Showing posts with label Ranfurly Shield. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Ranfurly Shield. Show all posts

Saturday, October 9, 2010

Canterbury defeat Southland in Ranfurly Shield classic...

INVERCARGILL, NEW ZEALAND - OCTOBER 09:  Robbi...Image by Getty Images via @daylife


Canterbury defeat Southland in   Ranfurly Shield classic...





Southland 16



Canterbury 26





Canterbury celebrate their 26-16 Ranfurly Shield victory over Southland. Photo / Getty ImagesIt was bitter-sweet, even for newly-elected Invercargill mayor Tim Shadbolt as, with heavy hearts, Southlanders farewelled the Ranfurly Shield last night.



Re-elected yesterday for a sixth term, Shadbolt had correctly predicted earlier this season Southland would beat Auckland 9-6 but his forecast the Stags would beat Canterbury 17-14 last night was, sadly, astray.



The Stags fought with every fibre but this was a bridge too far against more polished opposition.



It was a humdinger of a match, a shield classic.



It was no disgrace for Southland. Canterbury were simply too good, as they usually are at the business end of the season.



There were heroes aplenty on both sides. For Canterbury, Colin Slade, who contributed 21 points and controlled play so coolly; composed halfback and captain Andy Ellis; hard-running centre Robbie Fruean; the inimitable Sonny Bill Williams; and forwards like Nasi Manu and Matt Todd.



For Southland, the front rowers Jamie Mackintosh and Jason Rutledge; the workaholic flankers John Hardie and Tim Boys; and hard-running three-quarter, Tony Koonwaiyou.



But it's a cruel world. There was not even a bonus point for all that endeavour.



"It's been one hell of a ride," Mackintosh said as he handed over the log of wood, and no one would disagree.



It was 13 days short of a year since Southland beat Canterbury 9-3 to take the shield and, in the course of it defending it six times this year, the Stags had formed an impenetrable defensive barrier.



They had conceded just three tries in those matches but, conversely, their attacking momentum had stalled. They had scored just one try, by the injured Kenny Lynn, and not reached double figures in their last three games.



Of their eight wins in the championship this season, six had been by five points or less. They had lived on the edge, sustained by their physical endurance and their indomitable spirit.



Canterbury were fuelled by revenge and bolstered by players with international experience in Sam Whitelock, Wyatt Crockett, Isaac Ross, Ellis, Slade and All Black-in-waiting Williams.



Canterbury went into the match with momentum and with a proud shield challenging record.



They had won the shield 13 times before, including four times since 2000 and, understandably, they began as favourites. They had lost just twice to Southland since 1981.



Canterbury had first use of a cool, southerly breeze on an overcast evening in front of an almost capacity crowd of more than 14,500 but there was early encouragement for Southland when Robinson kicked an angled 35m penalty after Canterbury infringed at a scrum. Slade soon cancelled that out with a penalty for Canterbury.



Shield matches are won and lost on mistakes and James Wilson made a howler midway through the way. His timid chip was blocked by Williams who gathered, drew in the defence and wing Telusa Veauinu sprinted 25m for the try and a 10-3 lead.



There was a controversial moment three minutes before halftime when Southland flanker John Hardie touched down after taking an in-pass from Koonwaiyou but, after an interminable delay, television match official Doug Rodgers ruled Koonwaiyou had put a foot out before he delivered the pass.



But the Stags' persistence paid off as Koonwaiyou ran off Jimmy Cowan and No 8 Kane Thompson scored by the posts. Robinson's conversion made it 16-13 as the crowd and players caught their breaths at the break.



Southland had 62 per cent territory and 72 per cent possession in the first half, dominated the breakdowns 65-26 and would possibly have been disappointed not to have been in front. But they would also have been encouraged to be just three points behind after trailing 3-16 after 30 minutes.



The pivotal moment arrived 11 minutes into the second spell when Whitelock won a lineout on halfway, Fruean burst through midfield and, from the ensuing ruck, Slade scampered 20m down the blindside to score and convert and increase Canterbury's lead to 23-13.



It was a double whammy for Southland for Robinson was injured in making the tackle on Fruean and had to leave the field. Two minutes later, James Wilson kicked an angled penalty and the Stags, at 16-23, were still not without hope.



Southland twice turned down kickable penalties but Canterbury turned the ball over and Williams almost scored 100m downfield, just beaten to the touch by Pehi Te Whare.



Five minutes from the end Slade kicked his fourth penalty and Canterbury had a 10-point buffer.



Southland 16 (K. Thompson try, R. Robinson con, 2 pens, J. Wilson pen); Canterbury 26 (T. Veauinu, C. Slade tries, C. Slade 2 cons, 4 pens). Halftime: Canterbury, 16-13.



Sunday, September 19, 2010

Richie's the best - but it means nothing according to Phil Gifford...

richie mac caw rugbyman jouantImage via Wikipedia Richie's the best but it means nothing...


OPINION: Returned and refreshed, let's look at some burning issues.



How good have the All Blacks been this year? For mine, the fact they've not only won everything, but played with such breathtaking flair, means they match the benchmark set way back in 1967, when Fred Allen coached a team that not only swept through Britain unbeaten, but also showed you could win by running the ball. In other words, the class of 2010 is as good as we've seen in the last 50 years.



How good is Richie McCaw? Not just as good as All Black flankers of the past 50 years, as good as any All Black of the past 50 years.



Does that mean we'll bolt the Rugby World Cup? Bitter experience says no. Sudden death games are never a certainty. But wouldn't you rather start from the level we're on now than several steps below?



So who might tip us over next year? Australia, because their team is even younger than ours, and they've embraced the potential offered by the change in ruling the tackled ball area. South Africa, if they get to grips with playing like the Bulls and using the ball. And, of course, France, because they're France, and it's what they do.



What about England? They're dreaming.



PICK AND MIX



The Last task of the year for the All Black selectors, choosing the team to tour Britain, looked a breeze until the Sydney test. Now it offers some fascinating challenges.



Take it as read that the 10 players the selectors have limited to no play in the ITM Cup will be going. Add Keven Mealamu (if he's fit), Tom Donnelly, Brad Thorn, Tony Woodcock, the Franks brothers, Jimmy Cowan, and Israel Dagg.



As a service to amateur selectors, here's the roughest of guides to the prospects for other contenders.



Sonny Bill Williams (90%). Barring a catastrophic loss of form in the ITM Cup, this tour is the only chance they'll have to really see how he fits into the team environment. If it doesn't work, better to have taken the chance now than discover at the world cup that there's a problem.



Aaron Cruden (60%). His starting debut was shaky. The question is whether his strength of character persuades the wise men he can learn and improve.



Colin Slade (40%). Neck and neck with Cruden. His goal kicking might be a clincher.



Benson Stanley (50%). He could suffer from the Sonny Bill experiment. In a year when the coaches got almost everything spot on, what happened to Stanley was a small, but spooky, reminder of the belief Henry and Co seem to have that players are better off training with the All Blacks than getting regular footy. Insisting he stay on in the All Black camp, and not get game time for Auckland, hasn't been a help to Stanley, just as the same tactic didn't help anyone in 2007.


 Rene Ranger (80%). Tough minded, versatile, he should get the benefit of selectors who are daring enough to accommodate players whose style falls outside the square.



Victor Vito (50%). Until his catastrophic defensive error against the Wallabies, he'd have been a 100 percenter. His physical gifts are huge, but whether he reads the game well enough at test level is now a burning question.



Joe Rokocoko (50%). James and Dagg, both basically brilliantly gifted fullbacks, will be perfect wings to play in Britain, where it's likely their opponents will still be kicking and chasing. If Sitiveni Sivivatu is available again he's guaranteed, and then it gets really tight for Rokocoko. His place could depend on whether Mils Muliaina is the only fullback picked.



Corey Flynn (50%). His prospects will depend on Andrew Hore making it back from injury, and whether, if Hore is fit, the selectors trust John Afoa to be a back-up hooker.



A bolter? Robbie Fruean. Physically he makes Sonny Bill look almost delicate, and he's quick too. If he continues to improve, he may not make this tour, but he'd be hard to keep out of the world cup squad.



FORWARD BATTLE



Tradition gets turned on its head this Thursday night when Auckland challenge Southland for the Ranfurly Shield.



In the past you could write the script with cliches. Hard as nails swede bashers in the maroon jerseys, with backs who just filled out the numbers in the programme. Nancy boyish forwards in blue and white, with flashy backs.



In 2010 rip up the pages and set a match to them. Auckland now, as demonstrated so dramatically against Manawatu, have a forward pack that eats barbed wire at halftime.



Lovers of watching big tough men smash the tripe out of each shouldn't miss the game on Thursday. As just one example, the first time Jason Rutledge and Charlie Faumuina smash into each other should be a great test of whether human bodies alone can produce nuclear fission. With the passion Southland bring to defending the shield expect a potent throwback to the days of titanic forward battles.



SBW WATCH



The Sonny Bill watch continues to be a fascinating exercise.



Taranaki, a team using 125 years of history as inspiration, were terrific in beating Canterbury and it was Williams' misfortune to be the fallguy in two Taranaki tries, when, after running his heart out in defence trying to cover other people's errors, he found himself out of options.



His game remains the antithesis of showboating, and there are some big chapters in this story still to come.



Talking of talent, first-five Beauden Barrett was being talked bout in hushed tones in New Plymouth back in June when the All Black test was there.



Now we all see why. Still a schoolkid last year, and turning 19 just four months ago, it's too soon to go crazy about his prospects, but he has the breeding (father Kevin played 169 games for Taranaki), the class, and the speed (he's played sevens for New Zealand) to continue to make a big impression

Acknowledgements: Phil Gifford