Sunday Star-Times

Top marks for Blues outstandin­g wing

The Blues romped home against the Highlander­s in Dunedin last night and at the heart of almost everything they did, writes Marc Hinton, was their big No14.

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It’s early for major All Blacks statements, but how about Mark Telea’s monster game for the Blues as they opened Super Rugby Pacific with a recordbrea­king 60-20 victory over the Highlander­s in Dunedin?

The Blues right wing put in a sensationa­l 80-minute shift for last year’s runners-up, and it’s easy to imagine that All Blacks coach Ian Foster was scribbling furiously in his notebook as he watched Telea run in two tries, gallop for a mammoth 221 metres on 12 carries, beat 13 defenders, make three clean breaks and throw in an offload and try assist for good measure.

Telea was simply superb on a night when that lethal Blues backline flexed their muscles under the roof of Forsyth Barr Stadium. Beauden Barrett got through 80 minutes in his first hitout of the year and ran the show with his usual class, Rieko Ioane was quality (with two tries and 71 metres of his own), Caleb Clarke looked handy out on the left and Finlay Christie’s workrate was off the charts on a busy evening for running footy.

But their efforts paled in comparison with those of Telea, who emerged late last year as a No 14 option for the All Blacks, and must now be, if not the man to beat for the spot, at the very least an eminently viable alternativ­e to Will Jordan.

Who knows what’s happening with Jordan and his migraines, and maybe the Crusaders flier even emerges as a prospect at fullback, where’s he’s very handy, rather than right wing. Regardless, if Foster is looking for depth on the right wing, in Telea he appears to have not just a class act, but a man whose game is improving rapidly.

On the whole it was an impressive Blues performanc­e as they ran in eight tries to two and punished the Highlander­s for a succession of errors. The Crusaders, in last year’s final, showed how you beat Leon MacDonald’s side. You squeeze them up front and deny them momentum and frontforwa­rd ball.

The Highlander­s, in this 2023 opener at Forsyth Barr, showed exactly how not to play them – a nice 10-minute spell at the end of the first half apart.

After the Chiefs’ statement performanc­e on Friday night with their epic victory over the Crusaders on their home deck, this was, if not quite as impressive, certainly a commanding response from the Blues. Yes, they may have slipped at the final hurdle last year, but on this performanc­e, they are going to be there or thereabout­s again in ’23.

Truth be told, MacDonald’s men do not have a lot to fix after last year’s grand final implosion provided a bleak finish to an otherwise exhilarati­ng Super Rugby Pacific season.

You don’t rattle off a 15-game win streak in a competitio­n as high quality as this without getting a heck of a lot right.

But this effort indicates they’re ready to take up where they left off for the majority of last season. Hoskins Sotutu put in a big shift up front, Dalton Papalii too, and though there might be a close look at a scrum that had its issues against that powerhouse Highlander­s front row, the forwards on the whole provided the platform required.

The Highlander­s had some bright moments. Folau Fakatava was industriou­s and looks in good shape after the knee injury, Shannon Frizell put in some strong runs and Billy Harmon shapes as a skipper his team will be inspired by.

It was hard to know whether to be impressed or depressed about the Blues’ first 40 minutes. They played some rollicking rugby to charge to a 31-6 lead in less than half an hour, and were predatory, powerful and punishing.

Telea was the star with 75 firsthalf metres on a half-dozen carries, but Barrett’s playmaking and vision, Rieko Ioane’s smarts and athleticis­m, Clarke’s power and Sotutu’s strong carrying were all notable.

But then they went badly off the boil over the last 10 minutes, as the Highlander­s put them under sustained pressure and came roaring back into the contest. Two yellow cards late in the spell did not help the visitors’ cause either. From 25 up and cruising, the Blues went into the sheds with a 31-20 lead that was somewhat less commanding.

Never mind. Normal service resumed over the run home as the

Mark Telea touches down for his first of two tries in Dunedin last night.

Blues continued to strike regularly (Telea and Ioane completed their braces, and Marcel Renata and Papalii got on the scoreboard) and the Highlander­s were thrust into batten-down-the-hatches mode.

A good night for the Blues. A great one for their right wing.

The big moment

The Highlander­s started the second half with a player advantage and just 11 points behind. But any chance of a comeback disappeare­d when the hosts let replacemen­t prop Renata score a simple try in the 54th minute to give the visitors a 21-point advantage.

MVP

Two-test winger Telea was brilliant all night. He kept wriggling through tackles and offloading to team-mates in space

Match rating: 7/10 The big picture

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to leave the Highlander­s defence spinning.

The new rules designed to speed the game up appear to be working because this game was faster and more exciting than many of the drab spectacles of recent years which prompted the changes. It’s only round one, however.

The Blues have made it five wins in a row against the Highlander­s.

It’s magic round in Melbourne next weekend and the Highlander­s kick it off against the Crusaders on Friday night. The Blues have an interestin­g clash next Sunday afternoon with the Brumbies, who they pipped 20-19 in last year’s semifinal at Eden Park.

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