Five things we learned from Super Rugby Round 7

By Nick Kelland / Roar Guru

We are more than a third of the way into the season, and plenty happened over the weekend. Some good, some bad, and some plain ugly.

Here are five things we learned from Round 7.

The Sharks circle
On paper three weeks back, I mused that the Sharks have one of the most talented 1-23 rosters in Super Rugby.

I then got egg on my face when they were soundly beaten in their next two encounters.

However, on Saturday night against the Blues, they were outstanding. Defensively, they still have questions to answer, but in winning 60-43 in a 103 point try-fest over the Auckland franchise, they put to bed any doubts about their attacking potential.

The Blues even tried to do what most Kiwi sides do, and fly home with a wet sail in the second half. They scored three times in 10 minutes to be leading with half an hour to play, but the Sharks steadied, reloaded, and went again to run away with the win.

Flyhalf Robert Du Preez had comfortably his best game of the season, whilst brother Jean-Luc Du Preez was immense. Their back three is improving too, and Curwin Bosch continued his run of good form, scoring in the 80th minute to seal the impressive performance.

I don’t know whether it’s fair to say this, but I feel as though this year’s Super competition is somewhat disparate from those that have come before it (at least in the past few seasons).

Yes, there are benchmark teams, and yes, there are teams that will likely end up in the bottom few on the table – but there’s nowhere near the difference in standard week in, week out, that we’ve come to expect.

On their day, teams like the Sharks, the Jaguares and the Sunwolves will believe their form from the weeks previous, and beat whoever is in front of them. For me, at least, that’s a positive step forward.

The Rebels are brought down a peg
At the 30-minute mark of the Rebels vs Hurricanes clash on Friday night, Dave Wessels’ side was leading their New Zealand counterparts 19-8, and looked dominant.

Amanaki Mafi was ridiculous in this period, racking up over 100 run metres from 15 carries, while Will Genia and his loose forwards were getting the Rebels over the advantage line without an issue.

From there, as they did against the Waratahs, they went to sleep.

Pushed passes, kicks out on the full, and basic turnovers were their kryptonite as the Hurricanes did what only the Hurricanes can, and put the blowtorch on a suddenly misfiring Rebels outfit.

Beauden Barrett is a magician, and he, with TJ Perenara ruddered the comeback-cum-thrashing. Ben Lam scored four times as the Canes scored 42 unanswered points to pummel the table-topping Rebels.

The first test was always going to be when the Melbourne side came up against Kiwi opposition, and, bar the first half hour, they failed it badly.

(Photo by Hannah Peters/Getty Images)

No Izzy, no worries for Waratahs
The NSW Waratahs recorded a solid, but unspectacular win against the Brumbies in Canberra on Saturday night, in the process, breaking a four-year losing streak at GIO Stadium.

Perhaps the biggest story of the night wasn’t the game itself, but the hamstring injury picked up by Israel Folau in the third minute of the game.

Speaking after the fixture, Darryl Gibson suggested he could be missing for a month or more, so we’ll await further news on his condition.

The absence of the Wallabies fullback did nothing to stop the Tahs in the end, a plucky second half defensive performance was just enough to take the win.

Taqele Naiyarovoro scored his second double in as many weeks to push the Waratahs ahead, and, despite Bernard Foley’s wayward goal kicking, they were never really pushed until the final five minutes when the Brumbies were able to string together consistent phases in the Waratahs 22.

Both benches performed admirably in news that will please both coaches. Alex Newsome was more than solid when he replaced Folau in the fourth minute, while young prop Harry Johnson-Holmes was a rock at scrum time for his stint on the field.

For the Brumbies, Kyle Godwin was outstanding off the bench, and outplayed the man he replaced, Christian Lealifano, in a strong show of straight running and astute tactical kicking.

For the Brumbies, this loss puts a major dent in their finals ambitions – as the Rebels and Waratahs kick clear at the top of the Australian conference. With two of their next three opponents being the Hurricanes and the Crusaders, it’s do-or-die time for their season.

(Photo by Mark Nolan/Getty Images)

The Kiwi derbies are awesome viewing
The Chiefs vs Highlanders fixture on Friday night was close to the game of the round. Pre-game, experts were divided about who would take the honours, and, in the end, the Chiefs prevailed 27-22, courtesy of some resolute last-minute defending.

Damien McKenzie was outstanding for the Chiefs, orchestrating things from five-eighth, whilst Solomona Alaimalo continues to score tries for fun.

For the Highlanders, they pressed and pressed and continued to press, but couldn’t break down the Chiefs defence in the dying minutes.

They also lost flyhalf Lima Sopoaga to an Achilles injury early in the piece, compounding the defeat.

The game itself was a goodie, but it was the little things that stuck out for me.

It seemed as though every lineout, every scrum, and every bit of loose ball action was scrapped for, and heavily contested. If Brad Weber would scoot from the base of a ruck and find a little hole, Aaron Smith would turn around and do the same.

When Rob Thompson cross kicked for a Waisaki Naholo classic in the corner, Damien McKenzie waited ten minutes, then himself cross kicked to Toni Pulu in the corner who tapped back inside for Alaimalo to score.

When the Kiwi players start to throw the ball around and try to one-up each other; it makes for fun viewing.

(Photo by Michael Bradley/Getty Images)

Jaco, put the damn whistle down
The Crusaders vs Lions Sunday night fixture should’ve been the game of the round.

In sunny South Africa, a grand final rematch between two attacking oriented sides promised much, but failed to deliver.

Yes, the Lions and the Crusaders delivered uncharacteristic performances littered with errors, but referee Jaco Peyper did his best to slow the game from a gallop to a mere canter.

I counted 15 scrum resets in the second half alone, often trivial and unnecessary.

I’m a stout defender of the scrum laws, and think there needs to be a set of stringent rules in place at scrum time to ensure both a fair, and safe means of executing the set piece, but when referees over adjudicate these laws to within an inch of their lives, it becomes tiresome viewing for everyone involved.

Add into the mix a number of missed forward passes, it wasn’t a good night for the South African referee.

As for the game, the Crusaders won it 14-8, courtesy of two second half tries to Sam Whitelock and Jack Goodhue.

The Crowd Says:

2018-04-03T11:34:10+00:00

Charging Rhino

Roar Guru


100% Although the Sharks inconsistency is something to be feared more! Lol One week they’ll beat the best team in the competition, the next they’ll lose to the worst team. Been like this for many years now which is frustrating. They’ll beat your Stormers (well at least 1 of the 2 games), you can guarantee they’ll be up for that challenge ?? These two teams have a great tussle, always beat each other. Canes vs Shark - either the Canes will blow us away if the Sharks go back to their Australian tour form, or it will be a very close tussle to the final minute with scores in the teens/20’s. I can’t see it any other way. Either 22+ point margin or a 4- Point margin.

2018-04-03T08:54:18+00:00

cuw

Guest


perhaps that is why he kept favoring the Lions' prop at scrums - the guy who was penalized 20 odd times last season :) even Crockzilla couldnt get the better of the plank ( as u called him ) :P

2018-04-03T08:21:15+00:00

Jacko

Guest


RO quite the opposite...They called for Thorns head after the first up loss to the Rebels and even blamed Thorn for the send off

2018-04-03T08:18:56+00:00

Jacko

Guest


We shall see, I’ve been right on the Lion series, predicted SBW would lose them the series, right about Scotland destroying Australia in Nov tour, kB would be a disaster at fullback. We know that Malo but you said it all in November

2018-04-03T06:46:08+00:00

Harry Jones

Expert


Rhino To your point, the Sharks are in the 8 teams who have a positive PD+. Clearly in the middle, with time to rise. Nice schedule in the last half. Fear the Shark!

2018-04-03T06:42:41+00:00

Harry Jones

Expert


CRU’s travel on this leg is absolutely absurd ...

2018-04-03T06:42:02+00:00

Harry Jones

Expert


Me too

2018-04-03T06:41:20+00:00

Harry Jones

Expert


Carlos, since we did that study, I’ve been keeping a closer eye on Jaco. I think his flaw (every ref has one or more) is “momentum” refereeing. By that, I mean that once he thinks he’s spotted a “trend,” he rides it to the end. It’s difficult to get back on his good side. I don’t think it’s related to “pre-match” bias. I think he develops it DURING the game ...

2018-04-03T06:28:40+00:00

Timbo (L)

Roar Guru


Set in stone, sure, tied to the feet of the rest of the forward pack as it sinks to the bottom of the world rankings. Can't agree, Hoops isn't a Loosie, positionaly he plays a Scrum mounted 12. Is as dumb as saying Folau is Australia's best fullback. He wears the Jersey and Scores the tries but has never played play the position. Best 2 Loosies available in Australian super Rugby? Maybe George Smith would be my number 2. Everyone else has jumped ship. The Reds and Rebs are both starting dual 6's Internationally Todd, Savia Cane. Any Irish, Welsh or Scottish 7.

2018-04-03T06:20:15+00:00

Timbo (L)

Roar Guru


So all that is left is to dispel the myth that the Tahs are Australia's best team and that they full of super stars wort every million they are paid, proven each week by their performance on the training paddock. Second last in the Australian conference last year, with a couple of wins on the back of some questionable reffing decisions, yet averaging 50% of the game day wallaby selections. They haven't beaten a Kiwi side in a while either. Especially not the reigning champions. Foley had a pretty good game but Hoops was made to look like a rank amateur and was thoroughly outclassed by Pocock. His timing and Physicality is immaculate. The Brumbies were beaten by performances by a bunch of Tahs no-names. - This is a good thing, and will hopefully deflate some of the big Ego's going around in the the Sky Blue.

2018-04-03T05:50:06+00:00

Malo

Guest


We shall see, I’ve been right on the Lion series, predicted SBW would lose them the series, right about Scotland destroying Australia in Nov tour, kB would be a disaster at fullback. Rugby is pretty predictable. Hurricanes or Crusaders to win the title. Nsw have the best oz players therefore they win the conference .

2018-04-03T05:04:01+00:00

cuw

Guest


i think he has an issue concentrating. i know it is a very hard job - i used to umpire junior cricket and it was hard the slow grind for 3 hours of an innings. but if ur a test class ref - then u got to be at a good and consistent standard. this he lacks. perhaps refs too shud take sabbaticals and come back with a fresh mind n body. unfortunately - if u watched most of the rugger in the weekend , u will find almost all the reffing was vacillating between wtf and atrocious. and to make it worse - some of the best test refs like Nigel, Barnes, Peyper, Gardener, Graces - made some decisions that were totally agaisnt what we have seen in the past ( law of precedent ). maybe it was becoz of the holy month - people being off alcohol .... :)

2018-04-03T04:08:31+00:00

Charging Rhino

Roar Guru


“On their day, teams like the Sharks, the Jaguares and the Sunwolves will believe their form from the weeks previous, and beat whoever is in front of them." Ummm. Don't think I'd be putting the Sharks in that category. They've never lost to either the Jaguares or Sunwolves, almost always make the playoffs, have made the Final 5 times, the semi final far more. They also almost always beat the Blues, won 11 from the past 12 games so Saturday wasn't in the slightest bit surprising. They've just had a bad start to the year.

2018-04-03T04:05:27+00:00

bluffboy

Guest


Pirate didn't you realise Malo is a fisherman. It we interesting to see where the Tah's mindset is at this week against the Wolves. Pretty sure the Reds the following week will be thinking they can pull up the canter. Any case the Australian franchise is going to be closer than most thought. Giddy Up.............

2018-04-03T02:21:02+00:00

mania

Guest


once Mafi came off it was all over. genia looked good because of mafi and his front foot ball. genia (and rebels) struggled after Mafi left. this was also the time they went to aimless kicking.

2018-04-03T02:18:42+00:00

JRVJ

Guest


You're a braver man than me, Gunga Din !

2018-04-03T00:36:15+00:00

Ken Catchpole’s Other Leg

Guest


‘If super rugger goes under‘, cuw? Or when? The tide is dropping fast.

2018-04-03T00:15:51+00:00

Puff

Guest


Nick , there is always some aspect of each weekend match to enjoy or criticize. I don’t particularly like home grown referees particularly in SA, Jaco Peyper is a respected ref but SA is at times subject to bias and impartiality making third party governance important. After the Blues pitiful display at Eden Park, Tana Umaga probably tried to nibble the end of his dreadlocks. Auckland who have released so many accomplished players is recent years, like Ben Lam. Continue to disappoint and will most likely be the NZ cellar dwellers. For me, with all their talent the mechanics of the team looks far from solidified. In the Rebels match, Amanaki Mafi prime object is not to be the ball receiver at kickoff. Hence many of his run meters are wasted and not that productive. He is more valuable being the positional player his number suggests. The Brumbies are starting to slip behind the pack therefore their next few home games will be important.

2018-04-02T19:18:07+00:00

Nobrain

Roar Guru


I am tipping Jaguares for next round against the Crusaders. ?

2018-04-02T18:13:34+00:00

DavSA

Guest


I sense ...no hope ...no believe ...no hope again ... that there is something coming from my Sharks .

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