Hooray! The best teams face off in the Super Rugby final

By Brett McKay / Expert

I mentioned on the weekend that leading into the Super Rugby finals series I was genuinely concerned – fearful, even – that the best two teams in the comp to that point couldn’t meet in the final.

In numerous different outlets, and on numerous different mediums, it troubled me that if the qualifying finals went according to seedings, that the Hurricanes and Highlanders would meet in the semi-final, thus denying the final of one of the better teams of 2015.

In that regard, the Brumbies did the competition a favour in beating the Stormers in Cape Town in the first week of the playoffs. Their win meant that they became the lowest ranked winner in Week 1, punting the Highlanders over to the Waratahs’ side of the draw.

On the overall Super Rugby standings, the Hurricanes and Highlanders were ranked one and four respectively. By the actual records – and the records many would prefer were official – they’re one and two. At the end of the regular season, they were one and three in terms of tries scored.

And that last point is probably one reason – maybe the reason – why we’re really looking forward to this match as a decider. It could, hypothetically, be a 33-31 thriller, with the ninth and deciding try scored after 26 phases in the 83rd minute.

It could also be 15-12, though.

It’s certainly true that both teams like to throw it around, and equally, they like to make teams pay for their mistakes. They were again ranked one and three for tries scored from their own half for the season.

But they’re also very adaptable, as we saw on the weekend. Maybe the most adaptable in the competition, though I’m not really sure how that would be quantified.

Certainly the Hurricanes made no secret of their changed defensive focus for the semi-final. As I reported on Sunday, Conrad Smith spoke post-match of their plan to strike early and make the Brumbies chase.

“We thought that if we could get points on the board and they had to chase the game, that it could work in our favour as they try to play a game that they probably don’t like to play as much,” Smith said.

They had scored the most tries in the competition, and from all over the field, yet come finals time, here they were admitting that their plan was to post points and park the bus (Julian Savea injury pun not intended).

However, there was more to their defensive focus than that. The semi was the first time the side had played in Wellington since the death and funeral of former Hurricanes and All Blacks flanker Jerry Collins. The Canes played with ‘JC’ on their sleeves and will do so again this weekend.

I spoke with Hurricanes coach Chris Boyd on Friday after their captain’s run, and he explained to me what effect the loss of Collins had forced upon them.

“We found out about an hour before we played the Highlanders in Napier that JC had tragically passed in his car accident, and it was a pretty emotional time,” Boyd said.

“And then we played the Chiefs in New Plymouth, and you know, JC was a lot of things, but he was a pretty good defender, and so we re-themed our defence around JC, and that will continue tomorrow night.”

And there’s no doubt it did continue against the Brumbies.

“They covered the field well and put us under pressure there, particularly early on,” skipper Stephen Moore said post-match.

“We had some good ball there at the end of the first half and they held us out. And you do need good defence like that to win the competition, there’s no doubt. That will hold them in good stead next week.”

Then there’s the Highlanders. A little bit has been made of the Highlanders kicking 35 times for the match against the Waratahs, but they’ve shown all season an ability to switch between their kicking and running game-plans.

Working back all the way to the start of their South African tour in Round 13, the Highlanders kick tallies read as thus: 35 (v the Waratahs), 16, 28, 19, 39, 31, and 22 times against the Lions.

Realistically, they’ve always been a team that prefers to play away from their own half one way or the other, whether it be by contestable kicks or counter attack.

And even though they did kick out of their own half a lot against the Waratahs, they still capitalised on any half-chance presented. Richard Buckman only needed to lose the sensation of external touch to get up and keep going, and Waisake Naholo didn’t need much of an invitation to make Bernard Foley look silly and burn Nick Phipps in the race to the ball in-goal.

Lima Sopoaga had a shot at drop goal in the 25th minute – and had already kicked four for the season already – yet the Waratahs still didn’t notice him back in the pocket in the 75th minute, when he potted number five. Maybe the ‘Tahs defenders couldn’t see that far; so deep was Sopoaga in the pocket he was damn near pulling up the socks.

So sure, losing both semis wasn’t great for Australian rugby, but this week should now represent an opportunity for the Wallabies coaching panel.

Cream always rises to the top, but if you can’t learn something about much needed adaptability from these two teams in Saturday’s final, then some serious questions need to be asked.

And while those lessons are being learnt, I’m just going to enjoy the fact that the two best teams could face off after all.

The Crowd Says:

2015-07-01T23:36:53+00:00

Muzzo

Guest


Smith...... possibly the most used name, in reference to commentators, in a game such as this weekends final. With the Highlander's two, & the Hurricane's one, it could be quite funny if at some stage, if all three are engaged in some phase of play, which is very likely to happen. Being a Highlander's fan, & having enormous, respect for the Hurricane's,all I can say, let's hope both team's bring their "A" game to the party, & may the best team win.

2015-07-01T02:21:45+00:00

Nick Nack

Guest


The reason we are so internally focussed is because we have so much going on just here that there is very little time to worry about what Bruce the Kiwi is up to over the other side of the gutter. We have AFL, NRL, local union comps, local everything, women(sometimes two) you name it. Barely enough time to fit work and feeding yourself into what time is left over.

2015-07-01T01:58:28+00:00

Charging Rhino

Roar Guru


Ha ha nice post mate! Clearly you have some South African friends ;-) I read my post again and maybe it came off a bit harsh. Don't worry I'm chilled. Loving Australia! Love South Africa too. Enjoy the game!! :-)

2015-07-01T01:42:52+00:00

Existentialist

Guest


Ag man, take it easy Charging Rhino, Please don't generalise about Australians (and especially on the Roar) ... I am in particular looking forward to this match and being an ardent Tahs supporter I know when the better teams deserve their place. But true about the media. In some instances I am glad i don't live there anymore. But you fire up ya Braai & I'll fire my Barbie (not the doll) and lets Jol till we celevrate the Canes win with a babelaas ;)

2015-06-30T23:07:34+00:00

RobC

Roar Guru


Thanks Brett. Yeah, it wasnt even close in the semi's. I wonder what your thoughts are, about Phipps Foley. A few believe they should be dropped from the starting squad

2015-06-30T22:13:31+00:00

Charging Rhino

Roar Guru


That's what I don't understand about Australians. Why are they only interested in Australian teams? This is the Super Rugby Final!! It draw huge interest in NZ, South Africa and the UK. NZ and SA fans look forward to the games when their teams play against the other countries teams, whereas Aus only wants to watch their own? I'm not saying it's right or wrong, but it's kinda like the American mentality. It's strange to me, but having moved here you begin to realise how internally focussed the news and media coverage (radio, TV, papers etc) is about sport and Aussie teams only. And so I guess people become interested in what they're being fed.

2015-06-30T20:09:31+00:00

LukeR

Guest


Well, i think we may see this change. I think the most likely 9-10 is Phipps-Foley and 12-13 Toomua, Kuridrani. Two reasonably established combinations, even though the latter haven't played that much footy together this year.

2015-06-30T16:49:04+00:00

scrumma

Guest


hehe, you only have to blame the tahs for not showing up mentally and not so much the brumbies for going down to the best team in the comp due to travel fatigue and don't blame joubert either, but both were up against far superior skilled teams looking to pounce and pounce they did.

2015-06-30T13:23:00+00:00

Ra

Guest


Probably because you know too much already nick nack, you prob think u won't learn anything from watching the two best teams in super rugby, and enjoy watching the game played at an inferior level. Each to their own eh.

2015-06-30T12:46:21+00:00

Rugby Tragic

Guest


atlas is a walking encyclopedia of NZ rugby players... never fails to amaze me

2015-06-30T12:42:11+00:00

Nick Nack

Guest


ZERO interest. Why would we want to watch a couple of NZ teams running around and have to watch it on subscription tv or we could watch local football on free to air tv? And union wonders why it is losing people in Australia.

2015-06-30T09:15:47+00:00

Crystal Rage

Guest


Yes, best two teams. Its like the comp has hit its peak. Love it when its like that. I just wish they could structure the comp a little better.

2015-06-30T09:15:45+00:00

Digby

Roar Guru


Cheers OB, gonna be a great time!! Thanks Brett, nice piece.

2015-06-30T08:25:50+00:00

DC-NZ

Guest


Thanks atlas, as a Canes fan living in Sydney that's good intel. Will pass onto the old man in Havelock. Thanks again. Cheers. dcnz

2015-06-30T08:03:10+00:00

NickBrisbane

Guest


Who is the ref?

2015-06-30T07:01:34+00:00

sesenta y cuatro

Roar Pro


writing off the Highlanders does not seem like the best thing to do these days...

2015-06-30T06:28:12+00:00

Common Sense

Guest


It's the same reason why I think the Crusaders keep getting trumped in the finals. The opposition has more motivation than the Crusader stalwarts.

2015-06-30T06:26:45+00:00

Common Sense

Guest


NVM

2015-06-30T06:08:50+00:00

ads2600

Guest


After winning the New Zealand Rugby League high school competition with Rotorua Boys High Scool (http://m.nzherald.co.nz/rotorua-daily-post/sport/news/article.cfm?c_id=1503436&objectid=11121008) and then helping the New Zealand under 18's beat Australia for the first time in a test series (he also scored a 100m try), Te Toiroa was approached by the Andy Griffin at the Broncos and Graig Bellamy at the Storm.

2015-06-30T05:59:00+00:00

atlas

Guest


All nz finals, this is the fifth one, note two were won by the away team, those bloody Crusaders! 1998: Crusaders beat Blues 20-13 at Eden Park, Auckland 1999: Crusaders beat Highlanders 24-19 at Carisbrook, Dunedin 2003: Blues beat Crusaders 21-17 at Eden Park, Auckland 2006: Crusaders beat Hurricanes 19-12 at Jade Stadium, Christchurch 2015: ?

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