REACTION: 'We turned a real corner'- Brave Force fall agonisingly short of stunning 'half-cocked' Blues

By The Roar / Editor

The beauty of sport is that even the most ugly, scrappy contest can transform into an instant classic with a thrilling finish.

So it was in Perth as the Force fell short against the Blues in a 22-18 defeat, 70 minutes of attritional rugby giving way to the most dramatic finale we’ve seen this season to date.

Time and again the Force threw themselves into the table-toppers’ line with victory just metres away, and time and again they were repelled.

Finally, after 26 phases of pure desperation from both sides, the turnover was caused; and the Blues, whose usual brilliance was lacking but made up for it at the death through sheer force of will, could finally breathe a sigh of relief.

The Force lose no friends out of defeat: as poor as the Blues were, it was the Westerners’ pressure that caused much of it.

But for a pair of missed conversions from Bayley Kuenzle in the second half, a monumental upset could well have been achieved; but as it stands, the Force remain without a victory at home in 2022.

If ever a match deserved a furious set of victors and a proud group of losers, it was this one; speaking after the match, Force star Manasa Mataele, whose first-half try summed up the home side’s early dominance, even indulged in a cheery smile.

“The boys left it out there, and that’s what we talked about. Leaving no stone unturned,” Mataele told Stan Sport.

“Unfortunately, we couldn’t come away with the win, but a big step up from our lads. The last couple of weeks, it’s been tough, but big ups.

“The last couple of minutes, we gave it our all.”

Coming in off a horror preparation due to a COVID outbreak that saw their Super Round match postponed, the Force weren’t expected to so much as challenge a white-hot Blues outfit with a second consecutive Super Rugby title in their sights.

But aside from 15 minutes of trademark Auckland brilliance in the first half, which saw Sam Darry, Akira Ioane and AJ Lam score in quick succession to turn a deficit into a 22-8 half time lead, the underdogs were more than a match for the New Zealanders, whose horror night at lineout summed up what was quite clearly their worst performance of the season.

However, captain Dalton Papali’i was quick to applaud the Force’s tenacity and pressure, though he admitted the Blues were well and truly off their game.

“It’s a credit to them [the Force], they came back and they put us under pressure,” he said after the game.

“We just held in there, but to be honest, we put it on ourselves with our discipline and our errors.

“You can’t win games like that. We’ve got to understand that and actually be better and execute in those moments.”

Despite a whopping ten changes for the match, Papali’i refused to blame fresh faces for the performance, saying the team needed to ‘put your best foot forward’ regardless of personnel.

“Whoever puts that jersey on has a job to do to give their utmost. There’s no excuses there,” he said.

“You could just see in that game, the discipline and the mistakes we made out there, we just need to execute in those moments.

“There were dropped balls out there, basic skills that we need to be better at.

“It’s credit to the Western Force – we never take them lightly, and it showed out there. They just kept the hammer down, put us under pressure, and it could have gone either way.”

While not as chipper as Mataele, a proud Force captain Feleti Kaitu’u said the inspiration of the ANZACs was behind the performance, with their postponed game against Moana Pasifika seeing them continue the Super Round theme.

“We spoke about bravery and courage, the themes of the ANZACs, all throughout the week,” he told Stan Sport.

“I’m just so proud of my men to see it come to fruition, especially in that second half. Holding the Blues scoreless – I can’t fault the effort.

“A lot of the issues we experienced early on in the season were probably around our attitude and mindset and some of the effort areas.

“I think we turned a real corner tonight… for the most part, the attitude and intent will take us a long way moving forward.

“Looking back at the game, there were probably some key moments where we weren’t as clinical as we would have liked to have been.

“[We] allowed the Blues to sort of sneak back into the game. We’ll review that hard. We just came out hard and focussed on nailing our basics.”

Heading into half time after appearing to weather the Force storm in the opening minutes, it was a lethargic Blues that took to the field after the break.

Dropped balls, listless defence and more lineout worries continued to plague the favourites, the Force capitalising with tries to Jeremy Thrush and Bo Abra to set up a thrilling finish.

Speaking after the match on Stan Sport, Justin Marshall, who had tipped a 40+-point win for the Blues before the game, accused the favourites of being ‘half-cocked’ in their second half fade-out.

“What I thought was noticeably missing in the second half for the Blues was the physicality they had in the first half,” he said.

“I just wonder whether or not they were sort of half-cocked when they came out in the second half, expecting that physicality dominance to continue.

It certainly went missing, and the Force were the more physical side.”

“They were slightly complacent coming out… and the Force capitalised on that.

“And they really grew substantially throughout the game. I did not see that drama coming, believe me!”

As it stands, it’s yet another win for a New Zealand side over an Australian – though the gap in class between the two teams appears to have narrowed from last year.

The Force were brave – but you don’t get points for bravery.

The Crowd Says:

2022-05-02T03:22:32+00:00

piru

Roar Rookie


it was the B Team No such thing

2022-05-01T21:00:54+00:00

Waxhead

Roar Rookie


@Big A - your comment is big hypocrisy imo. Being arrogant and complacent is just as much an Aussie rugby habit as for anyone else. It happens everytime WBs play Scotland or Italy. WBs always end up struggling with them and often lose against Scotland. And take a look at many past Waratah teams under Cheika and before - same story often. Then otherwise you're blaming the Ref hehehe

2022-05-01T00:41:41+00:00

Jacko

Roar Rookie


Yeah the rugby is getting harder and harder to watch tbh. To me the way the games are reffed is dominating the way the teams are coached to play and its all about scrum penalties or ruck penalties.

2022-05-01T00:14:39+00:00

Malotru

Roar Rookie


Judging by the last couple of rounds winning is certainly more important than playing well. Definitely not as entertaining either Jacko.

2022-04-30T21:12:05+00:00

TJ-Go Force!

Roar Rookie


Good fight back, but have to stop giving teams leads. Top 8 is drifting away now.

2022-04-30T09:04:17+00:00

smoothy

Roar Rookie


All it took was watching a few more results for a stodgy 4-point win to become a pretty decent one this week! :laughing:

2022-04-30T09:00:57+00:00

piru

Roar Rookie


The NFL goes mad for AFL kickers, why don't we invest in them, or at least hire their expertise? Kicking should be an area Australia has an advantage over every other country

2022-04-30T08:52:56+00:00

andrewM

Roar Rookie


he certainly got a lot of stick from the crowd last night!

2022-04-30T08:49:56+00:00

andrewM

Roar Rookie


Doesn't travelling west have less impact on the body's clock than travelling east? From memory going to London was a breeze to adjust to but coming back was hell.

2022-04-30T06:56:29+00:00

Perthstayer

Roar Rookie


Perhaps the Tash was the key piece in our scrummage puzzle. We need 5 or 6 signings next year. Stander too old, no FLW, & a decent prop, plus a couple of backs. That'll give Cron a chance to make hay.

2022-04-30T06:54:29+00:00

Wigeye

Guest


rm doesn't make the bench :laughing: The midfield looks very strong. I guess you've seen it. :thumbup:

2022-04-30T06:27:51+00:00

West Aussie Exile

Roar Rookie


Scrum time, referees and goal kicking! Farrell vs whoever WB have kicking goals

2022-04-30T06:26:18+00:00

West Aussie Exile

Roar Rookie


Good call. I agree re conversions. I still don't understand why Australian super sides and Wallabies don't make improving goalkicking a priority -it looked clear during the game that the conversions could make the difference., and, unfortunately, they did. Great second half -I hope this is the beginning of more consistency

2022-04-30T05:05:46+00:00

Tom

Guest


You might need to read Graeme Lowe's book.

2022-04-30T03:52:08+00:00

Jacko

Roar Rookie


I disagree. Folau Fakatava, Cristie, TTT, Even the Chiefs backup ( Ratima ) looked better than his reds opposite last night and Roe is good.

2022-04-30T03:49:07+00:00

Jacko

Roar Rookie


Malotru we watched the Reds play very little rugby all year last season yet still win the Aus comp. Winning is more important than playing well.

2022-04-30T03:47:20+00:00

Jacko

Roar Rookie


Not a fan of BB at 15. I want Jordan there. Not a fan of Clarke, I want Fainga'anuku there. Reece on other wing. Not a fan of Rm. I want BB there. Not convinced RTS is ready but there is definately more games as yet and last night was his best so far.

2022-04-30T03:44:00+00:00

Jacko

Roar Rookie


Yes RTS's game was certainly his best. A run of games v Aus opposition will help his education. The offload for the try was VG. Took on his player, pushed thru him, then offloaded. Very good.

2022-04-30T03:23:38+00:00

Colvin Brown

Roar Guru


Promise not to tell anyone Jacko. :laughing: :laughing: But Burke certainly looks good, what he needs is game time.

2022-04-30T03:19:34+00:00

Carlos the Argie

Roar Guru


And to think that in many sports athletes use compression socks because they say they improve their performance, enhances recovery, prevent clots….and grow better tomatoes. (The latter may be false)

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