coach Quentin Macdonald said, though he was ‘‘very happy’’ to get the victory, he felt ‘‘more relieved than anything’’. ‘‘We’ve had a good season and yeah, it kind of hasn’t hit yet, it’s a pretty big achievemen­t. Awesome for the club and awesome for the province, so we’ll definitely enjoy it,’’ he said. Macdonald, who said he planned to stay on playing for the Blenheim club for at least another year, praised the performanc­e of Kahurangi, a team that finished only two points behind Central on the round-robin table.

‘‘They’re a classy team, they’ve been good the whole season and last season as well, so I suppose playing at home kind of had its advantages, so we’ll definitely take that,’’ he said.

Having lost in the playoff final last year and becoming runners-up for the second consecutiv­e season, Kahurangi centre Michael Wells was hopeful for the team’s future and thought 2023 could be the ‘‘third-time lucky’’.

A big Kahurangi contingent travelled over the hill on Saturday to watch the game and one supporter, who did not want to be named, said she was ‘‘absolutely’’ proud of the team this season, ‘‘no matter what’’.

‘‘They [Central] just wanted it a bit more,’’ she said.

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