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Blues secure record 13th consecutive win with last-gasp drop goal

(Photo by Matt King/Getty Images)

The depleted Blues have dealt the NSW Waratahs a reality check with a last-gasp 20-17 Super Rugby Pacific victory in Sydney. A drop goal from full-back Zarn Sullivan a minute after full-time secured the Blues a record 13th consecutive victory and consigned the Waratahs to sixth spot on the ladder.

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The defeat leaves the Waratahs needing to travel to New Zealand for a knockout quarter-final against the Chiefs next Saturday. They had been hoping to play the Brumbies much closer to home in Canberra.

“It’s a disappointing finish for us at Leichhardt Oval,” said Waratahs captain Jake Gordon. “We thought we started that second half really well and put some pressure on the Blues but we weren’t clinical in the last 20 minutes.”

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Predicting the make-up of the first-ever Super Rugby Pacific playoffs | Aotearoa Rugby Pod

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Predicting the make-up of the first-ever Super Rugby Pacific playoffs | Aotearoa Rugby Pod

Already assured of the top spot ahead of the finals, the Blues rested all but one of their starters from last week’s equally thrilling win over the Brumbies. But even without superstars like All Blacks playmaker Beauden Barrett, impressive league convert Roger Tuivasa-Scheck and skipper Dalton Papalii, they still had enough strike power to deny the Tahs a third Kiwi scalp in a single season for the first time in seven years.

The Blues kept the Waratahs scoreless in the first half even while reduced to 13 players after back-rowers Akira Ioane and Adrian Choat were both shown yellow cards in the space of a minute. The visitors, in fact, posted the only points of the half while they were two men short, Jock McKenzie’s penalty goal three minutes before the break giving the Blues a 3-0 lead.

Two tries in six minutes from winger Mark Nawaqanitawase midway through the second half shot the Waratahs out to a 14-3 lead. Replies from replacement Cameron Suafoa and lock Luke Romano put the Blues back in front before a 78th-minute penalty goal from Tahs five-eighth Tane Edmed locked the game up.

But Sullivan had the final say as the Blues clinched a quarter-final date in Auckland next week with either the Highlanders or Western Force. While the Waratahs were disappointed, their return to the finals in 2022 comes after their depressing winless campaign last year.

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“It’s been a massive improvement for us,” Gordon said. “We are happy with that but we are not getting ahead of ourselves. We have got a tough test next week.”

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GrahamVF 49 minutes ago
Does South Africa have a future in European competition?

"has SA actually EVER helped to develop another union to maturity like NZ has with Japan," yes - Argentina. You obviously don't know the history of Argentinian rugby. SA were touring there on long development tours in the 1950's

We continued the Junior Bok tours to the Argentine through to the early 70's

My coach at Grey High was Giepie Wentzel who toured Argentine as a fly half. He told me about how every Argentinian rugby club has pictures of Van Heerden and Danie Craven on prominent display. Yes we have developed a nation far more than NZ has done for Japan. And BTW Sa players were playing and coaching in Japan long before the Kiwis arrived. Fourie du Preez and many others were playing there 15 years ago.


"Isaac Van Heerden's reputation as an innovative coach had spread to Argentina, and he was invited to Buenos Aires to help the Pumas prepare for their first visit to South Africa in 1965.[1][2] Despite Argentina faring badly in this tour,[2] it was the start of a long and happy relationship between Van Heerden and the Pumas. Izak van Heerden took leave from his teaching post in Durban, relocated to Argentina, learnt fluent Spanish, and would revolutionise Argentine play in the late 1960s, laying the way open for great players such as Hugo Porta.[1][2] Van Heerden virtually invented the "tight loose" form of play, an area in which the Argentines would come to excel, and which would become a hallmark of their playing style. The Pumas repaid the initial debt, by beating the Junior Springboks at Ellis Park, and emerged as one of the better modern rugby nations, thanks largely to the talents of this Durban schoolmaster.[1]"


After the promise made by Junior Springbok manager JF Louw at the end of a 12-game tour to Argentina in 1959 – ‘I will do everything to ensure we invite you to tour our country’ – there were concerns about the strength of Argentinian rugby. South African Rugby Board president Danie Craven sent coach Izak van Heerden to help the Pumas prepare and they repaid the favour by beating the Junior Springboks at Ellis Park.

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