The Wrap: Opening round of SRP a case of the more things change, the more they stay the same

By Geoff Parkes / Expert

It seems that the more things change – and we are in the midst of a period of profound change for rugby in this corner of the world – the more things stay the same.

Any thoughts that the usual post-World Cup player movements might see the leading New Zealand franchises come back to the pack were quickly put to bed on Super Rugby’s opening weekend.

In an entertaining – and highly willing – opening match in Hamilton, the Chiefs reversed the result of last year’s final, edging the Crusaders 33-29.

Despite marquee players like Brodie Retallick, Sam Cane, Sam Whitelock, Richie Mo’unga and others having moved on, it was a familiar story; skill, intent, toughness, pace and teamwork, all blended into a compelling package.

A solid enough crowd seemed to be having a time of it too. Perhaps all of the ‘I don’t watch rugby anymore because the game is too boring/over-refereed/slow/not fun’ folk have been flushed out, leaving the rest of us to get on with enjoying it?

Making predictions as early as Round 1 can be fraught with danger, but it doesn’t feel like pushing my neck out too far to suggest that both sides will again be featuring late into the playoffs.

(Photo by Phil Walter/Getty Images)

In Melbourne, the final play of the match saw a wide pass from Carter Gordon fail to connect with Glen Vaihu and instead, roll over the sideline. It was wholly indicative of the lack of execution that marked the performance of the home side throughout.

Entering the match with high expectations, the Rebels failed to settle and, down 17-3 at half-time, never got any better when forced into playing catch-up rugby.

Winning the penalty count and dominating territory for large chunks of time, it wasn’t as if the Rebels lacked for opportunity. But repeated, clumsy execution took its toll.

In the match that followed from Perth, a statistic was highlighted showing the Hurricanes average per game, 10 visits to the attacking 22 or ‘red zone’, and average a try for every two of those visits.

The Rebels managed 16 separate red zone visits while in possession. There were four line-outs lost, three penalties conceded, five dropped balls, two wayward passes, one penalty kick slammed against an upright, and one successful penalty. In addition, Carter Gordon kicked a penalty dead in goal, denying a further opportunity for a five metre line-out.

More line-out feeds were squandered in other parts of the field. No rugby side has any business executing so poorly, not being able to spark any ‘go forward’ without a line-out platform, and expect to remain competitive. No prizes for guessing for what the Rebels will be working on this week.

(Photo by Daniel Pockett/Getty Images)

By contrast, the Brumbies were their familiar, efficient selves; particularly well-organised and stingy in defence, pushing referee Angus Gardner more than what they would have liked, but offering the Rebels very little to work with.

At flyhalf, a spritely Noah Lolesio looks to have returned in great nick, while Charlie Cale was not only a menace at line-out, but showed Corey Toole-like pace to score a spectacular second-half try. 30-3, four tries to nil, told the tale of the night.

The Hurricanes took the Perth crowd out of the equation early on, and were too polished for the Force, winning comfortably, 44-10. What impressed was their balance, blending power up front with speed on the outside.

A clumsy challenge by Harry Potter started things off on the wrong foot for the Force, as the visitors took full advantage of a lopsided early penalty count.

The third quarter was the home side’s best, although coach Simon Cron later pointed to concerns around needing more impact and cohesion from his bench. With the Rebels and Force certain to be throwing everything at each other this coming Friday night, getting full value across the 23 will be essential.

As an aside; on what was a good weekend for referees, full credit to Damon Murphy for trusting his eyes and sitting Potter down immediately, without stopping the game to initiate a needless video session and conversation with his TMO.

Whangarei doesn’t get many Super Rugby games but players and crowd alike seemed to enjoy the sunny, afternoon festival atmosphere, as the Blues comfortably held the Drua, 34-10.

New coach Vern Cotter is widely tipped to bring a harder, more clinical edge to the Blues this season, and they will be relieved to get this one out of the way nice and early, against a Drua side that still lacks fizz away from home, and whose scrum – while improving – is still developing at this level.

It appears that some things have changed in Dunedin; not the zoo full of students celebrating orientation week by singing along to a 45-year-old drinking song by ‘Th’ Dudes’, but in that somehow, wearing Speights merch has become cool.

New fullback Jacob Ratumaitavuki-Kneepkens disappointed commentators by getting so involved in the match. Not the local fans though; as delighted with his two tries and silky skill-set, as they were well pleased with how hooker Henry Bell, handled his first step up to Super Rugby.

It’s a long time until Round 12, but keep an eye out for a mouth-watering face-off at hooker between Henry and brother George, when the Highlanders take on the Crusaders.

Also lively was combative No.8 Hugh Renton. Thinking back to the 1996 film Trainspotting, is there any player in world rugby who so accurately resembles their younger, fictional self?

I’m not convinced that 12 is the optimal place to park a bus, but even if Julian Savea isn’t the inside centre he’d like to be, and even if Moana Pasifika came out on the wrong side of a 35-21 score-line, they showed enough to suggest that they’ll be improving on their one-win 2023 season.

They also have Miracle Fai’ilagi, a hugely talented player who, if he was at a different franchise, would surely be one of the headline stars of the competition.

Speaking of commentators, job well done to Sky Sports’ Grant Nisbett for not calling Makazole Mapimpi even once, during the Dunedin match!

Even though things were damp in Brisbane, and errors accrued as a result, the final match was enthralling throughout; the Reds pulling away in the second half to sweep aside the Waratahs 40-22.

The win was built of the back of the Reds’ effective, first-choice loose forward trio, with Fraser McReight in particular looking strong, fast and hungry. This opened up a sweet ride for the playmakers, with Tate McDermott and Tom Lynagh both enjoying strong matches.

(Photo by Bradley Kanaris/Getty Images)

The match took a pivotal turn right on half-time when Jordan Petaia, running on to a nifty infield grubber by Suliasi Vunivalu, was ruled to have been tackled early by Max Jorgensen.

A penalty try and a sin bin for Jorgensen resulted; harsh, but under the laws of the game, entirely just. There wasn’t much in it, but there didn’t need to be.

The Waratahs, overcoming the loss on Thursday of Lalakai Foketi in a nasty training accident, showed some nice glimpses. But they also had more of the unforced errors, particularly when forced into chasing the game in the second half.

They now face an awkward month where they face three New Zealand teams, then the Drua, away in Fiji. If reports are true that coach Darren Coleman will face judgment day at or before the end of this period, then this would only serve as yet another symptom of what is wrong with Australian rugby; the unhealthy fixation on head coaches.

If there are Waratahs board members who don’t want Coleman as coach, they should either have not appointed him in the first place, or at worst, replaced him during the off-season.

To set him up for failure by announcing interim win/loss targets, against sides that they historically have poor win/loss records against, feels disingenuous. Bad enough, but to have this information doing the rounds in public is just another example of rugby politics at its worst.

(Photo by Jason McCawley/Getty Images)

For all of the flak thrown at the Rebels board members in recent weeks, let us not forget that it was the Waratahs who had their financial dirty linen – debt totalling many millions of dollars – hastily swept under the carpet by Rugby Australia.

Yes, everyone connected to the Waratahs longs to repeat the success of 2014. But if 2024 proves not to be their year, they will do well to consider what exactly are realistic expectations, and to reflect on the performance of everyone in the franchise; not just one person.

The more things change, the more things stay the same.

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The Crowd Says:

2024-02-28T02:40:43+00:00

Dualcode

Roar Rookie


Welp, Brumbies and Reds likely to pull through for the Aussies as usual even though it's only round 1.

2024-02-27T11:56:20+00:00

Peter

Roar Rookie


You seem unwilling to accept the new paradigm. I watch more Japanese Rugby that I do Super Rugby these days. Why, wouldn't I. It's on at a time that suits me. It's pack full of quality overseas players like Richie Mo'unga that DONT play in SUPER RUGBY anymore and its growing exponentially in both standard and popularity. It's also expansive and fun to watch. If you are relying on Super Rugby remaining the premier competition in the world then you really need to think again. The world of Rugby is changing rapidly and the best New Zealand can hope for is for its domestic league to be a feeder competition. I hope you enjoy playing with yourselves because if NZR is not prepared to meet us halfway then there will be no Trans Tasman competition to speak of and the drain of All Blacks or ex All Blacks opting to play overseas will become a Tsunami if it hasn't become one already.

2024-02-27T08:35:15+00:00

Locke

Roar Rookie


Two wrongs don't make a right. Australia chose to sow it's limited talent over infertile rugby fields in the optimistic hope that this would lead to a bumper harvest in the future. This was clearly a fallacy, in effect they merely dumbed down the standard of their rugby by flooding their squads with the culture of club-level players. The few elite Australian players in each squad actually went backwards as they conformed to the new culture. Now you want NZ rugby to follow suite and offer up it's talent to be dumbed down in a similar manner. It's human nature to conform and it's easier to conform to the lowest common denominator than the highest. The only way standards lift is when the talent exceeds the opportunities. Australia got it the wrong way around and created more opportunities than they had talent. Don't expect NZ rugby to fall for the same fallacy.

2024-02-27T07:22:21+00:00

Muzzo

Roar Rookie


He’s having an injury break ATM, & word has it he’s not to far away from returning!

2024-02-27T05:35:32+00:00

Wig1

Roar Rookie


Little bit malu to ask as I missed it b4. Is de Groot injured or over seas.when I watched the game I straight away thought where's he

2024-02-27T05:10:50+00:00

Jacko

Roar Rookie


Quite the opposite. Its money for agreed content.

2024-02-27T04:38:14+00:00

kingplaymaker

Roar Guru


Then it's just tons of money thrown out. It seems as if there's more fear than in the north that the domestic product might not be watched, maybe behind decisions like this.

2024-02-27T04:35:30+00:00

HittingGapsWithNoGas

Roar Rookie


Geez I hope you’re right

2024-02-27T04:04:53+00:00

Jacko

Roar Rookie


The NH comps dont lose any TV money as they are still providing content which is what has been paid for and the crowd numbers dont really change.

2024-02-27T04:02:59+00:00

kingplaymaker

Roar Guru


Somehow with the way things are going I feel as if we'll be finding out sooner rather later..

2024-02-27T03:47:28+00:00

HittingGapsWithNoGas

Roar Rookie


Yeah with all the Kiwis on the Goldie you'd think they could do it at a point. I think CBUS is too big for it at this early stage but perhaps there's a more boutique rectangular set-up with 8-12k capacity. And the Wildfires seem to be building a good culture up in Newy so maybe scaling up their current ground with a grandstand on the far side could be an option. For me, showing that we can get an atmosphere going is key to getting more fans enthused about it and to build something sustainable and attainable given RA's limited finances. But in an ideal world the Goldie, Newy and maybe even Toowoomba would be on the wish list.

2024-02-27T03:27:07+00:00

kingplaymaker

Roar Guru


Yes and there's also Gold Coast as a question/issue. I think the faultlines would run along roving or Newcastle+Gold Coast or both or in which order.

2024-02-27T03:24:40+00:00

kingplaymaker

Roar Guru


Even if they kept player rules about playing in Australia to be Wallaby, there still wouldn't be a need. Ultimately the franchises can just decide they're clubs and have whatever organising agency they like. If the second tier were national it would be the teams you say plus probably a few more in Sydney/Brisbane. It seems as if RA is perpetually afraid of growing pains. But the NRL and AFL aren't.

2024-02-27T03:19:43+00:00

HittingGapsWithNoGas

Roar Rookie


Yeah hopefully second time round they'd throw more into marketing it - prepping the community that a game's coming up a couple of months out. Billboard and radio space is pretty cheap in the regions. Airdrop Ned Hannigan posters - stuff for kids to get into a bit. Do a promo with the Honeybadger and BCF. Country towns are waters the NRL doesn't fish in aside from trials and a couple of games through the season so there's less competition to get people to the games. Problem is realistically union doesn't have the profile to fill a WIN or Marathon Stadium (whatever Newcastle's one's called now) right now and getting a good atmosphere going's gotta be essential.

2024-02-27T03:18:54+00:00

kingplaymaker

Roar Guru


Yes, inevitably it means a whole lot of lost revenue. Revenue which seems as if it can't be afforded... It's probably 4 whole weekends with 10 teams losing all that money from gate receipts and TV money.

2024-02-27T02:56:36+00:00

AndyS

Roar Rookie


Indeed, but I’d go with that structure regardless. Certainly for a third tier, as I think it would have the best chance of the NRC having its own niche and identity within Australian rugby. But possibly even more interesting to think about if it were a replacement. It maybe best highlights a point that seems to go unremarked…if we have a domestic only comp as the second tier, and probably any model of domestic comp, do we really need RA? Chances are all the Wallabies will be overseas, so there would be no need for an ongoing structure…they’d essentially function like the Baabaas. So they make whatever money they can, it all gets distributed to the domestic comp teams/commission and the sub-unions (which would be the same thing in my model anyway), and then…?

2024-02-27T02:42:14+00:00

kingplaymaker

Roar Guru


Yes, it's a question they seemed pretty unsure about the answer to with the NRC.

2024-02-27T02:40:25+00:00

kingplaymaker

Roar Guru


Ok then it depends on whether we're referring to second or third tier. If second tier it would be replacing Super rugby, if third tier something quite different.

2024-02-27T01:35:17+00:00

Frankie66

Roar Rookie


We could rename the Telstra Premiership the World Series..

2024-02-27T01:20:58+00:00

Wig1

Roar Rookie


It definitely needs to be fixed,we all want the Australian sides to be competitive

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