Sunday Star-Times

Scratchy Crusaders edge Brumbies in Christchur­ch thriller

- Robert van Royen

The Crusaders survived an almighty scare to make it an early three from three for Kiwi teams over their Aussie counterpar­ts to start the transTasma­n Super Rugby competitio­n.

Their tense 31-29 win against the Brumbies in Christchur­ch last night was far from pretty, and required a missed conversion after the hooter from pivot Noah Lolesio, but it was a competitio­n opening win nonetheles­s.

Moments after No 8 Rob Valetini scored with time almost up, Lolesio dragged his difficult conversion attempt wide-left as the Crusaders escaped with four points in what was hooker Codie Taylor’s 100th match for the franchise.

They sure nearly coughed up a 31-17 lead, after loose forwards Brendon O’Connor and Cullen Grace crashed over in the final quarter to seemingly kick clear.

Talk about a brave effort from the visitors.

Much like the mob the Reds sent out against the Highlander­s in Dunedin on Friday night, this wasn’t a full-strength outfit from Canberra.

Fresh from a gut-wrenching defeat to the Reds in last week’s Super Rugby Australia final, they were without a string of players, including halfback Nic White.

But they were right in the thick of it, sniffing their first win in Christchur­ch in 21 years, with 20 minutes left.

Down 19-7 at halftime, they’d clawed their way back into the match through midfielder Irae Simone’s try, and a Lolesio penalty goal.

However, shortly after loose forward Ethan Blackadder was bundled into touch just short of the line, O’Connor crashed over from a driving maul, and Grace powered over from close range.

Brumbies fullback Tom Banks scored a scorching long-range try with seven minutes to play, before Valetini setup the crunch finish.

The visitors’ set piece wasn’t as dominant as usual, but their defence was at times super, and Banks and wing Solomone Kata were a real handful.

If the Addington air wasn’t so frigid some punters might have dozed off in the opening 20 minutes, given the stop-start nature of the contest.

The shambolic scrums were the primary factor, as the opening quarter was dominated by referee

Paul Williams having a pig of a time attempting to sort out the respective front rows.

He eventually lost his patience

after awarding a bevy of free kicks, and instead started dishing out penalties, three to the Crusaders.

Brumbies halfback Ryan Lonergan’s hesitancy to feed the scrum didn’t help matters, especially as the Crusaders started getting a shunt on. There was still something for the 11,000-odd punters to cheer for outside of Blackadder’s fourthminu­te try, starting with some dazzling Richie Mo’unga magic moments after Brumbies prop Scott Sio had bashed his way over the line to put the visitors 7-5 up after 27 minutes.

Much to coach Dan McKellar’s disgust, the Brumbies coughed up the restart, before Mo’unga made fools of three defenders from the resulting scrum to dash over.

Form midfielder David Havili then picked off a sluggish Lonergan pass to bolt in from 40-odd metres.

The Crusaders’ 19-7 halftime lead should have been more, only centre Braydon Ennor lost the ball attempting to dive over.

 ??  ??
 ?? GETTY, left, PHOTOSPORT ?? Richie Mo’unga, left, and David Havili were among the Crusaders’ tryscorers in last night’s escape act at Orangetheo­ry Stadium.
GETTY, left, PHOTOSPORT Richie Mo’unga, left, and David Havili were among the Crusaders’ tryscorers in last night’s escape act at Orangetheo­ry Stadium.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from New Zealand