Northern Edition

Select Edition

Northern Northern
Southern Southern
Global Global
New Zealand New Zealand
France France

Ioane brothers return as Blues make 15 changes for Highlanders derby

Akira Ioane on the run

Coach Leon MacDonald has completely refreshed his starting line-up for the Blues’ quarter-final derby with the Highlanders this weekend.

ADVERTISEMENT

Not one of the 15 players who started in last weekend’s last-minute victory over the Waratahs in Sydney has been selected in the run-on side for the quarter-final, meaning the Blues will go into the match at Eden Park with fresh legs and fire in their bellies.

Importantly, the likes of Tom Robinson, Akira Ioane and Rieko Ioane will all make returns for the Blues this weekend after also sitting out the team’s prior last-second win over the Brumbies.

Video Spacer

Why Super Rugby Pacific’s eight-team finals structure shouldn’t change.

Video Player is loading.
Current Time 0:00
Duration 0:00
Loaded: 0%
Stream Type LIVE
Remaining Time 0:00
 
1x
    • Chapters
    • descriptions off, selected
    • captions off, selected
      Video Spacer

      Why Super Rugby Pacific’s eight-team finals structure shouldn’t change.

      In the front row, the experienced trio of Alex Hodgman, Kurt Eklund and Ofa Tuungafasi will earn their sixth start of the campaign as a unit, with last week’s No 3 Nepo Laulala dropping to the bench alongside Soane Vikena and Karl Tu’inukuafe.

      Despite a man-of-the-match performance from stand-in captain Luke Romano against the Waratahs, the former All Black will start from the bench this week with James Tucker and Robinson preferred in the second row.

      Akira Ioane will join Dalton Papalii and Hoskins Sotutu in a formidable loose forward trio with Adrian Choat covering via the reserves.

      The first-choice halves combination of Finlay Christie and Beauden Barrett has unsurprisingly been restored for this weekend’s quarter-final with Roger Tuivasa-Sheck and Rieko Ioane combining in the midfield.

      ADVERTISEMENT

      Related

      Out wide, Caleb Clarke’s hamstring injury has forced a reshuffle with Mark Telea shifting from the right wing to the left and utility Bryce Heem suiting up in the No 14 jersey. Stephen Perofeta will suit up at fullback with Sam Nock, AJ Lam and Zarn Sullivan named as back reserves.

      The Blues have enjoyed a remarkably clean bill of health in the latter half of the season with Akira Ioane and Heem the only two players in this week’s run-on side to have not featured in at least four of the past seven starting line-ups – and that’s despite the Blues running out a shadow team last weekend against the Waratahs.

      While the Highlanders have limped into this weekend’s quarter-final clash following two losses in their last two matches, the Blues were only able to rest so many of their top players against the Waratahs due to locking up first spot on the ladder the week prior and are sitting on 13 victories on the trot – a team record. As such, the Blues will enter this weekend’s clash as firm favourites, especially given the side they’ve been able to now for the fixture.

      The Highlanders and Blues have squared off twice already this season with the Blues winning both games – although just seven points separated the two sides in their last encounter.

      ADVERTISEMENT

      Saturday’s match will kick off at 7:05pm NZT from Eden Park in Auckland.

      Blues: Stephen Perofeta, Bryce Heem, Rieko Ioane, Roger Tuivasa-Sheck, Mark Telea, Beauden Barrett, Finlay Christie, Hoskins Sotutu, Dalton Papalii, Akira Ioane, Tom Robinson, James Tucker, Ofa Tuungafasi, Kurt Eklund, Alex Hodgman. Reserves: Soane Vikena, Karl Tu’inukuafe, Nepo Laulala, Luke Romano, Adrian Choat, Sam Nock, AJ Lam, Zarn Sullivan.

      ADVERTISEMENT

      HSBC SVNS Singapore 2025 | Day Two Men's Highlights

      HSBC SVNS Singapore 2025 | Day Two Women's Highlights

      Jet Lag: The biggest challenge facing international sports? | The Report

      Boks Office | Episode 39 | The Investec Champions Cup is back

      Rugby’s Greatest Rivalry? | New Zealand & Australia | Sevens Wonders | Episode 5

      Kobelco Kobe Steelers vs Toshiba Brave Lupus Tokyo | Japan Rugby League One 2024/25 | Full Match Replay

      The Rise of Kenya | The Report

      The Fixture: How This Rugby Rivalry Has Lasted 59 Years

      Trending on RugbyPass

      Comments

      1 Comment
      G
      Graeme 1042 days ago

      👍😄

      Join free and tell us what you really think!

      Sign up for free
      ADVERTISEMENT

      Latest Features

      Comments on RugbyPass

      f
      fl 3 hours ago
      Why Les Kiss and Stuart Lancaster can lead Australia to glory

      “Why do you downplay his later career, post 50? He won a treble less than two years ago, with a club who played more games and won more games than any other team that managed the same feat. His crowning achievement - by his own admission.”

      He’s won many trebles in his career - why do you only care about one of them?

      I think its unsurprising that he’d feel more emotional about his recent achievements, but its less clear why you do.


      “Is it FA cups or League cups you’re forgetting in his English trophy haul? You haven’t made that clear
”

      It actually was clear, if you knew the number he had won of each, but I was ignoring the league cup, because Germany and Spain only have one cup competition so it isn’t possible to compare league cup performance with City to his performance with Bayern and Barcelona.


      “With Barcelona he won 14 trophies. With Bayern Munich he won 5 trophies. With City he has currently won 18 trophies
”

      I can count, but clearly you can’t divide! He was at Barca for 4 years, so that’s 3.5 trophies per year. He was at Bayern for 3 years, and actually won 7 trophies so that’s 2.3 trophies per year. He has been at City for 8 completed seasons so that’s 2.25 trophies per year. If in his 9th season (this one) he wins both the FA cup and the FIFA club world cup that will take his total to 20 for an average of 2.22 trophies per year.


      To be clear - you said that Pep had gotten better with age by every metric. In fact by most metrics he has gotten worse!

      182 Go to comments
      f
      fl 6 hours ago
      Why Les Kiss and Stuart Lancaster can lead Australia to glory

      “He made history beyond the age of 50. History.”

      He made history before the age of 50, why are you so keen to downplay Pep’s early career achievements? In 2009 he won the sextuple. No other manager in history had achieved that, and Pep hasn’t achieved it since, but here you are jizzing your pants over a couple of CL finals.


      “If continuing to break records and achieve trophies isn't a metric for success”

      Achieving trophies is a metric for success, and Pep wins fewer trophies as he gets older.


      “He's still competing for a major trophy this year. Should he get it, it would be 8 consecutive seasons with a major trophy. Then the world club cup in the summer.”

      You’re cherry picking some quite odd stats now. In Pep’s first 8 seasons as a manager he won 6 league titles, 2 CL titles, & 4 cup titles. In Pep’s last 8 seasons as a manager (including this one) he’s won 6 league titles, 1 CL title, & 2 (or possibly 3) cup titles. In his first 8 seasons he won the FIFA world club cup 3 times; in his last 8 seasons he’s won it 1 (or possibly soon to be 2) time(s). In his first 8 seasons he won the UEFA super cup 3 times; in his last 8 he won the UEFA super cup once. His record over the past 8 seasons has been amazing - but it is a step down from his record in his first 8 seasons, and winning the FA cup and FIFA club world cup this summer won’t change that.


      Pep is still a brilliant manager. He will probably remain a brilliant manager for many years to come, but you seem to want to forget how incredible he was when he first broke through. To be clear - you said that Pep had gotten better with age by every metric. That was false!

      182 Go to comments
      LONG READ
      LONG READ Why French rugby would be poorer if Ronan O'Gara leaves La Rochelle Why French rugby would be poorer if Ronan O'Gara leaves La Rochelle
      Search