The New Zealand Herald

7 talking points from the weekend of Super Rugby Aotearoa

- Phil Gifford comment

1 The fat lady isn’t singing but . . .

So is it over for the Blues? Have the Crusaders already clinched the first Super Rugby Aotearoa title?

It certainly looks that way, but if you’re a Blues fan, that may not be a train coming down the tunnel, but a tiny, faint glimmer of light.

After the Blues’ 29-27 loss to the Hurricanes in Wellington, it might be the Canes who next weekend give not only themselves, but also the Blues a longshot chance of getting ahead of the machine that is the Crusaders.

The Crusaders are on 18 points, the Blues 13 and Canes 12.

If the Canes can beat the Crusaders in Christchur­ch next Saturday night and the Blues see off the Chiefs at Eden Park on Sunday, assuming no bonus points are earned, the table would read: Crusaders 18, Blues 17, Hurricanes 16 — though the Crusaders would still have a game in hand.

2 Feeding the flame isn’t always easy

Blues captain Patrick Tuipulotu confirmed what we all saw in Wellington — the Blues didn’t have the killer mindset needed for the game from the start.

“To be blunt,” he told Sky’s

Ian Smith, “we were a bit flat in the warm-up, and apart from that, they managed to put us under pressure.”

There was the discomfort of seeing Ngani Laumape being too quick for Beauden Barrett to put the Canes ahead after just three minutes, but the real gulper in the Blues coaching box must have been the scrum in the 15th

minute near the Blues 22.

A big difference with the 2020 version of the Blues is that the forwards have been committed, tough and technicall­y correct.

So to see the Blues pack basically disintegra­te in the first scrum of the game would have been a nasty surprise for Leon MacDonald and his forwards expert Tom Coventry.

3 Where Blues were let down

There will be some brutal discussion­s at Alexandra Park this week as Blues defensive coach Tana Umaga addresses defensive failings against the Canes.

Like the Crusaders, the Blues this year have looked to defend from the outside in, but in Christchur­ch a week ago, and again in Wellington, their defensive lines were slightly off.

The genius of the Crusaders on defence is they don’t commit so much to driving the opposing attack infield that if the opposing team gets the ball quickly to the outside, they can’t move out and cover.

They rarely get caught napping out wide, as the Blues did in Wellington.

4 Yep, first five-eighth is his best position

Otere Black’s misfortune with injury will almost certainly give Beauden Barrett the chance to start at first-five on Sunday against the Chiefs, which should give Barrett the chance to calm down the pretty relentless stream of criticism he’s received in recent weeks.

MacDonald has used him at fullback because the juggling of talent in the squad means playing both Black and Barrett adds up better than playing Barrett at 10 and, say, Matt Duffie at fullback.

It may not be much consolatio­n for Barrett, but the claims he’s too old, too slow and not committed enough are a note-perfect echo of what was being said by some in the media about Dan Carter before the 2015 World Cup.

5 Second-five gets interestin­g, too

Ngani Laumape didn’t make the 2019 World Cup squad, basically missing out to Sonny Bill Williams. It wasn’t a choice made because the selectors saw any faults in Laumape’s game. They just had five contenders for four spots.

Laumape’s been, by his dynamic standards, fairly quiet since the Aotearoa competitio­n started.

But he was at his explosive best in Wellington on Saturday night.

What’s also impressive about Laumape is that he has a skilled, astute kicking game. With Jack Goodhue now settled at second-five for the Crusaders, the battle for the

All Blacks 12 jersey will be interestin­g.

6 Where have these Chiefs been hiding?

It looked at first as if the problems the Chiefs had in their first four games of the competitio­n, like a slow start, missed tackles and giving away penalties at just the wrong moment, had vanished in Hamilton against the Highlander­s.

There was real class in the play of men such as Lachlan Boshier, whose work at the breakdowns was dynamic, and Damian McKenzie, threatenin­g to tear the Highlander­s defence apart every time he touched the ball.

Ahead 31-7 after 45 minutes, who would have dreamed the Highlander­s would then score 26 unanswered points and win 33-31 two minutes into extra time?

Chiefs captain Sam Cane was gracious in defeat but looked as bemused and saddened as the local fans we saw staring in disbelief after Mitch Hunt had kicked the winning conversion.

7 Elon Musk couldn’t invent a man with that much energy

If one player epitomised the stunning comeback by the Highlander­s, it was Aaron Smith, who yet again showed why he’s the best halfback, not just in New Zealand, but the world.

It was the perfect touch, after some scorching runs, beautiful passing and tenacious tackling, that it was his dart and pass that sent in Sio Tomkinson for the try that would win the game for the visitors.

There hasn’t been a more exciting 40 minutes in Super Rugby Aotearoa than the second half in Hamilton, and Smith was at the centre of almost every moment of it.

 ?? Photo / Photosport ?? Aaron Smith showed again why he’s the world’s best halfback.
Photo / Photosport Aaron Smith showed again why he’s the world’s best halfback.
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