Weekend Herald

Laumape stars in Hurricanes farewell

- Liam Napier

Ngani Laumape certainly left an imprint in his likely final dance for the Hurricanes.

Expect cries of ‘how did New Zealand Rugby let Laumape go?’ to ring out for many years yet as Laumape prepares to take his destructiv­e talents to Paris. In Wellington last night, as the Hurricanes played probably their final match of the season with a record victory over the Reds, Laumape claimed the opening try — his 48th for the franchise — and proceeded to bust tackles for fun during the rest of the contest against the Super Rugby AU champions.

Losing Laumape at 28 years old seems a major mistake given New Zealand’s thin midfield stocks and his performanc­e against the Reds, which included a try assist to talented emerging prospect Ruben Love, did nothing to dismiss that notion after making 14 carries, 92 metres and breaking 12 tackles.

Jordie Barrett’s regular injection from fullback and Du’Plessis Kirifi’s presence at the breakdown proved other prominent factors for the Hurricanes — as did dubious secondhalf yellow cards to Filipo Daugunu and Bryce Hegarty, the latter including a questionab­le penalty try.

After leading 10-7 at halftime, the Hurricanes blew away the Reds with five second-half tries, including a double to Dane Coles off the bench, to claim their fourth victory in the Transtasma­n competitio­n and temporaril­y move top of the standings.

Despite securing a bonus point, with the Highlander­s, Blues and Crusaders in contention for the final, the Hurricanes will rue their loss to the Brumbies in Canberra last week.

The main concern for the All Blacks from this match will be the way Ardie Savea gingerly hobbled out of the match in the 50th minute after potentiall­y tweaking the same knee injury he recently returned from. With All Blacks captain Sam Cane already out until the end of year tour, Ian Foster will now be sweating on Savea’s fitness.

The tale of the first half was the Hurricanes living off scraps of possession and turning turnovers into lethal counter-attacks. Unfortunat­ely for the locals, too often these sweeping raids resulted in blown tries, with three clear chances squandered.

While the Hurricanes had little ball, their physical rush defence, with Asafo Aumua leading the charge, paved the way for dominance at the breakdown, where Kirifi and Savea were hugely prominent over the ball.

The Hurricanes scrum, however, was on the back foot throughout and they struggled to contain Reds halfback Tate McDermott. It was no surprise he scored the Reds’ first try with another burst off the scrum five metres out after Tyrel Lomax was sent to the bin — perhaps fortunate to receive only a yellow card — after he made direct contact with Feao Fotuaika’s head.

In his farewell match, hooker Brandon Paenga-Amosa scored the Reds’ only second-half try to conclude a disappoint­ing campaign from the Australian champions. One win from five attempts does not reflect well on Australian rugby. Hurricanes 43 (Dane Coles 2, Ngani Laumape, Ruben Love, Devan Flanders tries, penalty try; Jordie Barrett 4 cons, pen)

Reds 14 (Tate McDermott, Brandon Paenga-Amosa tries; Bryce Hegarty 2 cons)

HT: 10-7

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