Otago Daily Times

Landers’ tenacious effort in vain

The scores

- Patrick Tuipolotu tries; Harry Plummer con, 3 pen Sam Gilbert 3 pen Blues 166. HAYDEN MEIKLE hayden.meikle@odt.co.nz

Halftime:

THE Highlander­s won plenty of admirers for their extraordin­ary tenacity and spirit, but were still on Death Row last night.

A 169 loss to the Blues meant the Highlander­s were in the awkward position of needing favours from no fewer than three other teams in order to make the Super Rugby playoffs.

They needed the Brumbies to beat Rebels in the late game last night, and will today be hoping the Reds can beat the Drua in Fiji and the Chiefs can beat the Force in Perth.

Last night’s clash was either scrappy or epic, depending on which side of the fence you sat.

Just one try was scored, and there were only three points in the second half. But the scrum battle was a highlight, the defensive intensity was epic, and there was just enough doubt about the result to keep interest high for 80 minutes.

Everyone expected the Blues to be far too classy. And, indeed, they held on to the Gordon Hunter Memorial Trophy and consigned the Highlander­s to a 16th straight loss to New Zealand opposition.

A hat tip to the Highlander­s, though. They simply do not have enough players at the Blues’ level, and they did not really play much rugby as they were so busy, led by inspiratio­nal captain Billy Harmon, defending against waves of attack.

But they were gutsy as anything, and scrambled with remarkable intensity to shut down the Blues more than most teams have managed this year.

The first half was oddly entertaini­ng considerin­g it featured only one try.

Mostly, to be fair, the enterprisi­ng rugby was played by the Blues, while the Highlander­s were largely limited to defensive duties — they performed them reasonably well for half an hour — and kicks aimed at turning the superior team around.

Sam Gilbert (two) and Harry Plummer traded penalties before the Blues appeared to have scored the opening try when hooker Ricky Riccitelli slid over the line from some distance.

He appeared to have lost control briefly, but the try was ruled out anyway for an early knockon by halfback Finlay Christie.

The Blues’ class and dominance eventually paid dividends in the 29th minute when they showed all their relentless power and efficiency in a sweeping 70m series of phases.

After a bunch of behemoths picked up and charged, lock Patrick Tuipolotu got the try, though there were some questions around an earlier pass and a possible obstructio­n on the line.

Mark Telea was the hypedup danger man and he certainly looked terrifying at times, but the Highlander­s were wary of him.

Harmon did some sterling work for the Highlander­s, and Max Hicks was a wonderful presence in the defensive lineout, but the visitors started to slip off some tackles as the onslaught continued.

Ten points down at halftime is never a catastroph­ic situation, but there was a feeling the Highlander­s really needed to score first in the second half to stay in the fight.

The Blues looked oddson to cross again before rookie centre Matt Whaanga made a wonderful ankle tap on Rieko Ioane. Then Jona Nareki — is there a better defensive winger in the country? — shut down Telea. Then Harmon, in careerbest form in a World Cup year, shut down yet another attack.

Damage limitation is a strategy that usually has a limited shelf life, but the Highlander­s did superbly at withstandi­ng a relentless passage of Blues offence for the first 20 minutes of the half.

Even when they lost prop

Jermaine Ainsley to the bin, they held firm, frustratin­g a home side that had a 90% possession and territory advantage for an entire quarter of the game.

Finally, the crack appeared. Telea got the sniff of space and was through for his 12th try of a remarkable season . . . but hold that thought. The television match official spotted that Plummer had earlier had a knee on the touch line a fraction of a second before he released the ball.

Talk about getting out of jail. The Highlander­s had no right to still be in the game, but they showed gallons of heart and courage.

Improbably, they threatened a late miracle, and had a try overturned, but they had to settle for respect and a bonus point.

 ?? PHOTO: GETTY IMAGES ?? Last look? . . . Aaron Smith of the Highlander­s makes a break against the Blues in the sides’ match Eden Park in Auckland last night.
PHOTO: GETTY IMAGES Last look? . . . Aaron Smith of the Highlander­s makes a break against the Blues in the sides’ match Eden Park in Auckland last night.

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