A Reds alert for the other Super 14 finals contenders
By Spiro Zavos, 19 Apr 2010 Spiro Zavos is a Roar Expert
- Tagged:
- Bulls, Digby Ioane, Reds, Rugby Union, Super Rugby, Super Rugby 2011
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Queensland Reds player Digby Ioane (centre) during the Super 14 rugby match between the Queensland Reds and the Bulls of South Africa at Suncorp Stadium in Brisbane, Saturday, April 17, 2010. The Reds defeated the Bulls 19-12. (AAP Image/Dave Hunt)
The sensational Reds victory over the Bulls, in one of the best Super Rugby matches ever, has thrown open the finals possibilities. The top seven sides, in theory at least, are now in contention.
The table for the magnificent seven now reads: Crusaders and Bulls 34, Stormers 33, Reds 30, Waratahs 29, Brumbies 26, Blues 25.
The Hurricanes (22) claim that they have a theoretical chance but their brain-dead play against a lacklustre Brumbies side at Canberra suggests that any momentum will be stopped sooner or later by inept play and tactics.
I would expect the Waratahs to monster the Brumbies at the ANZ Stadium on Saturday night, which should put Brumbies supporters out of their finals expectation misery.
The Hurricanes have the most lethal backline in the tournament. So what did their halfback Tyson Keats do most of the match? Kick the ball away to the Brumbies.
The Brumbies were not slick enough to capitalise on these dreadful tactics. Matt Giteau is playing like a former great player who knows he has lost his genius for broken field running.
I make these points because the Reds and the Stormers both showed how the new/old interpretation of the tackled ball law (the tackled player MUST be allowed to place the ball) has changed the whole zeigeist of rugby.
The ball now should be treasured, not kicked away. We are back, if teams and coaches will only realise this, to the days of unlimited tackles. If a side is good enough in taking the ball into the tackle and contesting the ruck it can hold on to the ball indefinitely. The Reds often ran deep kickoffs back at the Bulls for many phases before kicking for territory.
The Reds also ran every high kick back at the Bulls. They forced the big Bulls forwards to run and run and run, until they were out on their feet at times. It was as if the Bulls were confronted with 15 matadors who teased them into false and tiring charges by clever, intelligent ball-in-hand play.
A little insight into the cleverness of the Reds tactics came when Ewen McKenzie revealed that they used Will Genia to probe the blindside and keep the defence honest on this side of the field, while Quade Cooper was given a licence to run things on the open side.
Two other points: first, Genia out-played Fourie du Preez who in my opinion has been the best halfback in world rugby for a number of year. Second, the Reds pack held its own against the big Bulls pack and created some confusion in the Bulls lineout.
They were able to double-team Victor Matfield so effectively that an errant Bulls throw was snaffled and the backs put Rod Davies away in the corner for the clinching score. Teams need good set piece skills to be championship contenders. The Reds, even though there are no current Wallabies in their pack, seem to have these skills.
This victory, too, was achieved with a South African referee, Marius Jonker, who made a schoolboy howler in allowing a ball to go through the scrum to be picked up and planted over the Reds line by a Bulls forward. Also, the Reds returned from South Africa during the week before the match.
Next Friday’s match at Lang Park against the storming Stormers, hopefully before a huge crowd, will be a definitive test for the Reds. If they can win this match, they are virtually assured of a finals place.
In all likelihood this could be a home final as they play, after the Stormers, the Brumbies at Canberra, the Hurricanes at Wellington and the Highlanders at Brisbane in a comparatively easy run of matches.
The Stormers on their showing against the Chiefs, who were admittedly pathetic with their skills and tactics, suggested that they might be the best of the South African sides. They have a toughish run home, though, playing after the next week the Crusaders at Cape Town, the Sharks at Durban and the Bulls at Cape Town.
Working for the Reds is the fact that their main competition for finals spots, the Bulls, Stormers and the Crusaders all play each other. And the result of the last pool round game of the 2010 tournament, the Sharks-Bulls match, could as in previous years be crucial as to the make-up of the finals.
The two Australian teams in the hunt – the Reds and the Waratahs – have easier matches at the end of the tournament than the other main contenders, the Bulls, Stormers, and Crusaders.
The Blues, too, although they have three matches in South Africa (against the Sharks, the Cheetahs and Lions) and finish with a match against the Chiefs at Eden Park, have potentially a great run home. But this team is so flakey and so far behind the leading five teams that you’d be foolish to believe that they can play with any consistency after another hot-cold season to blast their way through the pack.
I suggested a couple of week ago that we are looking at two Australian teams in the finals. This suggestion is more than ever in play after the Reds’ terrific victory. But don’t ask me right now to predict the other two teams in the finals.
It’ll all be a bit clearer, or perhaps not, after next week’s round. What we can say is that this is one of the best Super Rugby tournaments we’ve had since the journey began in 1996, and that the Reds victory was one of the great wins in that time.
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April 19th 2010 @ 7:13am
Redhead said | April 19th 2010 @ 7:13am | Report comment
Agreed Spiro – the reds played brilliant, courageous, magic, inspirational running rugby – and has anyone noticed that both the reds’ coaches (McKenzie & McKay) are Randwick men? The ghost of Mark Ella lives on! Go the reds!
April 19th 2010 @ 7:19am
Red Rooster said | April 19th 2010 @ 7:19am | Report comment
The ref was Craig Joubert – but your point is correct about the scrum feed
April 19th 2010 @ 11:45am
paulmc said | April 19th 2010 @ 11:45am | Report comment
But where was the assistant?
And – Spiro schoolboy refs NEVER make that mistake – its only adults who are too lazy to bend over to look through the tunnel!
April 20th 2010 @ 12:58am
Lindommer said | April 20th 2010 @ 12:58am | Report comment
Joubert was on the opposite to the halfback putting the ball in so the ball came out right in front of him! I had a good look in slo-slo-mo tonight and couldn’t see why that scrum wasn’t rest. But, I will say in Joubert’s favour the camera was on the put-in side, he must’ve seen something we didn’t. Christ only knows what.
April 19th 2010 @ 7:27am
Balthazaar said | April 19th 2010 @ 7:27am | Report comment
Just two little points: the people in the crowd around me on Saturday night thought the referee was Craig Joubert; and don’t write off the Sharks for the semis just yet. Whilst they have to play the Bulls in Pretoria their three other games are at home and I wouldn’t be surprised if they take 19 points from the remaining four games.
And I think I will be about the millionth person to say the Reds were awesome in a terrific match against the Bulls!
April 19th 2010 @ 7:32am
True Tah said | April 19th 2010 @ 7:32am | Report comment
Reds v Stormers should be a cracker – the best teams to watch.
The Hurricanes and Chiefs have been disappointing this season. The Blues have played well in part, but their defence was pathetic against the Tahs.
April 19th 2010 @ 12:53pm
Jervois said | April 19th 2010 @ 12:53pm | Report comment
But we only won by seven… do explain TT,
If there defense was pathetic our attack must be truely woeful
April 19th 2010 @ 7:57pm
Wavell Wakefield said | April 19th 2010 @ 7:57pm | Report comment
Why are you so quick to pounce on anybody who suggests that Super NZ rugby isn’t pulling up any trees?
April 19th 2010 @ 7:46am
johnny-boy said | April 19th 2010 @ 7:46am | Report comment
There is nothing gauranteed in this comp – even if the Reds beat the Stormers. Such is the intensity of the games they can burn out and fall over any time. Peak concentration and determination will be needed for every game, every minute. They have the tools now to run any team off the park. Lets hope they keep focussed. It will be worth it. The prize is Wallaby jumpers and financial security for themselves and their families. Watching replay it was suprising how many opportunites the Reds blew. If they can complete more chances in the future they will be unstoppable, even against the Crusaders. It’s a joy to watch for sure. I’d like to take my hat off to Genia’s parents. That’s one cool dude there. And to Van Humphries, having ploughed along for so many years it’s wonderful to see him hitting his straps so strong now. Coopers brand, bad boy gone straight, made good is priceless. A wonderful example for youth’s doing it tough. Peter Hynes’ returns are just great and Ioane is a wonder. Gee this is fun.
April 19th 2010 @ 8:04am
Justin said | April 19th 2010 @ 8:04am | Report comment
“Gee this is fun.”
JB – You got that right. I am not a Reds supporter but they just make you cheer for them.
April 19th 2010 @ 8:38am
Brumbiesfan said | April 19th 2010 @ 8:38am | Report comment
Go the REDS!!!
April 19th 2010 @ 8:08am
The Other Reds Fan. said | April 19th 2010 @ 8:08am | Report comment
The Reds have got the Super 14 in the bag.
April 19th 2010 @ 8:09am
TembaVJ said | April 19th 2010 @ 8:09am | Report comment
We dont have to wait for the Stormers match, I said if they beat the Bulls then they have prooved them selves. Weldone to them, I love the under dog coming in the back door and surprising everyone!
Wonder what the odds where of them winning the S14 right at the start? 200 – 1?
April 19th 2010 @ 8:14am
Justin said | April 19th 2010 @ 8:14am | Report comment
Agree Temba, they have proved themselves already. A great effort after a gruelling SA tour, then come straight back to QLD and beat the Bulls who had a significant travel advantage. Yet it was the Buls who looked jaded most of the match.
By the way on Betfair somone got $190 for the Reds but generally speaking there has been decent money at around $100 early in the year. Not bad at all!
April 19th 2010 @ 8:43am
TembaVJ said | April 19th 2010 @ 8:43am | Report comment
The reds might have to reproduse this effort at Loftus and will be the biggest test for them.
In the end and as a bulls supporter I say a magical final would be Reds vs Stormers and we will get a taste of that this weekend.
April 19th 2010 @ 8:15am
mungo said | April 19th 2010 @ 8:15am | Report comment
That game had me on the edge of the couch for the full 80 mins and when Rod Davis scored I screamed so much my 12 year old daughter came running out thinking I was murdering her mother, what a difference a year makes. Your spot on Spiro about Giteau, its painful watching him these days.
April 19th 2010 @ 8:37am
Jerry said | April 19th 2010 @ 8:37am | Report comment
I think you’re over-estimating that Canes backline a bit. Especially with a rookie 10.
April 19th 2010 @ 8:56am
Hanzo said | April 19th 2010 @ 8:56am | Report comment
Have to agree, this match was a cracker. I havent watched the Reds at all this season (work commotments), but have read alot of the press regarding their season so far particularly about the form of Cooper. I was pleasantly surprised to see how well they went. I thought Cooper was very strong and by all accounts this was a quiet night for him! I hope Mackenzie is getting plenty of credit for how well theyre going also. Tactics were great, setpeice work was top drawer and theyre play with ball in hand was with pace and accuracy. Well done Reds.