Crusaders edge Chiefs, claim seventh straight Super Rugby title
The Crusaders have put a seal on one of the great eras of rugby union domination with a 25-20 victory over the Chiefs in the Super Rugby Pacific final, sending coach Scott Robertson off to the All Blacks with a seventh straight title.
The Christchurch-based powerhouse handed the Chiefs only a second loss of the season to silence a full house at Hamilton's Waikato Stadium and secure a 14th Super Rugby title of all types.
Hooker Codie Taylor crossed for the second time in the 73rd minute for the winning score and the Crusaders held off the Chiefs, reduced to 14 men for the third time in the match, to snatch the victory.
The Chiefs had tries from fullback Shaun Stevenson and flying winger Emoni Narawa and held a 20-15 lead on the hour mark, but fell short in their bid for a first Super Rugby title since they went back-to-back in 2012-13.
As well as coach Robertson, who will take over at the All Blacks after the World Cup, the Crusaders were bidding farewe ll to three players who helped build the dynasty in Sam Whitelock, Richie Mo'unga and Leicester Fainga'anuku.
"I'm lost for words, I'm so proud of the effort," said an emotional Taylor.
"I can't get the fact that the boys are leaving out of my head and how much it means to them. It's special. Can't take anything away from the Chiefs. They threw everything at us and we just managed to hang in there."
The Chiefs were the dominant team in the regular season and co-captain Sam Cane, the last of the three home players to be shown yellow cards, was clearly deflated.
"We've had a heck of a season and it certainly hurts to come up short right at the end there," he said.
"A lot of credit must go to a quality Crusaders side. They've been the best for a number of years now and they managed to show that again tonight."
Flyhalf Mo'unga scored a try and kicked 10 points, opening the scoring with his first penalty in the ninth minute, just before Chiefs centre A nton Lienert-Brown went to the sin bin for a dangerou s tackle.
Damian McKenzie levelled up the contest with a penalty before Lienert-Brown returned, however, and three minutes later the home side were ahead.
Number eight Luke Jacobson tackled Will Jordan hard in midfield before stripping the ball off the Crusaders fullback and two phases later Shaun Stevenson was cruising across the line for his 12th try of the season.
Jacobson was yellow carded following repeat team offences soon afterwards, however, and Taylor grabbed his first try off the rolling maul against a short-handed pack to cut the deficit to 10-8.
The Crusaders were in the ascendant and Mo'unga finished off a raid down the left wing and converted his own try to give them a slender 15-10 lead at halftime.
The Chiefs struck back through Emoni Narawa three minutes after the break when slick hands through the backline sent the winger across in the right corner and McKenzie converted from wide to nudge the hosts back ahead.
The noise the crowd hit new heights as McKenzie kicked a second penalty for a 20-15 lead.
Narawa had a second try called back in the 56th minute and the Crusaders immediately laid siege to the Chiefs line but the home defence held firm.
They were unable to repeat the defensive feat legally eight minutes before fulltime and Cane was sent to the sin bin with Taylor mowing over the line from another catch-and-drive a minute later.
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I’m not fully convinced this was any sort of deliberate grand plan by SB, other than perhaps a masterful way (as it transpired) of dealing with injuries to a couple of key players in positions that lack high calibre alternatives in SB’s view. Losing Martin and Lawrence was disruptive to the team England ideally wanted and pretty likely both start if they had been able to. Ted Hill clearly isn’t fully trusted, despite being on the bench vs Scotland and Italy, and Slade may have had his day in light of an winger being drafted in to start as Test centre for the first time. Moving Earl to centre is worthwhile, in the right circumstances, as a proving exercise for future reference but it’s not the way to go against any of the top teams.
So they may well have added another page to their emergency playbook but I’m doubtful it was a genuine attempt at cutting edge innovation. More a case of necessity being the mother of invention that happened to suit the opposition on that given day. I guess we’ll know more in the Autumn but it won’t be until next year in Paris that the first real test of that set up would come against a heavy power team, IF it’s still in use ofc…
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