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'We deserve to be here': How the Highlanders plan to shock the Blues

(Photo by Joe Allison/Getty Images)

They may have won only four of their 14 matches in the Super Rugby Pacific regular season, but the Highlanders are firmly of the belief they deserve their place in the playoffs.

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Despite a tumultuous campaign that has been blighted by injuries, suspensions, Covid, illnesses and poor form, the Highlanders have managed to wriggle their way into the competition’s post-season, much to the disdain of fans and pundits alike.

Sneaking into the quarter-finals thanks to Super Rugby Pacific’s bloated eight-team playoff structure, the Dunedin-based franchise will look to silence their critics by shocking a star-studded Blues outfit at the peak of their powers.

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      Aotearoa Rugby Pod | Episode 16

      Few, if any, onlookers have given the Highlanders any hope of clinching a shock win over the Aucklanders – who are in the midst of a record-breaking 13-match unbeaten streak – at Eden Park on Saturday.

      That doesn’t bother them, though, as Highlanders star Shannon Frizell made clear on the eve of his side’s do-or-die clash this weekend.

      “We know how good the Blues are. They’re on the top of the table. They’re a good team, but we know how good we can be when go to our plan,” Frizell said.

      “That’s our goal, to be in a playoff. The round-robin, it doesn’t really matter. We’re here and we deserve to be here.”

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      Frizell headlines the match day squad named by Highlanders boss Tony Brown on Thursday, with the 17-test All Blacks loose forward listed on the bench after missing the last eight weeks of action due to a knee injury.

      His return is timely for the Highlanders as he offers power and experience that Brown said will be invaluable near the end of the match.

      “He’s obviously a quality rugby player. He’s going to give the players a lot of confidence, and when he gets on the field, he’s going to bring the physicality that’s required to beat the Blues,” Brown said when asked why Frizell wasn’t named to start.

      “We’ll look to inject him early on in the second half. We just feel as though he’s going to have the biggest impact on the team finishing the game.

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      “I felt as though if we started him, we’d need to take him off before the end of the game. We’ve got other guys who can do the job at the start. We want his rugby ability at the end of the game.”

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      Frizell isn’t the only notable addition to the Highlanders bench, as reserve hooker Leni Apisai has been named to make a potential debut for the club.

      Part of the Highlanders set-up as an injury replacement player, Apisai has been used similarly by three other Kiwi franchises this season, having played for the Chiefs in pre-season and for the Hurricanes in rounds 10 and 11.

      Now set to turn out for the Highlanders against his old team, the former Blues rake has been called in by Brown following injuries to Liam Coltman and Rhys Marshall.

      “Leni’s been with us for a couple of weeks now, but he’s been with the squad off-and-on for the whole year, really,” Brown said.

      “We got him in Queenstown for a few weeks, we just had ongoing injury problems with all of our hookers, really, so he’s been a great addition to the team.

      “He fits into the environment well. It’s a good opportunity for him to play his debut.”

      Frizell and Apisai will both be expected to provide the Highlanders with plenty of impetus from the bench as they look to defy the odds against a Blues team that finished the round-robin as league-leaders and title favourites.

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      Equipped with 11 past or present All Blacks in their match day squad, and others who could become All Blacks in the imminent future, the Blues present a daunting challenge for the comparatively understrength Highlanders.

      However, according to Brown, the key to success for his side is to embrace that challenge rather than be fearful of it – a lesson he learned himself during his playing days with Otago and the Highlanders.

      “I always remember, when I first started playing for Otago and the Highlanders, the Blues were always the team that was tough to beat, especially when you’re going up to Eden Park,” Brown said.

      “It’s no different [this time round]. I remember in ’95, when we played the [NPC] final up there for Otago, they had 13 All Blacks and we came just a little bit short on a penalty try.

      “Back in those days, the Otago sides and the Highlanders sides just used to give it everything that they had. They weren’t afraid of taking on the Blues. This weekend, we’ve got to be the same.

      “We’ve got to give it everything we’ve got, can’t be afraid of their team, and if it’s good enough at the end of the day, then we win the game.

      “If it’s not, we’ll still be proud of the effort and the preparation that we’ve had.”

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      J
      JW 42 minutes ago
      Broken hand or not, Richie Mo'unga is still New Zealand's best 10

      Should Kiwi players contracted to overseas clubs be available to the All Blacks?

      Well I didn’t realise that Ardie was returning to Moana in 2027, I thought he would go back to the Hurricanes (where he is on loan from). That is basically a three year sabbatical, and if say SR was able to move it’s season back, and JRLO, it’s forward (or continue later into June), and have a Club Pacific Cup to play for against each other for over 2 months, how much difference is that to the allowance of 3 All Blacks to be loaned to Moana each season?


      Granted, the 3 AB quota is probably only something put in during the beginning of their existence to give them a boost but maybe NZR don’t find too many downsides from it? The new tournament could be regulated heavily, all teams data open to the respective unions to monitor their players in overseas teams etc.

      “They’ve earned the opportunity; they’ve been loyal, they get to go away and come back.” In this respect, there is no difference between Jordie and Richie

      There is a huge difference here! Richie didn’t want to come back, he is staying in Japan FFS LOL

      That freedom of choice is what sticks in Robinson’s craw

      I doubt it’s that, I think it’s more the look of not getting your man. Though if Robinson was to think deeper on it, it could have fuel a hatred of allowing “free men”, yes.

      It leaves New Zealand rugby in something of a quandary

      You mean NZR? No, I think it leaves the player in a quandary..

      This is no washed-up has-been seeking to improve his pension plan in some easy far corner of planet rugby, it is a player still near the peak of his powers and marked by his resilience in the face of adversity.

      I had been thinking in all likely hood it had been looking more and more likey; Richie would need to switch allegiance if he really was in a quandary about what he could achieve. With a typical normal NH player returning Mo’unga would have arguable had more time in the saddle at International level if he choose Samoa or Tonga, but then I realised that JRLO players return so early in the year that he will still be able to join club rugby, and doesn’t need to wait for NPC.


      Richie’s two further titles probably haven’t helped the situation. Arguably one of the reasons he underperformed on the International stage was because of the ease of his domestic success. He struggled for a long time with what it actually meant to be a top player, and I really wouldn’t be surprised if he has lapsed back into that mindset playing in the JRLO. But if he could return to NZ in May or June next year, and selectable in July, well I would back him to then have enough time to get back to where he was when he nearly won a WC with the team on his shoulders.


      On the other hand, a team made of up of Mircale Fai’ilagi, Taufa Funaki?, Richie, Lalomilo Lalomilo, Tele’a, Shaun Stevenson would be pretty baller for Samoa as well!

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      LONG READ Broken hand or not, Richie Mo'unga is still New Zealand's best 10 Broken hand or not, Richie Mo'unga is still New Zealand's best 10
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