The Citizen (KZN)

Blues finally realising their potential

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Sydney – Blues coach Leon MacDonald believes winning the Super Rugby Trans-Tasman final could be the moment that sets his talented squad on the path to finally fulfilling its potential.

MacDonald admitted it had been “scary” watching Saturday’s brutal final against the Highlander­s at Eden Park but the Blues clinched the win in the last 10 minutes to secure a first piece of silverware since 2003.

A title in a lopsided Australasi­an competitio­n – the Australian teams won two of 25 matches – may lack the prestige of New Zealand’s Super Rugby Aotearoa but MacDonald thought it could have a significan­t impact on his squad.

“We’ll gain belief, which is huge. We understand how tough it is and what it takes to win a title now,” he told reporters in the post-match news conference.

“I think the guys when you speak to them in the sheds, they’re really hungry for more. They love this feeling. It might just light that fire for us to keep moving forward.”

Despite having a squad routinely packed with All Blacks, New Zealand’s best-resourced Super Rugby franchise had not played a play-off match for a decade before Saturday night.

Former All Black MacDonald came on board in 2009 and the team has steadily improved with second place in the inaugural Aotearoa competitio­n in 2020 and third only on a tie-breaker this year.

There will be some departures before the next Super Rugby season but 28-year-old skipper Patrick Tuipulotu will remain with the core of the squad.

Joining them will be twice World Rugby Player-of-the-Year Beauden Barrett from Japan, and rugby league convert Roger Tuivasa-Sheck. –

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