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The ‘rogue’ reason that’s contributed to the NPC’s success in 2024

Isaac Hutchinson of Canterbury celebrates with Braydon Ennor after scoring a try during the round nine Bunnings Warehouse NPC match between Canterbury and Waikato at Apollo Projects Stadium, on October 05, 2024, in Christchurch, New Zealand. (Photo by Joe Allison/Getty Images)

Commentator Grant Nisbett has credited “rogue” results as one reason behind the National Provincial Championship’s success in 2024. Fans and pundits alike have sung the NPC’s praises during a memorable season of provincial rugby in New Zealand.

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On Saturday afternoon, Bay of Plenty will host Canterbury in the first of two semi-finals to determine who qualifies for the big dance on October 26. Then, Wellington will take on Waikato in the nation’s capital to determine the other side that will battle for glory.

Bay of Plenty are two wins away from history. The Steamers haven’t won the NPC since the inaugural campaign 48 years ago, but on the back of a famous Battle of the Bays in the quarter-finals, they’ll be full of belief heading into another crunch clash.

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But, all four teams are chasing their own slice of history, and they’ll have to do it the hard way. If this season has shown fans anything, it’s that the competition is somewhat unpredictable – there are no easy games, so any result this weekend is truly possible.

Second seed and Ranfurly Shield holders Taranaki were knocked out of the finals last time out in a shock loss to Waikato, and third seed Tasman lost on Sunday in a 62-14 demolition by Canterbury. Anything can happen, and that’s made the NPC so great this season.

“I’ve really enjoyed it actually,” Nisbett said on SENZ’s Afternoons with Staffy.

“I’ve been to some terrific games. Just about every weekend there’s been a total rogue result and I think we saw one yesterday. Whoever who’ve thought that Canterbury would put 60 on Tasman?

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“You never quite know these days when you go along to an NPC game who’s going to win it and that’s good, I’ve enjoyed that. Even the teams that didn’t show up in terms of wins towards the end of the season, played some very, very good rugby.

“I don’t think there were any dud teams in the competition this year.

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“There’s nothing worse than going along to a game and you sort of already know who’s going to win, it’s really just a question by how much,” he added.

“I also think the standard of rugby has been good… sometimes you might think that the defence is a little bit optional given some of the sores but I’d prefer that to a 6-3 game, that’s for sure.”

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Canterbury have a “new lease on life” after their stunningly emphatic win over the Mako at Blenheim’s Lansdowne Park. While they were boosted by the return of some All Blacks, who are now unavailable for the semi-finals, it was by no means a fluke.

It was the type of performance that mirrored Canterbury’s traditional dominance in the competition. They’ve tasted championship glory on 14 occasions, and no one should write them off as they go hunting for what would be the province’s 15th men’s title.

But, Bay of Plenty showed last weekend that they’ll give it everything in order to deliver a title back to Tauranga. Replacement Taine Kolose was the hero last time out as they edged Hawke’s Bay 19-17, and that’s given them plenty to build off moving forward.

Minor premiers Wellington have been a tad inconsistent this season, but they’ll still go into Saturday’s clash with Waikato at Sky Stadium as the favourites. They’ve lost some All Blacks too, though, including Peter Lakai who was called into the national squad on Wednesday.

“I don’t think there’s a lot between these four teams, to be perfectly honest,” Nisbett explained.

Match Summary

0
Penalty Goals
1
2
Tries
9
2
Conversions
7
0
Drop Goals
0
101
Carries
191
5
Line Breaks
13
17
Turnovers Lost
11
5
Turnovers Won
6

“Firstly, of course, you’ve got Canterbury who’ve got a new lease on life. They lose a couple of their All Blacks, of course, but they’ll be full of confidence heading up to Bay of Plenty.

“I’ve really enjoyed the way Bay of Plenty have played this season. They don’t always have the star players but boy, they play with a lot of passion… that game could go either way.

“The game after that, of course, Waikato, who really came from nowhere, not many people have been talking about Waikato all season and suddenly they find themselves in the semi-finals with a big chance of upsetting Wellington who have been a little bit inconsistent.

“… (Wellington are) kind of all over the shop. They don’t have too much consistency… I think both away teams have got a shot at it.”

Watch the highly acclaimed five-part documentary Chasing the Sun 2, chronicling the journey of the Springboks as they strive to successfully defend the Rugby World Cup, free on RugbyPass TV (*unavailable in Africa)

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3 Comments
A
Andrew Nichols 31 days ago

"You never quite know these days when you go along to an NPC game who’s going to win it and that’s good, I’ve enjoyed that. Even the teams that didn’t show up in terms of wins towards the end of the season, played some very, very good rugby.


“I don’t think there were any dud teams in the competition this year.:


So Mr Robinson...it's the NPC that is not fit for purpose?

G
GP 31 days ago

Nice to see an article that is actually positive about Canterbury's resurgence. It is who is there at the end that counts.Tom Christie and captain Billy Harmon are playing inspirational rugby as is Dallas McLeod in the backs. Isaac Hutchinson has been sublime in his first season with Canterbury. Scored a hat trick of tries against Waikato and was superb in the Quarter Final win over the Makos.This team is up for it big time.

J
JWH 31 days ago

Yep excited for the Crusaders next season after seeing how good Christie has been so far.

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Hellhound 30 minutes ago
The 'one difference' between Boks and the back-to-back All Blacks

You are wrong thinking SA don't have the players to replace the current golden generation. There is too many talent currently knocking. Look at the Bulls front row and their bomb squad alone who destroyed every team in the URC last year and this year. A full strength Leinster team or more correctly, the Irish front row was destroyed by them.


Without Runa Nortje, the Boks line out struggles, and there is exceptional locks in SA still very young. The back row with Elrigh Louw and Cameron Hanekom and some others from the other teams, very young and already world class.


The backline with players like SFM, AF, CM etc etc etc. I can name 2 young teams that can push for top honours easily. SA rugby is in excellent and very rude health. As a NZ you don't follow the URC not the Currie Cup as closely as the SA public.


The current schools rugby have some monster players too, but the speed and skills of the youngsters in the country is absolutely outstanding and what the current Boks have built, will be surpassed by them. Talent coming through, excluding school stars, is enough for another 20 years minimum.


What other country have that waiting in the wings? Waiting for the current generation to retire and thinking other teams will run over the Boks once they are gone is just wishful thinking.


Why do you think Rassie is giving so much young players opportunities? By the next WC, most of these youngsters will already have 30 - 40 Test caps. They will have faced the current best players over the world already. Experienced despite a tender young age. Saying the current players on the fringes is not up to snuff is just wrong.


The Boks beat the teams in the RC with experimental teams. Young and old. Lost 1 against the Argies by 1 point and what a game that was. Experimental squads, not the strongest squads.


The amount of injured Bok players alone could make a team. The Boks have 49 players Test games this year. Nope, you are definitely not knowing what you are talking about when it comes to the standards of SA rugby, just as little as others knows NZ rugby young talent.

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