Fijian Drua claim famous win, hand Crusaders third straight loss
Two winless teams met in the cauldron that is Lautoka to kick off Saturday's epic slate of Super Rugby Pacific fixtures, with the Crusaders visiting the Fijian Drua.
It's a fixture that was famously won by the Drua in 2023, but it was the Crusaders who had the last laugh that season, beating the Fijians 49-8 in Christchurch in the quarter-final en route to a seventh title in as many years.
It was the Drua's day once more at home, with a roaring crowd celebrating another famous win for the side after a tight and tense 80 minutes.
The Drua were looking dangerous early as they broke the Crusaders’ line in the opening minute and a cross-field kick almost found the waiting arms of the lethal Selestino Ravutaumada.
The Drua's early kicking game was ambitious but lacking execution on contestable efforts, but they did enjoy some quality exits.
The Crusaders were the first to land points, thanks to the boot of young first five-eight Taha Kemara, capitalising on a Drua indiscretion.
The reigning champions' lineout continued to look uncharacteristically shaky but their scrum was dominant and a reliable source of momentum as they launched some disjointed attacks under the benefit of penalty advantage.
The backline found some cohesion to execute a superb lineout strike in the 20th minute, a play that saw centre Levi Aumua draw a crowd and then find Sevu Reece on the inside who showed blistering pace to burn the final defenders and score under the posts.
It was then a scrum penalty to the Drua that offered the home side their first chance at points, an opportunity which was converted by Isaiah Armstrong-Ravula.
The half-hour mark saw chaos unleashed with superb counterattacks from both teams foiled near each try line. Iosefo Masi was the instigator for the Drua while ball movement and pace from debutant Heremaia Murray found metres for the Crusaders.
Some superb vision from Frank Lomani gave Ravutaumada an inch of space on the wing which was all the in-form Flying Fijian needed, shrugging off the first tackle before stepping the second and third and diving over the line for a World-class finish that tied proceedings after the successful conversion.
The half ended with a missed penalty attempt from the Crusaders, leaving the score at 10 apiece.
Damp conditions contributed to some handling errors in the first half and didn't take long to feature in the second. The Drua received possession after some strong defence and looked to double down on their upper hand in the collision area.
A couple of powerful counter-rucks to begin the second 40 also contributed to the Fijians' momentum and a well-deserved try to Lomani put the home team in front.
The Crusaders had slowed the game down well after entering that deficit and looked to be building some momentum, but the Drua only needed a sniff and they launched a charge downfield.
Handling issues continued to be prominent as the game entered its final quarter and points were hard to come by.
A failed intercept over the try line almost saw Crusaders flanker Dom Gardiner steal a game-levelling effort with 15 minutes remaining in the contest. The referee ruled it a fair and realistic intercept attempt and awarded just a penalty.
The Fijians struggled to exit and ended up defending near the try line again shortly after, but the Crusaders again knocked the ball on in contact.
That man Ravutaumada got his hands on the ball and shredded the defence once more, getting his team beyond the halfway line before another run from the winger after a scrum made it well past the 22.
Execution continued to prove difficult in the conditions so in the 77th minute young Armstrong-Ravula stepped up to the tee and calmly extended his team's lead to 10.
The Drua's attacking ambition didn't relent once that lead was cemented, hanging onto the ball and even putting in another cross-field kick which ultimately saw them penalised for an offside offence.
The team had done enough already though and saw the game out with a final scrum. Frank Lomani was awarded Man of the Match for a superb performance. Final score: 20-10.
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It’ll something to do with money. If the bosses fire Gatland he’ll probably be due more of a payout than if he quits.
If that is the case he’ll hang on, criticism be damned.
Either way he’s only got a week left in the job.
Go to commentsMallia deserves 8 at least. Brains and skills for the comeback. Him, Garcia and Albornoz the core of The Pumas attack. Hope to see them in the 15s against France
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