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Crusaders could lose two All Blacks ahead of final

New Zealand centre Ryan Crotty

The Crusaders could be without established All Blacks Ryan Crotty and Scott Barrett for the Super Rugby final after both damaged a hand in their exciting semi-final defeat of the Hurricanes.

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Inside centre Crotty (thumb) and lock Barrett (finger) were to learn the extent of their injuries when x-ray results return on Monday, after they failed to finish the 30-26 win in Christchurch.

Broken bones would rule them out of Saturday’s home decider against the Jaguares and could impact on their availability for the All Blacks, who begin their pre-World Cup program in July.

Crusaders coach Scott Robertson will be sweating on the outcome of the x-rays, acknowledging his team needs as much quality on the park as possible against a Jaguares side he rates as a genuine threat to deny the Crusaders a third successive title.

“They’re important players for us, you know,” Robertson said.

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“A hundred-odd games for Crots and Scooter Barrett’s one of the best locks in t he world, so we’ll see.”

Injury could prematurely end Crotty’s Crusaders career as he is leaving for Japan next season.

Robertson has two other All Blacks nursing shoulder injuries but he expects five-eighth Richie Mo’unga and prop Joe Moody to recover.

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Mo’unga’s damage was suffered in a late hit from Hurricanes captain Dane Coles which Robertson believed warranted further action from match officials.

Classy pivot Mo’unga played on and was arguably the game’s most important player, landing all six shots at goal, scoring one try and setting up another in a 20-point performance which shaded incumbent All Blacks five-eighth Beauden Barrett.

“You’ve got to give it to Richie, he’s pretty clutch, kicking those threes, kicks from the sideline,” Robertson said.

Crusaders
Richie M’ounga lines up Beauden Barrett during last year’s semi-final. (Photo by Kai Schwoerer/Getty Images)
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“It kept us out ahead, they were always chasing and defence at the end was remarkable.”

Robertson revealed he had expected the Jaguares to beat the mis-firing Brumbies in their semi-final, which proved prophetic as the Argentines powered to a 39-7 triumph in Buenos Aires.

“We did a bit of homework, We were expecting to play them so we’re a few days ahead on it,” he said.

“Huge respect to the Jaguares, the way they’ve played all season.

“They’ve travelled well and they’re going to bring a band of supporters who love to party.

“We’ve still got to make sure we get our week right.”

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Julio Langworth 19 minutes ago
'Individuals are stepping up': Vern Cotter on Beauden Barrett's influence

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NB 1 hour ago
How 'misunderstood' Rassie Erasmus is rolling back the clock

Oh you mean this https://www.rugbypass.com/news/the-raw-data-that-proves-super-rugby-pacific-is-currently-a-cut-above/ . We know you like it because it finds a way to claim that SRP is the highest standard of club/provinicial comp in the world! So there is an agenda.


“Data analysts ask us to produce reports from tables with millions of records, with live dashboards that constantly get updated. So unless there's a really good reason to use a median instead of a mean, we'll go with the mean.”


That’s from the mouth of a guy who uses data analysis every day. Median is a useful tool, but much less wieldy than Mean for big datasets.


Your suppositions about French forwards are completely wrong. The lightest member of any pack is typically the #7. Top 14 clubs all play without dedicated open-sides, they play hybrids instead. Thus Francois Cros in the national side is 110 kilos, Boudenhent at #6 is 112 kilos, and Alldritt is 115 k’s at #8. They are all similar in build.


The topic of all sizes and shapes is not for the 75’s and the 140’s to get representation, it is that 90 to 110 range where everyone should probably be for the best rugby.

This is where we disagree and where you are clouded by your preference for the SR model. I like the fact that rugby can include 140k and 75k guys in the same team, and that’s what France and SA are doing.


It’s inclusive and democratic, not authoritarian and bureaucratic like your notion of narrowing the weight range between 90-110k’s.

110 Go to comments
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