LIONS MUNCH LAMBS
NPC Rugby Final, Jade Stadium, CHCH, Saturday, OCtober 21,
2000
Wellington Lions v Canterbury Lambs
Article:
Mathew Loh
WELLINGTON celebrated a famous victory
tonight when the Lions won their first NPC in 14-years with
a stunning 34-29 victory over Ranfurly Shield holders
Canterbury.
In a sensational 4 tries to two victory,
Wellington demonstrated their class and earned a deserved
championship trophy with firstly, an awesome display of
attacking rugby to secure a commanding lead. And secondly, a
ruthless defensive effort to survive a surging Canterbury
comeback before rightfully emerging as New Zealand's No 1
provincial rugby team.
Led on to a seething Jade
Stadium by their inspirational leader, Norm Hewitt,
Wellington started the game on fire and thanks to the
pin-point kicking of first five eighth David Holwell were
soon leading 3-0.
This lead was extended inside the
first ten minutes when Jason O'Halloran nudged a superb
grubber, which bounced up for Jonah Lomu, who had outpaced
his opposite Marikia Vunibaka, to score in the corner. The
added Holwell conversion and minutes later a second penalty
saw Wellington hold a 13-0 lead inside the first
quarter.
Typical Wellington indiscipline was, however,
soon taken advantage of by a recovering Canterbury XV and
with Ben Blair his usual accurate self the Lions' lead was
soon shortened to 13-6.
But, despite poor discipline,
Wellington remained confident and continued to attack at
every opportunity and this exciting play paid dividends when
Christian Cullen nabbed a loose ball and shot across field
at full pace, drawing a bevy of Red and Black tacklers,
before off-loading a perfect inside-ball for barnstorming
second-rower Inoke Afeaki to charge onto and over the line
for a crucial Lions try.
A wonderful 50 metre plus
penalty by Canterbury kingpin Andrew Mehrtens and another
goal to Blair saw Wellington lead 20-12 at the break and the
fans looked forward to another 40 minutes of exhillarating
running rugby.
Blair's accurate kicking again featured
early in the second half and Canterbury edged closer to
trail 20-15.
However, perhaps, sensing it was now or
never the Wellington XV seemed to explode into form and a
blistering 80 metre move was finished off in style under the
posts by an exultant O'Halloran to give the Lions an
impressive 27-15 lead.
With Jade Stadium rocking to
the chants of desperate Cantabrians, Wellington refused to
sit on their laurels, after engineering O'Halloran's epic
score, and in a fitting - and in hindsight matchwinning -
moment the biggest Lion of all, Lomu, stampeded downfield,
tossing Vunibaka aside, on route to his second
try.
Holwell's conversion took Wellington to a 34-15
lead with 17 minutes of play remaining, but, the Lions knew
they were in for rugged final quarter as the Ranfurly shield
holders with Todd Blackadder in the pack are one team that
never says die for one second of a full 80 minutes of
rugby.
And so the inevitable Canterbury comeback began
and as cream rises to the top so do quality rugby players
and it was no suprise to see Mehrtens orchestrating his
team's fight for glory.
Indeed, it was the All Black
pivot himself who darted over for the first Canterbury try
and then it was all on, when, with less then 10 minutes
remaining the Red and Black's most famous son the All Black
captain Blackadder, was driven over for a try which with the
conversion saw the game go to the wire with Wellington
leading 34-29.
Championships are built of character
and with the minutes ticking down; reduced to 14 men with
the sin-binning of the manic but certainly All Black-class
lock Dion Waller; and holding out a world-beating Canterbury
hammering their line; Wellington were forced to dig to the
depths of their character reserves and by doing so and
emerging victorious the Lions 2000 deserve every accolade as
they go down in legend as the first NPC winner of the 21st
century.
While credit is due the entire Lions squad and management, special mention has to go to the leadership and inspiration of the often forlorn Norm Hewitt who battled the highly rated Canterbury front-row to a standstill and ended the season holding the NPC trophy aloft.
Alongside
Hewitt there were many heroes and while it is repetitive the
loose-trio of Jerry Collins, Kupu Vanisi and Rodney So'oialo
is, on-form, New Zealand's best and if not the provider of
three immediate All Blacks it must certainly be the well on
which New Zealand draws it's future loose-forward
talent.
Waller and Inoke Afeaki also stepped up and
were never bettered by their All Black rivals, Blackadder
and Norm Maxwell. The front rowers of Hewitt, who deputised
with ruthless effectiveness at loosehead for two scrums,
Kevin Yates, Morne Van der Merwe and at times Mike Edwards
and Shane Carter all performed above expectations and
provided the foundation for the Lions win.
In the
backs Cullen and Lomu were devastating; Holwell, Spice and
O'Halloran all equalled or even bettered their All Black
opposites while Tana Umaga again highlighted his obvious
quality as the best rugby player in New
Zealand.