Chiefs and Crusaders have more than a title to play for
The clash of the Chiefs and Crusaders in the Super Rugby Pacific final in Hamilton on Saturday is both a title decider and finale, an ending and farewell for leading figures in both franchises.
Head coach Scott Robertson will attempt to lead the Crusaders to a seventh straight title before he steps down to await the beginning of his tenure as coach of the New Zealand All Blacks. Robertson also won four titles with the Crusaders as a player.
The veteran All Blacks lock Sam Whitelock has been pencilled in to the Crusaders’ starting lineup as he struggles with an Achilles tendon injury.
Robertson has said he will give Whitelock until game-time to prove his fitness to make his 178th and final appearance for the Christchurch-based team. Whitelock will move to France after this year’s World Cup to play for Pau.
All Blacks flyhalf Richie Mo’unga also will make his last appearance for the Crusaders ahead of his post-World Cup departure for Japan.
The Chiefs also will be saying farewell to a stalwart on Saturday night, with lavishly bearded loose-forward Pita Gus Sowakula heading to France.
He has been chosen in the Chiefs’ starting lineup ahead of new All Black Samipeni Finau as an acknowledgement of his service to the Chiefs over the last five years.
Those departures add a sombre note to a final which already has many intriguing aspects. The Chiefs have lost only one match on their way to the final, though they faced tight struggles in their two playoff matches against the Queensland Reds and the Canberra-based Brumbies.
The Crusaders lost four matches during the regular season, including two against the Chiefs. But they have come into their own in the playoffs, as they so often do, posting substantial wins over the Fijian Drua and Auckland-based Blues.
The playoffs are the Crusaders’ happy place; they have been in their current situation so often, they know the routine of finals week by heart.
“It never gets old,” Robertson said. “These weeks are special and in your own way you make it special.
“It’s a one-off game. You prepare with the deepest prep and you’ve got to enjoy it. You’re walking into a pressure environment, and the Crusaders love these moments.”
For the Chiefs, it’s their first finals week since 2013 when they won the second of their two Super Rugby titles.
They have the privilege of hosting the final after finishing in top spot in the regular season and they will play in a sold-out stadium, probably in wet conditions.
Chiefs fans clatter cowbells as a sign of support for their team and a reference to their region’s dairy farming heritage.
The sound often is an irritant to visiting teams, something the Chiefs are happy to exploit.
“The cowbells won’t be the difference but they will certainly make a difference,” head coach Clayton McMillan said.
“It’s not a pleasant experience going down to Christchurch in the middle of winter and being on the end of their parochialism.
“But I’ve also experienced what it’s like here when the cowbells are ringing and 25,000 people are vocal getting behind the team.
“We’re going to need them in their colours, loud and proud and making sure the opposition understands that they’re a long way away from home and it’s our backyard.”
Comments on RugbyPass
My heart is with Quins, but the head is convinced Toulouse have too much. Ntamack is back, his timing and wisdom has been missed.
1 Go to commentsWow, what a starting line up for the Sharks) Tasty up front,kremer vs Tshituka or venter …fiery ,,Lavannini ,,will he knobble etzebeth? Biggest game for belleau?
1 Go to commentsIt was rubbish to watch, Blues weren’t even present. Did what they had to do, nothing more. Should be better next week against canes.
1 Go to commentsI’ve just noticed that this match has an all-French refereeing team. Surely a game like this ought to have a neutral ref? Although looking at the BBC preview of the Saints game, Raynal is also down as reffing that - so there may be some confusion about who is reffing what.
1 Go to commentsIf Havili can play anywhere in the back line, why not first 5. #10.
11 Go to commentsThe dressing room had already left for their summer break before they ran out in Dublin that year, and that’s on the coach. Franco Smith has undoubtedly made progress, particularly their maul, developing squad players and increasing squad depth. And against a very tight budget too. That said they were too lightweight last year and got found out against both Toulon and Munster in consecutive games. Better this season so far but they’ve developed something of a slow start habit occasionally, most notably losing at home to Northampton who played them at their own game. Play offs will ultimately show whether there has been tangible progress on last year, or not…!
2 Go to commentsAustralian Rugby has been a disaster, by not incorporating learning from previous successful campaigns. QLD Reds 2011 - Waratahs 2014. Players, coaches and administrators appoint there representatives for scheduled meetings, organisation’s agreement’s assessments and correspondence. This why a unified Rugby Union under one entity works. Every Rugby nation has taken that path. Was most difficult in the Northern hemisphere with over 100 years of club rugby before the game become professional. Took a lot of humility for those unions to eventually work together.
7 Go to commentsThough Wilson’s sacking was pretty brutal, it wasn’t just down to that Leinster game; Glasgow had a lot of 2nd half collapses that season, in the URC and Europe, and only just scraped into the playoffs. Franco Smith has definitely been an improvement, some players are delivering far more than they did under Wilson.
2 Go to commentsjesus - that front 5!
1 Go to commentsShould be an absolute cracker of a game! Will be great to see DuPont & Ntamack in tandem once again🔥
1 Go to commentsBest team ever…. To have played? These guys are still pressure chokers. Came nowhere when it counted. What a joke
69 Go to commentsMusk defends anonymous terrorism, fascism, threats against individuals and children etc etc But a Rugby club account….lock ‘em up!!!
1 Go to commentsActually the era defining moment came a few years earlier. February 2002 to be precise, when Michael D Higgins as finance minister at the time introduced his sports persons tax relief bill to the dial. As the politicians of the day stated “It seems to be another daft K Club frolic born in Kildare amongst the well-paid professional jockeys with whom the Minister plays golf” and that the scheme represented “a savage uncaring vision of Ireland and one that should be condemned”. The irfu and Leinster would be nowhere near the position they are in today without this key component of the finances.
5 Go to commentsIt is crystal clear that people who make such threats on line should be tried and imprisoned. Those with responsibility in social media companies who don’t facilitate this should be convicted. In real life, I have free speech to approach someone like Reinach and verbally threaten him. I am risking a conviction or a slap but I could do it. In the old days, If someone anonymously threatened someone by letter the police would ask and use evidence from the postal system. Unlike the Post, social media companies have complete instant and legal access to the content in social media. They make money from the data, billions. Yet, they turn a blind eye to terrorism, Nazi-ism and industrial levels of threats against individuals including their address and childrens schools being published online all from ananoymous accounts not real people. They claim free speech. Free speech for anonymous trolls/voilent thugs threatening people under false names? The fault is with the perps but also social media companies who think anonymous personas posting death threats constitutes free speech.
2 Go to commentsSo if this ain’t the best Irish team ever then who exactly is? I don’t remember any other Irish team being this good & winning a series in the Land of the Long White Cloud. Yes I may rip them often for 8 X QF RWC exits & twice not even making it to the QF, but they’re a damn good team who many think can only improve, including me!
69 Go to commentsNot a squeek out of Leinster for weeks about this match. So quiet. The first team have been quitely building for this encounter under Nienaber’s direction. All fresh, all highly motivated. They are expecting a season’s best performance from Northhampton. They will match that. They will be fresher and apparently they will have 80,000 out of the 83,000 shouting for them. I do expect Northhampton to turn up big time. Not to be missed. On a tangent it is evident how the loss of a few Premiership teams has in some respect helped other Premiership teams and England. More quality over less teams makes the teams better, which has a knock on effect on England. Not the only factor contributing to England’s rise but one of them.
5 Go to commentsOur very own monster teddy bear Ox😍💪
17 Go to commentsThis is might be the most generalised, entitled, patronising, out-of-pocket cultural indictment on a group of people you’ll ever see on what is supposedly a sports publication. I can only assume the author is weak like a woman or homosexual. I’m feeling an incredible range of emotions but I am not quite sure how to express them. I might go beat up a hockey player - assuming that’s okay with Duane and the boys? 🙂
9 Go to commentsBest thing the Welsh clubs could do is apply to join Gallagher prem surely be more exciting matches for there support than they have now.
2 Go to commentsRugbyPass writers are useless! you guys should get a real job because you all suck at writing about rugby!!!
9 Go to comments