Crusaders beat Reds to finish second in Super Rugby Pacific regular season
The Queensland Reds' Super Rugby Pacific season is hanging by a thread after another tough loss against New Zealand-based opposition on Friday night.
They couldn't stay with the Crusaders in a 28-15 defeat in Christchurch, and will meet them again in the South Island city for next week's quarter-final.
It completes a horror run for the Reds against the competition's New Zealand-based teams, 0-5 in those fixtures and outscored by a combined 63 points.
But Queensland skipper Tate McDermott said a far more competitive second half would give them confidence that they could make some noise in the post-season.
"Really proud of how we managed to claw back into it and we'll take that going forward," he told Stan Sports.
"Not too many teams get two cracks at the Crusaders in a row and we'll take the positives out of that game because we've got to.
"It was as simple as holding the ball, when we stuck to things better as a team and worked hard and put phases together, we looked really good ... but it's about doing that for longer periods of time."
From the jump the Crusaders looked in imperious touch, breaking through on 12 minutes through Fergus Burke after they pinched a scrum from a Queensland feed, while Will Jordan scored under the posts soon after.
And they could effectively start planning for their rematch at the half as Brodie McAlister crossed for 21-3, his team having run for an extra 217m in the first term.
The Reds were far more competitive in the second half and found a try through Richie Asiata to bring the score back to 21-10 as the hosts played a man down after Pablo Matera was carded for a dangerous throw.
A crash play for Crusader sub Tom Christie as soon as they had their full compliment back was quickly cancelled out by Red No.8 Harry Wilson in the corner, but the Kiwis had done enough to claim the points.
It kept the hot form rolling for the Crusaders, now with 38, 11, 58 and 13-point wins since their surprise loss to the NSW Waratahs a month back.
And captain Scott Barrett warned his side could produce an even more clinical display in a week's time.
"All week we focused on ourselves and didn't look too far ahead ... it's about us getting momentum and playing some rugby that we're proud of," he told Stan Sports.
"We were creating in that first half and had a little lack of patience and weren't clinical enough, come playoffs footy those chances are probably going to be less.
The Crusaders were without gun flyhalf Richie Mo'unga and hooker Codie Taylor, with both expected to be fit for next week's clash after dealing with ribs and finger injuries respectively.
Queensland sorely missed the creativity of James O'Connor, with the flyhalf's season all but over with a hamstring injury.
Matt Faessler left the field inside five minutes after copping a big hit, with the hooker not returning.
Crusaders 28 (Tries to Fergus Burke, Will Jordan, Brodie McAlister and Tom Christie; 4 conversions to Burke)
Reds 15 (Tries Richie Asiata and Harry Wilson; conversion and penalty to Lawson Creighton)
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Ford completely took the energy out the game for us, waving his hands telling people to calm down. Just for us to die off and lose the momentum.
Bringing him on all the time to ‘close out’ games is condescending to Smith. Get Ford out and let Marcus Smith & Fin Smith run the show. The future is them so give them the keys and let them get on with it.
Go to commentsTaking Marcus Smith off was a big puzzle and probably cost England the game. However, Abs created more opportunities and scored some tries but left a lot out there through sloppy execution, not playing to the ref and no enforcement of English off-side play. The fact the game was close all through made it worth watching but it was a frustrating pectacle. English succeeded in slowing the game down and were in the refs ear which Gardner allowed. I think Ireland or France will punish the sloppy execution more than England so still much for ABs to work on.
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