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Dramatic finish sees Force keep alive playoff qualification hopes

(Photo by James Worsfold/Getty Images)

The Western Force have kept their Super Rugby Pacific finals hopes alive with a dramatic 27-22 home win over the Hurricanes. A 74th-minute try to centre Byron Ralston and the successful conversion proved decisive after the Force trailed 22-20.

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Saturday night’s win elevated the Force to eighth, but they will lose that spot even if the ninth-placed Highlanders fall to Melbourne but pick up a bonus point in Sunday’s away clash with the Rebels. It was the Force’s first home win of the season.

The eighth-placed qualifying team – either the Force or Highlanders – will play away to the ladder-leading Blues in Auckland in next week’s sudden-death quarter-finals. Needing a final-round win to keep their season going, the Force trailed by eleven points just before half-time.

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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

But they showed enormous heart against the finals-bound Hurricanes, who scored 17 straight first-half points. The Hurricanes scored four tries to three, with their impressive full-back Josh Moorby crossing for two first-half five-pointers.

It was a rousing final Force game in Perth for coach Tim Sampson – who is being replaced by Simon Cron – and retiring players Richard Kahui, Jeremy Thrush and Greg Holmes. Centre Kahui was forced off the field with a head knock in the fifth minute and didn’t return while fellow former All Black and lock Thrush was sin-binned early in the game for a cynical act.

Captain and half-back Ian Prior kicked two penalties in his 100th game for the Force to give the home side an early 6-0 lead. Moorby showed great footwork to evade four tackles for his first try and backed up well to score a second before No8 Brayden Iose showed tremendous pace to run almost 40 metres to round off a sweeping crossfield move.

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Down 17-6, the Force got back into the game just before halftime when Argentinian prop Santiago Medrano crashed his way over and Prior’s conversion reduced the deficit to four points at the break. The Hurricanes were a man short within a minute of the second half starting, with winger Salesi Rayasi sin-binned for an intentional knock-on.

The Force twice opted for lineouts rather than shots at goal in the following five minutes and the tactic paid off the second time, with hooker Andrew Ready crashing over from a rolling maul. Prior’s conversion gave the Force a 20-17 lead but a lovely cut-out pass from Moorby set up Rayasi for a try that put the Hurricanes two points up just before the hour.

They had another try scrubbed out for a knock-on, but the Force held on and came back to produce the decisive score.

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J
JW 12 hours ago
The Fergus Burke test and rugby's free market

I can guarantee that none of the three would have got a chance with Ireland in the state they arrived from NZ.

Why would you think they would?

Two of them were at Leinster and were bench-warmers when they arrived

Sometimes you can be beyond stupid JW.

Haha look who's talking! Hello? Can you just read what you wrote about Leinster to yourself again please lol

It took prob four seasons to get James Lowe's defence up to the required standard to play international footy. If Jacob Stockdale had not experienced a big slump in form he might not have gotten the chance at all.

I'm really not sure why you're making this point. Do you think Ireland are a better team than the All Blacks, where those players would have been straight in? This is like ground hog day the movie with you. Can you not remember much of the discussions, having so many readers/commentors? Yup, 26/7/8 would have been the perfect age for them to have been capped by NZ as well.


Actually, they would obviously have been capped given an opportunity earlier (where they were ineligible to for Ireland).


TTT, who was behind JGP at the Hurricanes, got three AB caps after a couple of further seasons acting as a backup SR player, once JGP left of course. In case you didn't see yourself contradicting your own comments above, JGP was just another player who became first choice for Ireland while 2nd (or even 3rd/outside the 23 in recent cases) for Leinster. And fair enough, no one is suggesting JGP would have surpassed TJP in three or four years either. He would have been an All Black though, and unlike in your Leinster example, similar performances from him would have seen TJP move on earlier to make way for him. Not limited him like he was in Ireland. That's just the advantage of the way they can only afford so many. Hell, one hit wonders like Seta Tamanivalu and Malakai Fekitoa got rocketed into the jersey at the time.


So not just him. Aki and Lowe both would have had opportunities, as you must know has been pointed out by now. It's true that the adversity of having to move to Ireland added a nice bit of mongrel to their game though, along with their typical development.


Aki looked comfortable as the main 12 in his first two seasons, he was fortunate SBW went back to league for a season you could say, but as a similar specialist he ultimate had to give the spot back again on his return. There's certainly no doubt he would have returned and flourished with coachs like Rennie, Wayne Smith, and Andrew Strawbridge, even Tom Coventry. All fair for him to take up an immediate contract instead of wait a year of course though.


It's just whatever the point of your comments are meant to make, your idea that these players wouldn't have achieved high honors in NZ is simply very shortsighted and simplistic. I can only think you are making incorrect conclusions about this topic because of this mistake. As a fan, Aki was looking to be the Nonu replacement for me, but instead the country had the likes of Laumape trying to fill those boots with him available. Ditto with Lowe once Rieko moved to center.

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