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Home teams hold the aces in Super Rugby

The Brumbies. (Photo by Cameron Spencer/Getty Images)

All roads are expected to lead through Christchurch to claim the Super Rugby crown, although the Brumbies have the small matter of a Buenos Aires long haul to negotiate first.

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The competition quarter-finals didn’t offer a single surprise result as the top four qualifiers notched wins on home soil, with the Brumbies the most emphatic via a 38-13 drubbing of the Sharks.

The other three games were at least more competitive before the annual finals travelling hex kicked in.

The Crusaders powered away from the Highlanders (38-14), the Jaguares ground past the Chiefs (21-16) and the Hurricanes held out the fast-finishing Bulls (35-28) to end South African involvement.

Those who opine Super Rugby has become too predictable will say the Crusaders have got a third-straight title in the bag, given their phenomenal record and the home advantage that comes with qualifying first.

A Hurricanes semi-final win would be the first by any team in Christchurch since they achieved the feat themselves three years ago.

Furthermore, no team has ever won a play-off game on Crusaders’ home soil.

There have been 22 such games and only three times have the opposition come within single figures.

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Hurricanes coach John Plumtree said such records are made to be broken, although bringing down an empire will take something special.

They were outmanoeuvred 30-12 in the equivalent game last year before the Crusaders went on to clinch a ninth title.

Then-coach Chris Boyd declared the red and black machine at that stage was on a different level to every team.

“We’ve been down there a lot this time of year and come away with nothing, so we need to really dig deep next week,” Plumtree told reporters.

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“I don’t think they’ve lost down there for the last 26, 27 times. That’s pretty amazing.

“The pressure will be on them and we can just go down there and have a real crack.”

The Brumbies will take irrepressible form and a seven-match winning streak to Argentina.

The Jaguares have won 10 of their past 11 but are in unknown territory, having booked a last-four berth for the first time.

However, the maturity shown by the Pumas-laden team against the Chiefs was textbook play-off rugby, defending steadfastly and preying on mistakes.

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Flankly 1 hour ago
'Absolute madness': Clive Woodward rips into Borthwick in wake of NZ loss

Borthwick is supposed to be the archetypical conservative coach, the guy that might not deliver a sparkling, high-risk attacking style, but whose teams execute the basics flawlessly. And that's OK, because it can be really hard to beat teams that are rock solid and consistent in the rugby equivalent of "blocking and tackling".


But this is why the performance against NZ is hard to defend. You can forgive a conservative, back-to-basics team for failing to score tons of tries, because teams like that make up for it with reliability in the simple things. They can defend well, apply territorial pressure, win the set piece battles, and take their scoring chances with metronomic goal kicking, maul tries and pick-and-go goal line attacks.


The reason why the English rugby administrators should be on high alert is not that the English team looked unable to score tries, but that they were repeatedly unable to close out a game by executing basic, coachable skills. Regardless of how they got to the point of being in control of their destiny, they did get to that point. All that was needed was to be world class at things that require more training than talent. But that training was apparently missing, and the finger has to point at the coach.


Borthwick has been in the job for nearly two years, a period that includes two 6N programs and an RWC campaign. So where are the solid foundations that he has been building?

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