Four questions I want answered in Round 10

By Brett McKay / Expert

Sitting down to put the tipping panel together was the first chance I had to look at games this weekend, and doesn’t it loom as a really entertaining round?

It feels like more than a few rounds have coasted by this season, and the Australian teams have no doubt contributed to that, but Round 10 could be the best yet.

I said on Thursday that I think six of the eight games could go either way, and that’s probably a bit a rough on the Sharks, on reflection. I still think the Jaguares at home will win, but the Sharks have a horrible knack of reminding me they’re a better team than I think they are at any given time.

So what do I really want to see this weekend? Well, I’m glad you asked.

Which Australian team can play out a game?
If there’s been one common element of Australian teams this year, it’s the shocking habit of shelling tries late in games. The Waratahs are the only side to not concede the most tries in the final 20 minutes every game, and that’s because, for some reason, the ‘Tahs have conceded 13 of the 35 tries they’ve let in this season in the period leading into halftime.

This is how it reads for the five Australian sides:
Brumbies – 11 of their 21 tries conceded coming after halftime, and seven of those in the last quarter;
Force – 14 of 26 tries conceded after halftime, eight in the last twenty minutes;
Rebels – 22 of 35 tries conceded in the second forty, 13 in the last quarter;
Red – 22 of 34 conceded in the second half, 14 in the last twenty; and
Waratahs – 13 of 35 tries conceded after halftime; eight in the last twenty minutes.

The Brumbies and the ‘Tahs are the only sides to have scored more second-half tries than they’ve conceded, though both teams took a hit in that department last week. The Rebels, worryingly, have scored just three second-half tries in 2017, and only one of them in the last 20 minutes of a game.

It’s really simplistic to say, but it’s also true, that the first Australian side to start playing games consistently will be the one that starts stringing wins together.

Of course to do that they’ve got to be holding enough ball to attack with, and the issue there is that Australian sides have been guilty both of kicking too much ball away and not winning their share at the breakdown.

Like defence – and that’s another question for another day – holding onto possession and winning the breakdown contest comes down to attitude. So which Australian side is ready to adapt theirs?

Could the patient Stormers sew up Africa One tonight?
The surprising stat I found this week was that the runaway leader of the most tries scored from seven or more phases this season is – well, yeah, the Stormers. The Stormers have scored 12 of the 37 tries this year from seven-plus phases, which is well in front of the next best Crusaders with eight (as an aside, the Hurricanes have scored 26 of their 56 tries in 2017 from first phase!).

The Stormers weren’t good enough in Christchurch last weekend, but they’ll be a lot closer to the Highlanders tonight in Dunedin, I suspect – and if they could sneak a win in the same week the Bulls have the bye and the Cheetahs host the unbeaten Crusaders, they could go at least 16 points clear on the Africa One conference table. With only eight rounds to come, that’s very nearly uncatchable.

Even if they can’t win this weekend in Dunedin or next weekend in Wellington, the Stormers can win their last five games and take the conference fairly comfortably anyway.

The Cheetahs have their New Zealand games to come, and the Bulls play three New Zealand teams plus the Lions and Sharks. Both sides play the Stormers on the run home, too. The Cheetahs might win three of their remaining games, but the Bulls might only win two.

With a 12-point gap now, the Stormers might already be safe. But a win under the roof in ‘Dunners’ tonight will pretty much confirm it.

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Is this the round the Jaguares start their finals run?
Meanwhile, in Africa Two, the Jaguares and the Sharks face off in the first match of an eight-week competition within a competition to see who probably take the one available African group wildcard spot.

The Jaguares now have a run of five-straight home games, and included in their run home are the Sunwolves, the Kings and all the Australian sides bar the Reds. It looks like a really good line-up. The Sharks have Force-Kings-Sunwolves but then play the other four South African sides to finish. It’s far from a good run home!

A Jaguares win this weekend will draw the two teams level, though bonus points either way could still have one in front of the other. But I think this is where the Jags start taking advantage of their home ground fortress in Buenos Aires, and if they do that, they make the playoffs.

How on earth has Matt Todd played 100 games already?
Richie McCaw’s been retired only ten minutes, but somehow the young punk in the headgear who was groomed to replace him will run out in his 100th Super Rugby match against the Cheetahs in Bloemfontein.

But it’s true; Matt Todd debuted in 2011 with McCaw in pre-Rugby World Cup cotton wool, and without too much of a fuss as hit the bottom of most rucks along the way to bring up the tonne inside seven seasons. Perhaps even more surprising is that he’s 29, because it still only feels like he’s 24 or 25.

It’s a fair nod to Todd’s quality for the Crusaders that McCaw spent a fair amount of his final few seasons in the red and black playing in jerseys other than the No. 7, and it’s probably a bit rough that a couple of blokes named Cane and Savea have limited his international appearances to just eight.

But he’ll be front and centre in his hundredth game, and he’ll likely be a major reason why the Crusaders will be too good for the Cheetahs.

Enjoy your rugby this weekend.

The Crowd Says:

2017-04-30T06:32:08+00:00

Special Treatment

Guest


Perhaps a question should be: why do the Waratahs receive special treatment from the Wallabies coaching staff when there are three other Aussie franchises struggling for help? (The Rebels have been disowned as a Super Rugby franchise in almost everyone's eyes) Another question could be: Will Folau be selected in the Wallabies team given his current woeful form?

2017-04-30T06:28:44+00:00

Sam Cane?

Guest


I thought Sam Cane was being groomed as McCaws replacement? Scary depth at flanker for the NZers

2017-04-29T08:53:46+00:00

Garth

Guest


We're happy with 5 teams. If it ain't broke, why fix it? (NZ team numbers only of course).

2017-04-29T07:12:11+00:00

cuw

Guest


Japan beat Korea 80:10 in the ARC, probably the first outing for Jamie Joseph. will be interesting to see who played for Japan - as the wolves have many test caps.

2017-04-29T05:41:42+00:00

The Neutral View From Sweden

Roar Guru


Has there ever been any talk about a sixth NZ side in SR? Where should that team be located? Anyone else have any idea around a sixth NZ team? Maybe a sixth team is the solution, maybe something else. All i know is that something needs to be done so SR gets a more equal playing field.

2017-04-29T05:36:44+00:00

The Neutral View From Sweden

Roar Guru


The big question I have is if Sunwolves can win over the Chiefs. Under normal circumstances it would be impossible, but the Chiefs have just been on a long tour and they did not convince in SA and Perth. And to my knowledge the Chiefs will field very few regular starters and they have been looking deep down the squad list to find a fit scrum half. Can also see that there is a pretty big risk that the Chiefs will underestimate Sunwolves also. Saying that, Chiefs are massive favorites and the only thing Sunwolves realistically can target is a respectable scoreline and some good rugby.

2017-04-29T03:26:28+00:00

Brumby Bill

Guest


1. Will Skelton launch like a North Korean Rocket? No hell reach at least 1.5 inches off the ground. 2. Will Skelton make it to a ruck before the halfback already has the ball? Not the outside centre will already have it. 3. Will Skelton prevent the #7 scoring a try? Yes but it will be Hooper he crashes into 4. Will Skelton.....not he will NOT

2017-04-29T00:48:33+00:00

Browny

Guest


Yeah, definitely well done to the lad. Feels like he'd be at 50-60, not 100! I guess I would have picked him as being younger than 29 too. Being McCaw's understudy has undoubtedly helped his game, both learning from the master and also being able to fly under the radar during his formative years without having huge burden and expectations placed upon him like so many of our promising youngsters face when they enter the game. Congratulations, Matt.

2017-04-29T00:13:34+00:00

puff

Guest


Tman, to some degree we have the same frustration although to be honest a 14 year journey with no silver wear means the Blues have inherence traits or fundamental nonplus perplexities that are not delivering the right result. Without sounding cynical and disparaging but in reality the Blues should be the powerhouse of NZ rugby but they’re not. Although the rest of the nation looks very healthy and if you think the Lions will be tested at every venue. You folk are in for exciting times. We are delivering no such joy, the OZ rugby public vote with their feet and the OZ way is not ticking all the boxes and never will. The clash at SunCorp, this weekend, to my knowledge has only received local media / print exposure although the Tah’s & Reds match should be the biggest game on the local conference calendar. The interesting manifestation is; it will not be on t/v only Fox, yet during the same time slot, nationwide AFL & NRL will be beamed into very home in the nation. You talk about recovery on this side of the creek but that can only commence with the right people in place. Good luck at GIO, it will be a test.

2017-04-28T22:59:11+00:00

taylorman

Roar Guru


Nice tribute to Matt Todd, one of NZ rugbys unsung heroes. A Prince born in the time of Kings.

2017-04-28T22:54:41+00:00

taylorman

Roar Guru


That may be so but not ALL oz sides have been languishing for 14 years straight as the Blues have so my comment was really a selfish one about supporting them. At least a few oz sides have had their momemts, a couple have won it. This year is particularly bad in oz I agree, but I actually think the ozzie way will be what turns it around eventually simply because... it has to, and I think its going to be done in the best way possible... out on the field.

2017-04-28T11:11:10+00:00

ukkiwi

Guest


Couldn't disagree with you more about Matt Todd, Brett. It seems like he's been around since the dawn of time!!!

AUTHOR

2017-04-28T10:02:13+00:00

Brett McKay

Expert


It still means something Nick, but it's fair to say it's not the same as it once was, for sure. That's because of multiple factors, of which current form is probably first and foremost, but certainly not limited to that one. I suppose a decent measure will be the crowd and ratings..

2017-04-28T08:36:02+00:00

Bring Back...?

Guest


I think the fans (incl me) are too embarrassed to suggest it's an important fixture this year.

2017-04-28T06:29:43+00:00

Perthstayer

Roar Rookie


My smiley emoji fell off!

2017-04-28T06:29:13+00:00

Perthstayer

Roar Rookie


Brett - You could at least have backed the Force to win :-)

2017-04-28T06:28:32+00:00

wyn

Guest


Yeah - and its the only fixture that one of our Australian team has a better than 50% chance of winning - says wyn and then they draw! :)

2017-04-28T06:25:24+00:00

Perthstayer

Roar Rookie


Piru - Yes. Gary Flowers - former ARU chief executive Peter O’Meara.- WF inaugral chief Jon Collins - Former ARU and Waratahs director Raymond Burke - Multi million $$ businessman Influential, rugby connected, WA based, successful businessmen. Hmmm sounds a good combo to me. ARU?

2017-04-28T06:18:29+00:00

Perthstayer

Roar Rookie


Piru, haha! That is gold

2017-04-28T05:44:50+00:00

piru

Roar Rookie


I'd be in that mattocks Maybe we could talk a Canberra team into playing and one from Adelaide

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