Uncanny similarities in finals journey to end with home advantage

By Matt Porter / Roar Guru

So it’s all come down to this. Two teams. One elusive prize.

It’s been interesting to see some uncanny similarities between the Hurricanes and Lions as they won through to rugby’s showpiece last weekend.

Both had to front up to their semis without their injured inspirational skippers Dane Coles (ribs) and Warren Whiteley (shoulder). 

Whiteley looks likely to play on Saturday while the jury will be out on Coles until minutes before kick off.



The good news was that their replacements were well up to the task.


The improbably named Ricky Riccitelli (why do parents do that?) made an especially good fist at hooker for the Canes.

A couple of wayward early lineout throws notwithstanding, the 21-year-old ripped into his work to make his presence felt with and without the ball including a big hit on All Black opposite Nathan Harris and a desperate scramble that saved a certain Chiefs’ try in the 27th minute.



Riccitelli, last year’s New Zealand under 20 hooker, was replaced by this year’s version when Leni Apisai joined the fray in the 59th minute and looked similarly undaunted by the occasion.

For the Lions 20-year-old Ruan Ackermann more than adequately filled Whiteley’s big boots at No.8, justifying his selection by coach and father Johan.

 And the pair’s absence hardly rendered their teams rudderless ships.



Lions’ openside and stand-in captain Jaco Kriel revelled in the extra responsibility with an even more workaholic performance than normal to continue his rich vein of form.



His match up with Ardie Savea, who outplayed the All Black Test incumbent on Saturday with another eye-popping display, is reason alone to sit glued to the final.

Although he didn’t quite scale the dizzying heights of his sublime performance in the quarter final thumping of the Sharks the week before, Canes skipper TJ Perenara was his usual self. He exhorted his troops for another massive defensive shift and yet again combining brilliantly to spark his match-winning mate outside him.

Which brings us to another point of similarity – the two freak shows at No.10.

Both Beauden Barrett and Elton Jantjies were match winners for their teams on Saturday. Each busted the game open scoring and setting up tries, pulled the strings to navigate their teams around the park, kicked the goals that needed to be kicked and defended their channels strongly.



Barrett’s audacious banana chip try assist for Willis Haluhalu in the fifth minute prompted Sky Sports Kiwi sideline commentator Ian Smith to ask if there is a more influential player in world rugby right now, receiving an emphatic “no” from his colleague Justin Marshall.

That was half an hour before the boy from the ‘Naki effectively sealed the deal when he intercepted Sam Cane’s gift pass to run away under the posts.



Yet, somehow Jantjies managed to be even more influential for his team at Ellis Park a few hours later.

 Everything he did turned golden for the Lions in their comprehensive defeat of the Highlanders. Like the running exit from his own 22 that led to a try to the flying left winger Courtnall Skosan to put the game beyond the visitors’ reach seven minutes into the second half.

And his pinpoint left foot cross-field kick for Kriel’s try, that he casually converted from the sideline. 

Then there was his little chip that replacement lock Lourens Erasmus latched on to to blow the Lions out to 40 -16 in the 72nd minute.

It will be brilliant to watch these two spark plugs ignite their sides on Saturday. Each holds so much of their team’s destiny in their hands – and feet.

Another point of similarity is the good form of both teams’ midfield combinations.
Rising star Rohan Janse van Rensburg and his seasoned partner Lionel Mapoe ran 166m, beat eight defenders, made 20 tackles and scored one try between them for the Lions in a standout all round performance.

The stats weren’t quite so compelling for Halaholo and Matt Proctor, but it was another assured display from the Canes’ pairing who are reducing fans’ pining for the fabled Nonu/Smith double act less and less with each outing.

But while there’s some resemblance, there’s plenty of points of difference between the final two contenders.

Foremost among them their scrums. To put it simply, the Lions’ scrum is a great strength they will be looking to win because of while the Canes will be looking to win despite theirs.

Although one element helping the home side in this regard is the appointment of ref Glenn Jackson.

A fly half who never got his head near a scrum in his Super playing days for the Chiefs, Jackson is one of those merciful refs (Jaco Peyper is another) who sees the set piece as a means to an end, not an end in itself.

If it collapses and the ball is available at the back, more often than not he’ll let it go. This should serve to mitigate a little against the dominant Lions scrum.


The weight of a scrum is one thing, the weight of history is quite another.

 Not one of the ten South African sides who have made the long trek have won a play-off match – let alone a final – in New Zealand in the 21 years of Super Rugby.

The 11,757km and umpteen time zones the Lions have had to traverse to reach this fixture cannot be under-estimated. And rather than a sun-drenched Ellis park they will be confronted by a forecast swirlingly windy and bitterly cold Cake Tin, conditions South African teams have failed to cope with this year.



Then there’s the residual scarring from the fact the Hurricanes inflicted the heaviest defeat on the Lions in 2016, the Round 10 50-17 away thumping.

Throw in the redemptive pain from their home final heartache last year, the yellow and black brick wall that has not been breached in two and a half games and the fact it’s beloved son Victor Vito’s 100th and last match for the franchise and I’m picking a glorious finale for the locals. 



But not without some exhilarating twists and turns along the way.

The Crowd Says:

2016-08-04T19:02:32+00:00


Sam I think for Ackerman and his boys the aim was get to the final. From there anything goes.

AUTHOR

2016-08-04T06:03:38+00:00

Matt Porter

Roar Guru


A mate of mine who's a mad Lions fan pointed out that when these two teams last met the Lions were a v different lineup: No Combrink. No Marx. No J Van Rensburg. No Redelinghuys, No A. Coetzee. A much more powerful pack awaits the Canes on Sat.

2016-08-04T05:10:32+00:00

taylorman

Roar Guru


Not to be the case...

2016-08-04T04:52:37+00:00

taylorman

Roar Guru


Yes but they're not playing them...the suggestion is they'd beat the Lions if it were in SA. so it's not flawed, there are reasonable grounds for that to be the case.

2016-08-04T04:42:05+00:00

Mark Williams

Guest


The Hurricanes got thrashed by The Brumbies, a team that is not in the final, at the beginning of the season. Ancient history by now.... The Sharks, who were thrashed in the quarters, also destroyed the Hurricanes 4 or 5 weeks before. Your logic is flawed.

2016-08-04T01:28:21+00:00

puff

Guest


From over the ditch most pundits are more interested in the Wallabies performance in three weeks. But for the uncorrupt purest the battle Saturday night at the Cake Tin is thought provoking. Both teams are stocked with individuals, capable of special split second moments what will excite a crowd and deliver tears. Although for me the key ingredient is structure. The Lions possibly believe they have the bigger more mobile forward pack with the Canes, utilizing great defensive patterns and can soak up sustained pressure. To be fair I see very little difference in the packs during the set piece but outside these more controlled elements the Canes have more free thinking opportunists who are impulsive, quick, will confuse and create options with opportunities that often end in celebration. The Lion are more predictable although Ardie Savea and TJ Perenara will be busy scheming, how to control the two live wires behind their pack. As it is unusual for SA teams to attack, ball in hand, from within their red zone. The Lion have been successful with this kind of unpredictability, which means they are confident. Wellington residences should have reason to smile come Sunday but don’t pop the corks too early. .

2016-08-04T01:12:41+00:00

Sulzberg

Guest


You forget the H'Canes put 50 pts on the Lions at home in the regular season!

2016-08-04T00:53:22+00:00

Pinetree

Guest


Yep, agree Tman, the Canes and Lions have a real team culture going on, and the Lions in particular have appeared to have grabbed the same sort of bond that the Crusaders and Brumbies had around 1997-1998 that started off very successful era for those teams, and I think the Lions, like the Brumbies and Crusaders of old, should start to dictate the national selection and the style of play they are evolving, What's great about the Lions is that they have not compromised the traditional strengths of the SA play, and just built on top of that a more expansive, adaptable to different conditions/teams game. I think the Cheetahs tried to achieve the same, but forgot that you build and expand around your strengths and just went straight out attack without the asset that SA has always had with defence, hard straight forward smashing and a sound kicking game. I see the Canes as favourites this weekend with the home advantage, but I think the Lions will compete better away from home than the Canes would of if they played away to the Lions. I guess what I mean by that is that if it was a neutral venue I would probably back the Lions to win, but I think home ground advantage will pull through (and who wants to lose 2 consecutive home finals in front of your fans, I believe this will add further motivation for the Canes as well!). Matt - Great points on the common aspects of the 2 teams. It seems that quite often that title winning sides pivot around the 7, 9, 10 position and the Lions and Canes are certainly blessed in this department.

2016-08-03T23:17:18+00:00

Rugby Tragic

Roar Rookie


Nice article Matt, thanks. Both teams have come right at the 'business end of the comp' and it should be an outstanding contest. Can't wait.

AUTHOR

2016-08-03T22:38:56+00:00

Matt Porter

Roar Guru


Good thought Sam, Jantjies was particularly emotional in his post-game interview, in stark contrast to Barrett's low key "another day at the office" reaction.

2016-08-03T22:13:52+00:00

Sam Taulelei

Roar Guru


One thing I noticed following both semifinals was the difference in player reactions for the winning sides. I could be misreading or reading too much into it but the highly charged emotional state of the Lions was in stark contrast to the Canes. Could the Lions be guilty of playing the final a week early? I'm still backing that hometown advantage will be too strong to overcome, if the final was in Joburg it would be Lions all the way.

AUTHOR

2016-08-03T21:56:04+00:00

Matt Porter

Roar Guru


Cheers Taylorman and Mania, good point re: subs Taylorman, definitely more than a hint of the AB 'family' type vibe with the Canes which is big credit to Boyd, Plumtree & co.

2016-08-03T21:26:52+00:00

mania

Guest


awesome article Matt gonna be an awesome finals too I reckon. both teams I hope will play beautiful rugby

2016-08-03T20:50:04+00:00

taylorman

Roar Guru


Very good Matt, the key point for me being when the subs or replacements step up consistently it suggests a strong and inclusive team culture where the squad has bought into the win, sometjing the ABs do very well. Should see them both well for the final

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