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One playoff dream survives as Crusaders thrash Moana Pasifika

Dallas McLeod scores for the Crusaders. Photo by Joe Allison/Getty Images

Both the Crusaders and Moana Pasifika entered their round 15 matchup needing a bonus point win to keep their slim hopes of a quarter-final birth alive. This meant one thing; tries.

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One team achieved that goal, and it was the reigning champions who won the night with a 43-10 margin on a typically chilly Christchurch evening. The Crusaders now need the Fijian Drua and Western Force to lose their respective contests in order to make the playoffs.

The Crusaders came out of the gates hugely energised but even with the dominant carries of Christian Lio-Willie, Moana Pasifika were able to absorb the pressure and win a penalty.

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      The lads have plenty of big club games to react to this week after finals in Europe and Japan as well as some huge results in Super Rugby Pacific. We start by dissecting the games in Christchurch and Hamilton before casting an eye over the Champions Cup final.

      The Crusaders suffered an early yellow card when Joe Moody entered a tackle on Lotu Inisi upright and made high contact. Before long lock Antonio Shalfoon was helped from the field with an ankle injury.

      The Crusaders gave away a stupid penalty right in front of the posts by hanging on to William Havili’s leg in the ruck, allowing Moana to claim the first points of the game through a penalty – although there appeared to be some confusion over that call given it was tries the team needed.

      However, even with that yellow card, the hosts were on the scoreboard shortly after with a strong driving maul try finished by Ethan Blackadder.

      With that proven recipe for success, the Crusaders went back to the driving maul four minutes later and were in for their second.

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      Moana had some lineout magic of their own to throw the Crusaders’ way, opting to play it off the back rather than muscle up, with the Inisi brothers connecting to see Fine touch down over the line draped in defenders.

      The try scorer’s next impact on the game was an intercept attempt that resulted in a yellow card. Before the winger could even take his seat on the sideline, another Crusaders lineout drive saw Super Rugby’s all-time leading try-scoring forward Codie Taylor touch down yet again. Fergus Burke’s third conversion extended the lead to 21-10 as the clock ticked over 30 minutes.

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      35-year-old Ryan Crotty was the next man on the scoresheet as the Crusaders exploited overlaps down the blindside on consecutive phases for the former All Black to dot down in the corner.

      The try meant the Crusaders had their bonus point with minutes to spare before halftime. The teams headed into the sheds for oranges with a scoreline of 26-10 favouring the hosts.

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      The second half didn’t start all that well for the reigning champions with the kickoff going out on the full.

      However, a steal from Ethan Blackadder sparked a counterattack in Moana’s half and the individual brilliance of Noah Hotham saw the opportunity converted. The halfback put through a chip and chase and leapt for the bounce, winning the aerial contest and falling over the line with the ball.

      The Crusaders next found pay through short carries around the ruck, with big efforts from Tamaiti Williams and Cullen Grace helping create another overlap down the blindside which Dallas McLeod emerged as the benefactor of, scoring another try in the corner.

      The Crusaders continued to dominate territory through superior discipline and the kicking game of Noah Hotham and Fergus Burke, with the long-range boots of Johnny McNicholl and Chay Fihaki also stepping up with timely interventions.

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      It was a McNicholl kick that set up the Crusaders’ 68th-minute try for Macca Springer, with the short ball landing perfectly in the waiting arms of the winger in full stride, who cantered past the last defender to extend the lead.

      With the hosts owning a 33-point advantage in the contest, they were just seven points shy of a positive points differential on the season, not something often said about a team with more than twice as many losses as wins.

      With just 30 seconds remaining in the game, the Crusades demolished an attempted lineout drive by Moana Pasifika, punctuating a dominant performance. The final whistle was blown with the score 43-10.

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      PM 22 minutes ago
      Why Henry Pollock's x-factor could earn him a Lions Test start

      Nick,

      I am a long suffering England fan, who has had to endure watching 4 years of dull rugby, poor selections and painful defeats. Steve Borthwick talks about GPS and picks squads by numbers and then we put in a poor performance on the pitch - it’s been a consistent trend.


      Something changed in the Six Nations and we totally changed our style (literally overnight) and played some really good footie, which finally felt like positive rugby for a change.


      Genge has regained his pore-Covid form and is looking back to his best and is head and shoulders above Porter.


      Chessum has had a good year and hasn’t played a poor International game this season.


      Tom Curry was outstanding in the 6 Nations but they have been playing him at 6, wheras he is better at 7 and is lethal at the breakdown.


      Tom Willis was brought into the starting team at 8 and has been one of the best England players over the last year, who should have been on this Lions tour at 8. Earl had his best game since 2020 last week - not sure 1 game warrants Lions selection over a poor combination side and he is certainly second choice for his club 7 country behind Willis.


      Pollock will be a good player but like all young emerging players, he is inconsistent and can go quiet in games, which is why Curry should be the starter at 7. He brings energy to games, which is why he is good from the bench but there is an argument to say he is the 5th best England openside (Curry x2, Underhill & Earl are currently better) but will improve over the next 5 years. We just need to stop the media building him up for a fall, let him play and develop and you will see a sensational Henry Pollock for the Lions in 4 years time.


      Lions will be too powerful over 80 mins, so doesn’t really matter who they pick. Just please don’t put too much hype on Pollock. His 20 mins of International rugby going into this tour were positive but the media caused a frenzy and no other player would be selected on this basis.


      Let’s enjoy the rugby and give Pollock the space and time he requires.

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