Former Wallaby refuses to ‘put a line through’ Crusaders’ title hopes
They may sit second last on the ladder with a disastrous 1-6 record but the Crusaders are still in with a chance of defending their Super Rugby Pacific titles according to former Wallaby Stephen Hoiles.
After starting the season with five defeats on the trot, the Crusaders snapped their uncharacteristically poor losing run with an upset 37-26 win over New Zealand rivals the Chiefs late last month.
The Crusaders went on a bye before turning their focus to a Trans-Tasman blockbuster in Sydney. The equally-as-desperate Waratahs waited for them, and the thriller more than lived up to the hype.
Wing Sevu Reece scored the opening try inside the opening minute, but after trading points for more than 80 minutes, both teams went to golden point. In the end, the Waratahs emerged victorious.
Replacement Will Harrison handed the Crusaders their sixth loss of the season from seven starts – and their second defeat to the Waratahs in 2024 – with a clutch drop goal at Allianz Stadium.
The Waratahs sit just one point outside the top eight now while the Crusaders are six points off the pace. But Super Rugby winner Stephen Hoiles won’t rule the reigning champions out just yet.
“Not yet. Can I have another week on that one? One more week, one more week and we’ll put a line through their name,” Hoiles said on Stan Sports’ Between Two Posts.
“Even for the Tahs this week, as good as that win was, then they’ve got Moana go on a win.”
With the Waratahs leading by just four points with a couple of minutes to play, the Crusaders need a hero. Replacement Christian Lio-Willie was the player who rose to the occasion at the death.
Lio-Willie scored what was believed to be the match-winning try with about 90 seconds to play, but the Waratahs were gifted another opportunity to claw their way back after the conversion.
Will Harrison slotted a long-range penalty attempt to send the clash to extra-time with a scoreline of 40-all. Harrison’s heroics weren’t done there with the fly-half nailing a drop goal to win it.
After more than 700 days, Harrison returned to Super Rugby Pacific after an unfortunate run of injures earlier this season. But this was the crowning moment for a man who “didn’t think he was going to play rugby again.”
“We both know Will really well. We’ve seen him come all the way through. We worked closely with Mark Harrison, his dad,” former Wallaby Morgan Turinui explained alongside Stephen Hoiles.
“The family have had a tumultuous year, two years… lots of things going on.
HEROICS FROM HARRISON!#SuperRugbyPacific #WARvCRU pic.twitter.com/qu3lnkqaZH
— Super Rugby Pacific (@SuperRugby) April 12, 2024
“I coached Jack, his brother. Ella works for us at the front gate at Coogee Oval. They’re a Randwick family… I know what the family around Will have gone through as well.
“There were lots of times where you didn’t think he was going to play rugby again, let alone get back to that level.
“He’s a great kid. There’s lots of other stories like that, it’s just that we have a really close connection to the people around it so we’ve seen firsthand what goes beyond him to get to that moment on the weekend.
“To see him come through, pretty happy.”
Comments on RugbyPass
Great role model.
2 Go to commentsOne significant tell, not a single Waratahs player stopped to whinge to the ref about Finau’s tackle. They got on with playing the game. Great tackle.
8 Go to commentsWouldn’t be a bad move if Ireland pulled into SA with a young side. Particularly in Pretoria. Invaluable experience getting thumped in the bosveld.
57 Go to commentsIreland. The Princess Diana of Rugby. I never cheered so much for a team as i did for the All Blacks in that QF.
57 Go to commentsWill be great to see the Leinster first XV back in action again after their cotton wool time…
1 Go to commentsLooked up Grant Constable on google and reply was doppelgänger for Ben Smith
57 Go to commentsIt is so good that we now all get excited and debate who is best and emotionally get involved. We all back our teams which is great. Up until about 15-20 years ago, NZ was basically on its own, and then Saffa, Aussie and sometimes French and English were there. We now have at least 5-6 really top sides and another 4 who keep improving. This is so healthy. So we should not resort to rubbish comments and unhealthy debate, but rather all be chuffed that the product we watch is not competitive, exciting and often uncertain. It would be so good if World Rugger could find a way to align the rules to professional players as well as spectators. Live rugby games are SO boring as there is SO much down time as we wait for refs and TMOs and whoever else to look at every small event going back endless phases with the hope of eventually find a minute infringement to then decide cancel what was a wonderful try. This is the ultimate cork back in the bottle moment and feels like every balloon is always being popped. Come on- we must be better with the rules.
57 Go to comments“upon leaving said establishment I tripped over a stool knocking some bottles into the air and as I fell I accidently dislodged a police officer’s teaser who was passing by on an unrelated matter there by landing on said taser which caused it to discharge 50,000 watts into me. Out of shock I shouted Ireland are going to win the world cup. Upon waking up I apologised for the distress caused by my Ireland comment. The matter is closed. If you wish to pursue this matter may I remind you what I told Wayne Barnes when he sent me off. I AM A BIG ASS MAN”. Or was it “I AM A BIG ASS, MAN” or was it “I AM A BIG ASSMAN”?
2 Go to commentsThe only championship the Boks hold are: Great value for the incompetence of referees during the RWC Moaning endlessly and champions of spewing utterly ignorant 💩 at all times. Displaying the dangers of a third world education End of.
57 Go to commentsSouth Africa and Rassie do a phenomenal job of treating the 4 years in between World Cups as nothing more than a training exercise to build squad depth. The Six Nations money that keeps Irish rugby afloat is unfortunately too important to allow the same approach, and basic population size means we'll never get close to matching the depth of South Africa, England and France. That being said, Irish rugby is in a relatively good place and slowly improving inch by inch. If the other three provinces can pull the finger out and actually develop some players it'd be even better.
57 Go to commentsGood on Clarke for taking on the criticism and addressing his deficiencies, principally his laziness.
2 Go to comments“It is the people’s favourite against the actual favourite. It is the people’s champions against the actual champions. I’m joking, but it’s going to be a fantastic series.” Why did Darcy make that joke knowing it would be used as click bait? Why did RP headline it as a serious comment? Anyway, the tired comment isn’t very astute. SA players may have played more games etc. Darcy over estimated as a pundit.
57 Go to commentsNot sure Frisch will ever make the French team with Depoortère and Costes waiting in the wings to take over from Danty and Fickou.
1 Go to commentsThe Irish are tired and the Boks are old. The test series won't confirm who is best in the world, it will confirm which team needs to pursue the task of rebuilding with the most urgency.
57 Go to commentsGrant, the first time I have seen an article written by you. Maybe I have missed your previous stuff. These days all professional players effectively play a common season so all top players are equally tired, or rested. That is the job of the coaching ticket to build squad depth and juggle resources so players are ‘ fresh’ when the big games come. Possibly Ireland are less inclined to juggle squad compared to Rassie, who is prepared to take the risk to rest players as well as build depth throughout the year so come WC he has a full squad, experienced and rested enough to win 7 games. After all, to win WC you need to get through the tournament and then win the final big 3 games. Ireland should try and build a bit so come final 3 they are ready. So far only played final 1(QF). I am so looking forward to the Irish tour. Hopefully Rassie has enough time to align his guys, as he draws them from across the globe, and not from 2 sides locally( eg Leinster, Munster). No excuses, going to be exciting.
57 Go to commentsIn football, teams get fined and sometimes docked points for deliberately fielding weakened teams yet Leinster can pretty much do as they please with no comebacks. Could it be because Ireland run the URC? Could it be that Ireland run the ERC? Whichever it is, it stinks!!
6 Go to commentsIreland are only the People’s Champions in Irish eyes. The rest of the world do not care for them very much because of attitudes of people like Gordon, Ferris, Best, Jackman…I could go on!!
57 Go to commentsNot sure how Karl Dickson can ever ref a Quins game, he played for the club for 8 years as understudy to Care and is still close friends with half the team
3 Go to commentsAre bookies taking bets on how many times Vunipola's eventual statement will use the term “elders"? My money is on at least 4 times.
4 Go to commentsSo Ireland will be tired, despite having the most rested test squad in the world. They only play tests, champions cup and urc play off games ffs! Case in point; Leinster sent a B squad to SA for their last two games while their first xv rested up and trained at their leisure for the sf vs Saints at the so called ‘neutral venue’ of Croke Park. So tired? Do me a favour… And as for “people’s champions”? Seriously??? Outside of Ireland they are respected for their ability to win 6N. And of course plenty of inconsequential test friendlies without any real pressure. WC ko games when the pressure is white hot? Not so much…
57 Go to comments