'Nothing's going our way': Tony Brown laments the bounce of the rugby ball

Highlanders coach Tony Brown has suggested that it's primarily dumb luck that is to blame for the Highlanders' ongoing winless streak against New Zealand opposition.
With Super Rugby Pacific now entering the trans-Tasman stage of the competition, the Highlanders won't meet any of the four other Kiwi franchises again until the knockout stages of the competition. While the southerners haven't managed a single victory against their fellow New Zealand sides this year, managing only a solitary victory so far against Moana Pasifika, Brown is confident that the Highlanders have done everything within their power to get a victory.
"We always have a plan to win every week and the boys execute the plan," Brown said following Saturday night's loss at the hands of the Hurricanes. "At the moment it's just not getting the rub of the green and it's not going our way. The belief's there and if we keep preparing well and we keep performing, we'll be fine."
Brown repeatedly emphasised throughout his post-match press conference that 'the rub of the green' simply hadn't favoured his side in their games to date.
In their six losses this season, three were by seven or fewer points. If a few decisions had gone a different way, perhaps the Highlanders wouldn't be sitting in 10th place on the 12-team ladder.
Brown suggested that at some stage, some of those decisions would end up falling in their favour.
"I think we've showed a lot of heart right through the whole campaign," he said. "Nothing's going our way, decisions aren't going our way, but the effort that the guys are putting in and how we're preparing for a game is first-class.
"I'm really, really proud of the guys for that and at some stage we're gonna get the rub of the green and we're gonna turn these narrow losses into good wins."
In Saturday's loss, a TMO decision saw a Highlanders try chalked out at the death which would have turned their 22-21 defeat into a victory. While the video evidence seemed fairly conclusive that prop Saula Ma'u had made a double movement on the ground, Brown implied that had referee Angus Mabey awarded an on-field try before going upstairs, the outcome could have been different.
"Obviously, it went upstairs and it [had been] awarded 'no try'. In that situation, very hard to overturn it unless it's really clear," Brown said - though he wouldn't be drawn on whether the wording that referees use when referring a try to the TMO could be problematic. "I don't know, [that's] not my job."
Brown's comments weren't too dissimilar to those shared by his captain Aaron Smith following the match, who said the Highlanders were "getting robbed" this season and that referees needed to be consistent with how they treated foul play after two tackles from the Hurricanes in the second half likely deserved a second look from the officials but were missed.
Brown, however, stopped short of blaming the officials.
"I'm not gonna criticise the referees," he said on the post-match broadcast. "It is what it is. Another day, another time, that gets awarded and we win the game."
Regardless of the results so far this season, Brown said the future is bright for the Highlanders, you only need to look at how they responded after going down early against the Hurricanes.
"I think that's the heart, and it's leadership and it's desire to want to work for your teammates," he said of the never-say-die approach to the match. "That's what I'm most proud about.
"Sometimes when you coach rugby and you're in rugby teams, it's all about the result. But for me, it's all about the attitude and the desire and the heart and the camaraderie in your team that's most important and I think we've got that.
"Like I say, if little things go our way and we get the rub of the green, we're gonna be fine."
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I think you have gone in the wrong direction here Nick. I think you need to delve down into the rules etc around Moana Pacifica’s selection policies and then you need to understand that a lot of KIWI BORN rugby players have PI heritage. It appears ok for the 4 home nations to pillage NZ born players constantly without retribution but you want to question whether NZ BORN players should be eligible for NZ? Seems a real agenda in there.
Go back and look at the actual Aims and agenda for MP becoming a entity and you see lots of things enshrined in policy that you arnt mentioning here. EG there is an allowance for a percentage of MP to be NZ eligible. This was done so MP could actually become competitive. Lets be real. If it wasnt this way then MP would not be competitive.
There also seems to be some sort of claim ( mainly from the NH ) that NZ is “cashing in” on MP, which , quite frankly is a major error. Are you aware of how much MP costs NZR Financially?
39 NZ born rugby players played at the last world cup for Samoa or Tonga. PLUS plenty for Scotland, England, Ireland and Wales.
Taumoefolau is a BORN AND BRED NZer. However I very strongly doubt he will be an AB, but who do you believe he should be allowed to play for? Levi Aumua is ALSO a born and bred Kiwi.
Aumua was eligible to represent Samoa and Fiji for the Pacific Nations Cup in July that year but ended up playing for neither. He IS eligible for his nation of Birth too Nick
He is a Kiwi. Are you saying an NZ born, raised Kiwi cant play for NZ now?
Sorry Nick Kiwi born and bred actually qualify for NZ.
Go to commentsYeah, Richie certainly stepped up for the ABs in 2022 and 2023 and proved he could translate his skills into the test arena. You have to understand many fans checked out at that point though, only to tune back in for a directionless WC final.
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