How the NZ Super sides fared tactically: Hurricanes are real deal, the Beauden Barrett bounce and end of the line for RTS

By Highlander / Roar Guru

In Christchurch, the Crusaders took on the volatile Moana Pasifika with all eyes on Richie Mo’unga as he brought up his 100th for the franchise.

The script started perfectly as the man of the hour skipped past three down the left to set up Codie Taylor for the opening try.

Mo’unga’s run stats this year are incredible, especially given the multitude of changes in the pack and the youth of the rest of the backline. After six matches he has racked up 54 runs, 368 metres, 7 clean breaks with 28 defenders beaten. On Friday, his defenders beaten number equalled Beauden Barrett’s effort for the season to date.

But as with most games this year, Moana Pasifika then roared into life early, primarily through their two main ball carriers, Levi Aumua and Timoci Tavatavanawai who totalled 180 run metres and 11 defenders beaten and 3 tries between them as the Crusaders wandered off to the sheds behind on the scoreboard at halftime. MP are adding an increased kick return threat via William Havili and with an improving offloading game, we await the day it all clicks.

A few weeks ago, I observed that the three best passers of the ball in this comp are Aaron Smith, Frank Lomani and Ere Enari, and once again, Erani drove his side around the park with real purpose and with the ball zinging off his hands. The time is going to come when this side gets through a full 80 minutes and someone is going to cop it. Maybe it will be the Reds in Apia this week, but this Moana side is not one acclimatised to playing at home like the Drua are.

While the second half was by no means an easy finish for the Crusaders, their young players showed the ruthlessness in execution that would be perhaps be expected of more experienced players. They finished the game with a forward pack averaging 22 years of age; it really is a production line they have in that Christchurch academy.

The HIA which saw Jack Goodhue off again early demonstrated the inconsistency with the laws and officiating for both sides of the ball. Goodhue in position early, won the now much needed race to get lowest earliest, and the ball carrier, Sam Slade, was late to lower his height, led with his head and drove straight into him.

The other way round and that’s a stone cold red and a month off. It’s like ball carriers who raise their knees before contact, we need to get rid of it or at least officiate it as we would a defender.

In the increasingly chillier climes of Dunedin this match intrigued not only for the multiple head to heads, but also as a measure to just how good this Hurricane start to the season has been.

Most first blush looks at the Hurricanes focus’ on the big names, Ardie Savea, his brother Julian on one flank and Salesi Rayasi on the other, and with Brayden Iose and Du’Plessis Kirifi rounding out the flanks there are attack dangers everywhere.

But this Hurricanes side is just as likely to bash straight through your front door as it is to get to its flanks. When they present the ball at the tackle there is confidence to reach out, full arm’s length, plant the ball and rely on the speed and accuracy of the cleaners to secure the pill before using that pick and drive repeatedly. It’s a hard tactic to combat.

Combine that with new levels of determination to defend their try line and you have a side that will be able to compete with the top 3-4 sides of the competition. There was a passage around the half hour mark where the Canes repelled a series of home side attacks, and you got the feeling right then that the tone had been set for the day.

There is a both a patience and a connectivity in these guys that wasn’t there last year, as evidenced by the 16 phases they went through for the first try.

Once again, the Highlanders had to alter their side late as Aaron Smith returned to Fielding to support his family and he was certainly missed. After a late season start due to an All Blacks protected species edict, he has torn through his opposition in recent weeks with 10 try assists, twice the number of anyone else in the comp. The guile of the master was missed in the red zone this week.

Ethan de Groot got the points decision over All Black tighthead mate Tyrel Lomax, and with both recently signing NZR extensions they will be handing out scrum challenges at international level together for a few more years yet.

It’s worth noting that Jermaine Ainsley is probably a name Australia should not have discarded.
Billy Harmon the Highlanders captain won the battle on the floor off the back of some sterling work from his fellow loosies, Billy Proctor shows every week that the largesse of the Roger Tuivasa-Sheck selection wasted a year for someone else, the next generation of halfbacks and first five eighths put on a great display between them.

A returning from injury Shannon Frizell, who looked totally gassed when he departed after 50 min with 80 minutes worth of stats collected, was excellent, but his departure saw the Highlanders turnover stats go from only 5 to end the match at 17 – gotta look after your own ball boys.

The big difference was the Hurricanes’ kicking game, with four guys all able to drive the Highlanders back consistently they took the territory stat to over 60 percent and they were good enough to take advantage.
With the Blues back in Melbourne for the second time this year the New Zealand rugby media had all eyes on the form of Beauden Barrett, albeit about a year after the symptoms began to appear and there were no signs of any great revival in the opening stanza.

Beauden Barrett (Photo by Mark Nolan/Getty Images)

Unwilling to commit to living in the 10 slot he spent a lot of time out the back, a couple of nice positional kicks evident but largely underwhelming again and not indicative of what was to come.

The Rebels however are just good fun to watch this year as they combined innovation off their own line which ended up in a score, with good technique at maul time and overall, an attitude that is going to keep them in a lot of contests this year, but 25% possession in the second half was never going to be enough to keep the marauding Blues horde off them.

One thing the Blues will always bring you is a contest up front; they will bludgeon you if they can, and with Leon MacDonald now seeing the light and playing two actual locks in the second row, they have a far more solid look about them. They also fielded a loose forward trio which was more work than play this week and they really took it to the Rebels in the narrow channels.

Be it the physical contest, bad luck, a spell from a naysayer, who knows, but the Rebels’ tight five player stocks were going backwards quickly and Sam Talakai had to answer the call to fill in as third hooker. It’s a tough role at the best of times but free kicks against for brake-foot and a baulk free kick at a lineout showed it had been a while since he had played there, and the die was cast.

This Blues side has shown over the last couple of seasons at they are ruthless, open the door an inch and the whole company rampages through and that is exactly what happened. Barrett was suddenly up for repeated touches in the 10 slot, and the blue wave was racking up points for fun, as the first five went through his full array of attacking short kicks with the chip, regather and grubber for Mark Telea to score in the corner a real highlight. But that was counterbalanced with a non-existent running game, a couple of charge downs and kicking for poles which was a season’s worst. The battle for the All Blacks 22/23 shirt is still on.

The big winner for the Blues was Finlay Christie who was in everything and even if a little inelegant, was the clear game driver for the visitors. The big loser was the injured Roger Tuivasa-Sheck as Harry Plummer followed up recent good games by Bryce Heem in the 12 slot, with a mature all-round performance, running for over 100 metres and showing what a genuine kicking alternative in the middle of the park can add for a side. It’s going to be a long way back for the league convert me thinks. There is a current pub game in New Zealand, see how many midfielders you would select for the ABs before RTS, current market is 8-10.

The Crowd Says:

2023-04-13T00:22:57+00:00

Emery Ambrose

Roar Rookie


It’s hard to see Foster moving more away from his conservatism and him coming from the era of All Blacks form and positioning is different to super rugby. I would say he would be 15 currently in a top xv and probably 10 against the minnow nations. I did think for while last year that they were building almost 25 players that could start on any given day instead of the same 15 for seven weeks, given there will be covid protocols, fatigue etc, creating 2 top XVs, so he could be the other top 10.

AUTHOR

2023-04-12T23:45:30+00:00

Highlander

Roar Guru


What position do you have him in at RWC Emery?

2023-04-12T22:53:41+00:00

Emery Ambrose

Roar Rookie


Cheers Highlander, good to see B Barrett having a better game, a lot positive outcomes on his touches this week, we know he’s going to be there for the ABs, just needs this sort of form every game, add in a few runs he will be sorted.

2023-04-12T00:33:11+00:00

Wig

Roar Rookie


Goes missing i action as well

AUTHOR

2023-04-11T23:55:33+00:00

Highlander

Roar Guru


Good news for TUJ - getting to stick a few uninjured games in row. He was awesome both sides of the ball in the weekend, I stood next to him in a coffee shop last year- hes a very solid man Lets hope the Highlanders can use their bye week to get the full side back together. Withy has been a revelation as you observe, esp since he has always been seen as a pure 7. Frizell needs minutes after his injury break, but he does all the stuff in the dark places that sides need, so fingers crossed he stays fit too. Primary lineout option too and our lineout has missed his as a target this year.

2023-04-11T23:23:35+00:00


Nice article Highlander. I’ve enjoyed the resurgence of Thomas Umaga Jensen this season after many past promising years which took a dive due to injury. I’d say he would definitely be putting some pressure on J Barrett at 12 (to the dismay of RTS). Had a great game against the Canes and consistently got over the advantage line. Also, I was actually more impressed with the Withy/Renton combo in the back row as opposed to Frizell - plenty of mongrel there but I’m sure Frizell will stay. But yeah I’d say a full strength Highlanders team is definitely on the up. Crusaders somehow always seem to pull out quality teams and it’ll be scary once their full strength team comes back into the picture. As an Aussie I’ve always preferred the southern teams over the north :thumbup:

2023-04-11T16:32:56+00:00

JD Kiwi

Roar Rookie


I love how they moaned about the travel in Super Rugby and now have to travel even more :laughing:

AUTHOR

2023-04-11T14:02:10+00:00

Highlander

Roar Guru


We might be evenly matched this year Mz, should be a good game

AUTHOR

2023-04-11T14:01:35+00:00

Highlander

Roar Guru


It was an old school beating in the end

2023-04-11T12:27:00+00:00

mzilikazi

Roar Pro


Great work, Highlander. Thanks. Reading this very late, and just going thru' comments. Very interesting discussions. Anticipation building nicely for RC, RWC. Always really enjoy the build up, and pieces like this are very much a part of it all. Jeez, I can't see our Reds beating your Highlanders this year.

2023-04-11T12:19:49+00:00

Ankle-tapped Waterboy

Roar Rookie


Perhaps a bit of jet lag in the South African teams, for they did disappoint. Their air miles must have earned everyone picked a fortune.

2023-04-11T12:17:52+00:00

Ankle-tapped Waterboy

Roar Rookie


Highlander it'd be interesting to read of your take of your family member's experience of the Crusaders Academy. So many players have been through it and it's been spoken about a lot, so the knowledge is out in the wider world about what it does and how it works, but it's hard to emulate. I'm sure you'd have some thoughts on the subject.

2023-04-11T12:13:03+00:00

Ankle-tapped Waterboy

Roar Rookie


"Bludgeoned". That Blues match was like watching Auckland at work in the 1990's, where their game plan appeared to be injure the opposition off the park until only the second-stringers were on the field, and then tear them apart (and maybe hand out some more injuries on the way).

2023-04-11T08:18:40+00:00

Nick

Roar Rookie


Excellent. I can see us really benefitting from an increased tempo game @ the RWC!

2023-04-11T08:17:40+00:00

Nick

Roar Rookie


This JC!!!

2023-04-11T08:05:22+00:00

CUW

Roar Rookie


i will take Rayasi any day over Clarke. taller - bigger - can kick with left foot - can catch any high ball - can tackle - can run and stay upright in tackles. he has that floating style of running - like a Naholo or Rocko :stoked: :stoked: :stoked: :stoked:

2023-04-11T07:59:31+00:00

CUW

Roar Rookie


Heinz is old - and is lucky to get such a good gig !!! i think the problem was they had 2 very good 9s in their prime playing together - thus limiting time for boys like Enari - who left. while the 1 -2 punch worked for a few years - it left them lacking a good 3rd backup also i wonder if they regrett not taking Aumua - after all he played for tasman !!! i still remember his first game - forget the opponent in miter 10 - came on as a sub , hammered someone and speared - thus sent off!!!! :laughing: :laughing: :laughing: :laughing: :laughing: :laughing: :laughing: :laughing: :laughing:

AUTHOR

2023-04-11T07:45:50+00:00

Highlander

Roar Guru


Yep, all timing stuff is Wprld Rugby directive

2023-04-11T07:37:06+00:00

jcmasher

Roar Rookie


The trouble is Foster likes him there and is too stubborn to change

2023-04-11T07:32:54+00:00

Nick

Roar Rookie


True true. He seems bigger this yeah but that could be imagined. Speaking of laws what about the new laws speeding up the game? Are they at the RWC??

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