Win over Drua leaves Force daring to dream of making the knockouts
Western Force are daring to dream of Super Rugby Pacific finals, keeping their hopes alive with a bonus point 34-14 win over Fijian Drua at HBF Park. The victory maintained the Force's unbeaten home record of four wins from four, and Friday's bonus point was crucial as they jumped the Drua and moved into the top eight.
The Force scrum was bolstered by the return from injury of Wallabies Tom Robertson and Folau Fainga'a, with the latter grabbing two tries. Max Burey, in just his second Super game, straightened the Force attack well and centre Sam Spink was bruising in midfield.
The Force's carries through the middle were effective and they concentrated most of their wide attack on the left with right winger Zach Kibirige struggling. Coach Simon Cron went into the game with just two backs on the bench for the first time this season and would have been reluctant to make an early switch.
His problem deepened when he lost left winger Manasa Mataele after 54 minutes with an eye injury. The Force took an early lead when the ball was moved quickly to Mataele who went over in the corner. They went further ahead when hooker Fainga'a ran a good line to crash over for his third try of the season, converted by Burey.
After a slow start, the Drua clawed back, piling pressure on the Force defence as Eroni Sau found a hole to stroll through. His try was converted by Frank Lomani. The momentum swung further in the Drua's favour and they pummeled the Force line, edging ahead on the half-hour with a converted try by Te Ahiwaru Cirikidaveta.
Burey restored the home side's lead with a penalty after the siren. The Drua were pointless after the break as the Force got off to a dream second-half start, second-rower Jeremy Williams driving over from the back of a maul.
Fainga'a added his second from a rolling maul, Burey converted both, and homegrown flanker Carlo Tizzano added the fifth with his first Super try for the Force.
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wel the crusaders were beaten by a queensland reds side that hadnt beaten them at home since 1999 and queensland reds partied like it was 1999
Go to commentsThink it was a great defensive performance by Northampton. They didn't have stage fright in the first half, the Nienaber defense smothered them. They limited Leinster to 15-3 in the first half. It could have been over by then. A great try from Leinster in the start of the second half looked to have sealed it. But Byrne missed another conversion. Northampton started trying little kicks behind the Leinster wingers. Leinster messed one and Smith brilliantly made the conversion. Leinster decided to tighten the game after Byrne missed a straight forward penalty. A few errors got NH into the 22 and they scored and converted with a few minutes left. Another brilliant steal from Lawes saw NH have a final attack which was turned over by Conan. A classic semi final. World record attendance of 82,300. Leinsters 3 week preparation warranted for this one.
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