Super Rugby Rd 4 – Hurricanes v Force

Super Rugby Power RankingsMarch 21, 2016

KFC Super Rugby power rankings: From 52-10 thrashing to #1 ranking

Super Rugby Rd 4 – Hurricanes v Force

The Brumbies finally lose top spot after their first defeat of the season, and somehow get replaced by a team they beat 52-10. Scotty Stevenson power ranks round four of the Super Rugby season.

THE HURRICANES ARE GOOD AGAIN. PHOTO / GETTY
THE HURRICANES ARE GOOD AGAIN. PHOTO / GETTY

1. Hurricanes

Rd 4: 41-6 v Force

Last week: 4 (up 3)

There is an irony here that the team to replace the Brumbies at the top of the KFC Power Rankings is the same team that got dusted up by the Brumbies 52-10 in round one. That said, this looked like a very different Hurricanes team, one that picked up on last weekend’s staunch defensive effort against the Blues and which this week backed its attack to break down the Force and eventually pile on the points. The Beauden Barrett-James Marshall double pivot game plan should not be messed with. It works for the Chiefs, and it works for the Canes, too.

2. Highlanders

Rd 4: 30-26 v Waratahs

Last week: 2 (N/C)

There were two Highlanders teams on show in Sydney on Friday night. There was the Highlanders team that you want to show off to your friends, and then there was the Highlanders team you don’t want to talk about. The former racked up 30 points on last year’s fellow semifinalists. The latter fell asleep after thirty beers on a couch in front of the television with bacon frying on the kitchen, only to be woken up by the smoke alarm as a fat fire threatened to engulf the entire house.

3. Brumbies

Rd 4: 11-31 v Stormers

Last week: 1 (down 2)

Let’s not panic here. One loss is not the end of the world for the Brumbies’ competition chances, though it would have hurt them greatly to be outplayed at their own game by the Stormers. What also hurt was the red card shown to Josh Mann-Rea after he threw a couple of awkward punches that, despite completely shite technique, somehow managed to connect. Given he subsequently received a one-week ban, the question is this: did the legal team use a mens rea defence for Mann Rea?

4. Chiefs

Rd 4: 30-26 v Jaguares

Last week: 6 (up 2)

The Chiefs roll deep. Real deep. They might be looking for a new co-captain this week, though, given Sam Cane tried to pull a guys head off.

5. Crusaders

Rd 4: 57-24 v Kings

Last week: 5 (N/C)

This was always going to be a win for the Crusaders, but how good did they look in attack? ‘Very good’ is the answer you’re looking for. The best thing about it was that they gave Johnny McNicoll all the ball while the Kings crapped their collective daks thinking about Nemani Nadolo. Like the Chiefs last week, the Crusaders get held back on their advance up the KFC Power Rankings by the same “you let the Kings score 24 points?” glass ceiling rule.

6. Stormers

Rd 4: 31-11 v Brumbies

Last week: 12 (up 6)

After being on the receiving end of a perplexing TMO call last week, the Stormers could barely believe their luck when Dillyn Leyds dropped the ball over the Brumbies line and was awarded a try anyway. Here’s the question: at what point does a TMO ignore the fact that a) the player didn’t think he had scored and b) the player actually dropped the ball? Ah, never mind. The Stormers deserved their win on the back of Schalk Burger being measty.

7. Lions

Rd 4: 39-22 v Cheetahs

Last week: 8 (up 1)

The Lions are the only South African team to have racked up more than 100 points this season, which is why I love the Lions. They are one of just two teams in Super Rugby (the Chiefs being the other) to average more than 500 running metres this season, which is also why I love the Lions. They beat more defenders than any other team, make more passes then any team bar the Hurricanes, and kick less than any other team. To be honest, they could lose by 80 points and I would still love them.

8. Rebels

RD 4: 35-9 v Sunwolves

Last week: 11 (up 3)

Is it time we took the Rebels seriously? Singling out Sean McMahon again this week may seem unfair on the rest of the team, but that’s life. McMahon made a team-high 14 carries and a team-high 13 tackles as the Rebels shut out the Sunwolves four tries to zip, and improved to 3-1 on the season. This was a big away win for the Rebels, who have never enjoyed a lot of success outside Australia. Actually, that’s an understatement. This was just their second win in 22 games offshore.

9. Sharks

Rd 4: 16-16 v Bulls

Last week: 3 (down 6)

The Sharks are so hard to shake, their opposing sides might start applying for restraining orders. Put aside, for the moment, the comedic missed penalty at the end of the match, and give the Sharks some credit here: somehow they keep getting results even when, by almost every statistical measure, they shouldn’t. They probably don’t deserve to fall this far down the list, but alas, they have.

10. Bulls

Rd 4: 16-16 v Sharks

Last week: 7 (down 3)

The Bulls have a major problem: they can’t understand how they have ended up with the equal leading ball runner in the competition, and now that they have Warrick Gelant, they don’t know what to do with him. Gelant ran for a game-high 125 metres against the Sharks which, for most teams, would have been a catalyst for action. Not the Bulls. In a move seemingly designed to counteract Gelant’s unwelcome brilliance with ball in hand, centres Jan Serfontein and Burger Odendaal combined for just 9 metres.

11. Waratahs

Rd 4: 26-30 v Highlanders

Last week: 9 (down 2)

Here is the infuriating thing about the Waratahs: on Friday night they doubled their season average in carries, in metres run in the game, in rucks won, and in clean breaks; they quadrupled their season average in offloads, and made a little over one third of their average season tackles. They did all of that. And still lost.

12. Blues

Rd 4: 25-25 Reds

Last week: 10 (down 2)

To quote Gus Gould, “No, no, no, no, no, no!” Okay, I get it. Two points are better than one. But four points are better than two, too. The big issue here is that the Blues are in desperate need of self-belief, and self-belief does not come from playing for a draw, especially against the Reds. Yes, had they gone for the line-out (as Ihaia West wanted to) and failed, they would have copped a bit from the public. Who cares? The Blues are always copping it from the public.

13. Jaguares

Rd 4: 26-30 v Chiefs

Last week: 13 (N/C)

The Jaguares had it all going for them here: a week off in round three, a first ever game in Argentina, a pitch that looked like it had hosted a 500-head herd of future steaks for a week before the game – but you cannot play the Chiefs for 76 minutes. You must play them for 80. Tough lesson for the Jaguares, but an important one.

14. Reds

Rd 4: 25-25 v Blues

Last week: 17 (up 3)

The Reds are like a UTI: Niggly, but easy enough to take care of. Unless you’re the Blues.

15. Cheetahs

Rd 4: 22-39 v Lions

Last week: 14 (down 1)

The Cheetahs missed a full third of their tackles against the Lions. That is absolute bush league stuff. Then again, they managed to score three tries off a paltry 90 carries and less than 300 running metres, which is actually a pretty good return. I can’t figure out whether I love watching the Cheetahs clown it or whether I want to throw a pot plant at the television every time they play. They are torturing me, emotionally.

16. Force

Rd 4: 6-41 v Hurricanes

Last week: 15 (down 1)

Tried hard. Got beat. The story of the Force since forever ago.

17. Sunwolves

Rd 4: 9-35 v Rebels

Last week: 16 (down 1)

If last week was a crushing blow to sentamentalists everywhere, this loss to the Rebels was a resounding victory for rationalists. A two-week pre-season is never going to give a team enough of a base from which to be competitive.

18. Kings

Rd 4: 24-57 v Crusaders

Last week: 18 (N/C)

For the second time in as many weeks the Kings scored 24 points in a match and for the second time in as many weeks the Kings conceded 50 points in a match. There will never be a time this year when the two numbers in the above sentence will be in a different order.

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PartnersMarch 14, 2016

KFC Super Rugby power rankings: Ugly wins and even uglier jerseys

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Big wins for the Highlanders and Chiefs, heartbreaking losses for the Blues and Sunwolves, and the Brumbies juggernaut just keeps on rolling. Scotty Stevenson assesses all the movers and shakers after round 3 of Super Rugby.

The Southern Kings' horrible argyle jersey. (Photo: Getty Images)
The Southern Kings’ horrible argyle jersey. (Photo: Getty Images)

1. The Brumbies

Rd 2: 31-14 v Force

Last week: 1 (N/C)

David Pocock played for ten minutes of the match against the Force at halfback. That’s just plain funny. Funnier still, the Brumbies didn’t miss a beat. There is a reason the Brumbies are the favourites to win this whole thing. I bet you can’t wait to book your grand final boys’ trip to Canberra.

2. The Highlanders

Rd 3: 34-15 v Lions

Last week: 5 (up 3)

The Highlanders and Michael Jackson are the only two things that can change complexion this rapidly. In the case of the Highlanders, it was a typically ballsy and unorthodox ten minute burst that turned the game and blew the Lions away under the roof at Forsyth Barr. There is no team in this competition that scraps as hard as the Highlanders. Only the Waratahs have made more tackles per game, and no team has played with such scarcity of ball. Even though they post a competition-low 11.46 minutes per game in possession, and the second fewest carries per game, they still rank in the top 8 for average metres run. Team motto: we do more with less.

3. The Sharks

Rd 3: 18-13 v Stormers

Last week: 8 (up 5)

In terms of statements, the Sharks’ victory in Cape Town was arguably the biggest of the weekend. This is a team that has a misfiring lineout but one that is just efficient enough in every other facet of the game to get the victories. They won on the percentages last week against the Jaguares and this week they won on straight up belligerent defence, making a shoulder-aching 164 tackles at 91%.  They also got the benefit of a high-level dubious penalty try call.

4. The Hurricanes

Rd 3: 23-19 v Blues

Last week: 10 (up 6)

I don’t mind ugly wins. Ugly wins are worth the same amount of points as pretty wins. The Hurricanes have been trying to be pretty but let’s face it: they looked even better being ugly.

5. The Crusaders

Rd 3: BYE

Last week: 5 (N/C)

I’m just going to leave the Crusaders where they were last week. There are two reasons for this: one, there was nothing that went down in round three to suggest the Crusaders deserve to be overtaken on the rankings and two, the Crusaders have the best post-bye record of any of the New Zealand teams, winning 78% of their games after a break. That percentage will increase this week when they host the Kings.

6. The Chiefs

Rd 3: 58-24 v Kings

Last week: 9 (up 3)

Back to winning ways and back to the top of the average points per match table for the Chiefs, who played a Kings side that rolled out in jerseys uncannily similar to the Chiefs’ original Super Rugby strip, which was a bad jersey even for its time, and should now be regarded as a criminal act. The Chiefs were always going to be too good for the Kings, but their rise up the table hits the ‘you let the Kings score 24 points?’ glass ceiling.

Walter Little in the 1997 Waikato Chiefs uniform. (Photo: Getty Images)
Walter Little in the 1997 Waikato Chiefs uniform. (Photo: Getty Images)

7. The Bulls

Rd 3: BYE

Last week: 6 (down 1)

There are some people who would love to take a pot shot at the Bulls by suggesting they play more rugby on a bye than in any other competition week. I am not one of those people.

8. The Lions

Rd 3: 15-34 v Highlanders

Last week: 2 (down 6)

Blame it on the travel, blame it on the superior transition offence of the Highlanders, or blame it on the boogie if you wish, but you have to concede the Lions’ efforts in the percentages ultimately cost them the match. The Lions made 150 carries to the Highlanders’ 70, and made 60 tackles to the Highlanders’ 150. Problem is, the Highlanders made a full 4 metres per carry more than the Lions, and the Lions missed a full 20% of their tackles. But for a sloppy ten minutes from the visitors, this match would have been much closer.

9. The Waratahs

Rd 3: BYE

Last week: 10 (up 1)

The Waratahs would have enjoyed a week off, during which they would have no doubt realised that rugby is a tough sport to play when you are making a competition-high 142 tackles per game, and conceding a competition-high 15.5 penalties per game, and allowing a competition-high 179 passes per game. The ‘Tahs will be better for a week off.

10. The Blues

Rd 2: 19-23 v Hurricanes

Last week: 11 (up 1)

The Blues do so many things well that it is tempting to say they have merely forgotten how to win the close ones. So tempting is it, in fact, that I will say exactly that. There was an extraordinary lack of finishing ability from the team this week, considering they spent a full quarter of the match inside the Hurricanes red zone. Anyway, it wouldn’t be the Blues without a soul destroying result, and they go up a spot on improvement.

11. The Rebels

Rd 3: 25-23 v Reds

Last week: 12 (up 1)

Captain Sean McMahon may have struggled to say the word ‘gutsy’ in his post-match interview, but that was only because he was almost dead. McMahon is as franchise as they come – he made a team high 12 tackles in the win against the Reds and ran for more metres than anyone else bar winger Tom English. If the Rebels can keep building a team around him they will continue to improve.

12. The Stormers

Rd 2: 13-18 v Sharks

Last week: 3 (down 9)

On the face of it, the Stormers are almost as hard done by on their massive fall down the KFC Power Rankings as they were by the massively brutal TMO penalty try decision against them. But hard-done-by or otherwise, this was a team that still couldn’t get the win despite being camped inside the Sharks’ half for the majority of the game. A one-try dividend on all that ball is Zuma’s presidential palace-level poor return on investment.

13. The Jaguares

Rd 3: BYE

Last week: 14 (up 1)

Went home, ate meat, got all excited about their first home game. Climb one place on account of those three things.

14. The Cheetahs

Rd 3: 32-31 v Sunwolves

Last week: 15 (up 2)

What on earth was going on in this game? Give the Cheetahs some credit for the comeback here, but really? This team is a slapstick skit every week, albeit a hellishly entertaining one. There is a point in every Cheetahs match at which you just know they have absolutely no idea what they are going to do next. I guess that keeps it fresh for everyone.

15. The Force

Rd 3: 14-31 v Brumbies

Last week: 15 (N/C)

Skipper Matt Hodgson made 21 tackles. Matt Hodgson is 34 years old. Stop making Matt Hodgson do everything.

Sunwolves hattrick hero Akihito Yamada executes one of the best swan-dives Singapore has ever seen.  (Photo by Lionel Ng/Getty Images for Japan Sunwolves)
Sunwolves hattrick hero Akihito Yamada executes one of the best swan-dives Singapore has ever seen. (Photo by Lionel Ng/Getty Images)

16. The Sunwolves

Rd 3: 31-32 v Cheetahs

Last week: 16 (N/C)

Scored 31 points. Yes! Conceded 32 points. Noooooooooooooo! According to a Spinoff Sports quick fire flash snap opinion poll last week, this was the Sunwolves’ best chance at a win this year. Will they ever again in 2016 race out to a 31-13 lead only to clock off and allow three unanswered second half tries? Probably not. This was an absolute punisher for fans of sentimentality.

17. The Reds

Rd 3: 23-25 v Rebels

Last week: 18 (up 1)

Sack coach: check. Play better: check. Still lose: Check.

18. The Kings

Rd 3: 24-58 v Chiefs

Last week: 17 (down 1)

The Kings’ jerseys really are criminally bad.


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