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Brumbies rue blowing halftime lead in Christchurch

The Brumbies have blown a chance to end their Super Rugby drought against the Crusaders, falling away in the second half to lose 36-14 in Christchurch.

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The men from Canberra produced one of their most intense 40-minute efforts in recent memory to lead 7-0 at the break on Saturday, playing with a physicality and accuracy that threw the defending champions off kilter.

However, they couldn’t maintain it, conceding five tries in a one-sided second half, including a brace each to Crusaders wingers Sevu Reece and Will Jordan.

It means their decade-long wait to beat the nine-time champions goes on. The Brumbies haven’t won in Christchurch for nearly 20 years.

The result was a relief for the competition leaders, who were playing their first game Christchurch since the tragic mosque attacks three weeks earlier.

It was their sixth win from seven games this season while the Brumbies slump to a 2-5 record, the worst of the four Australian sides.

Coach Dan M cKellar’s decision to rest three Wallabies forwards following a bye week didn’t have any negative impact on their exceptional early output.

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Captain Christian Lealiifano darted over in the 32nd minute, capitalising on his team’s relentless tactic of keeping ball in hand and forcing mistakes from the ill-disciplined hosts.

The Crusaders conceded eight penalties to two by halftime and their Test prop Owen Franks was shown a yellow card in his 150th game for a no-arms tackle on Henry Speight.

Momentum swung on a big scrum from the home pack soon after the break and the tries followed.

Reece crossed once and Jordan twice in the third quarter as the Brumbies were forced into defence mode, struggling to shut down the crafty play-making of inside backs Richie Mo’unga and Ryan Crotty.

Yellow cards were shown to winger Toni Pulu and reserve lock Sam Carter, both for high tackles, making it even harder to stem the red and black tide.

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Lealiifano tr ied to squeeze the positives from the performance.

“A really impressive first half, we came out with the right intent,” he said.

“It was just a shame that we couldn’t continue that in the second half.

“They put us under a lot of pressure there in the second half and a quality side like that can hurt you from anywhere… but we’ll take plenty of confidence. There’s something to build on there.”

The Brumbies created the final try, when Pulu broke from distance to set up Tevita Kuridrani.

Crotty praised the Crusaders defence for not wilting when the Brumbies bossed the first spell.

“I don’t think we touched the ball for that second 20 minutes. It was awesome that we only let them in for seven,” he said.

“We talked about trust that momentum would come back our way. We just had to be good enough to execute when it did.”

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J
JW 2 hours ago
Mick Cleary: 'These blokes have done the jersey proud, with their buy-in and with their relish.'

Jesus PR that’s another great conclusion. I can definitely see it as blocker to bringing through new talent in time for the WC. NZ underwent a lot of change in 2018 following the Lions tour, in part thanks to key injuries. Despite the revenue spending Aaron Cruden (getting frail even at his young age then) and Lima Sopoaga (along with Julien Savea), 2 of the 3 1st5s in the Lions squad, both left before the 2019 WC for example. But when we apply your logic, their delayed departure prevented Richie Mounga and Damien McKenzie (the 15 who got injured and threw a spanner in the works) from brought through in what would possible now be considered the preferred WC preparation. Ditto on the win with a scramble of constant change their all the way through to their WC 3rd/4th playoff.


Theres certainly cause to account for certain circumstances eventuating being influenced by a Lions tour. But as both nations here select from domestic players only, theres also cause to put similar emphasis on the contracting model in general, as sometimes you can hold on too long. Ireland has a similar model, talking to another irishman here he suggests it has lead to selecting based on contracts, money being spent on a player centrally contracted. So I would not so much worry about fatigue (in part because some incomplete analysis I had done on all.rugby shows the Irish contingent have low minutes this year) but continuing to select underperforming and aging players. When in a pure context of building for a WC, one would normally want to move on an develop the future.

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