BRUMBIES HORSE-WHIPPED BY HURRICANES
SUPER 12 rugby HURRICANES v BRUMBIES
A CAPACITY crowd was stirred to a passionate standing ovation of roaring adulation by 40 minutes of pure rugby magic Friday night when the Hurricanes played fabulous football to fashion a 20 point halftime lead that was the foundation for an emphatic 34-19 victory over the form ACT Brumbies.
Desperate for a victory to maintain their
semi-finals campaign the hometown Hurricanes ensured
WestpacTrust Stadium rocked with screaming local support by
starting the game with confidence and pace.
Flowing
with the momentum sparked by last week's win over the
champion Crusaders the Hurricanes surged onto attack from
the opening whistle. Seemingly stunned by the early
onslaught the Brumbies were sucked into a Jonah Lomu dummy
run that allowed Brad Fleming the room to get outside his
man and put Christian Cullen away on a blistering run to
line for the game's first try. YES "Cully'' is back on the
full revs - no doubt about it.
Eager to reply with
points the Brumbies steamed back onto attack but frustrated
by relentess defence they lost the ball which was quicky
spun wide to the quick-thinking Paul Steinmetz, who inside
his own 22 and with a three on two situation chip kicks - to
the groans from a crowd seeing the overlap. But the inside
centres instinct proved right as the human locomotive Lomu
sped onto the bounce to charge 60 metres for a spectacular
five pointer.
Another 10 minutes was then spent
digging deep by the 'Canes' who through sheer desperation
repulsed wave after wave of Brumbie attack to hold them
scoreless to close the half leading 20-0 courtesy of two
additional penalties to flyhalf David Holwel.
Spurred
on by a delirious crowd the Hurricanes maintained the edge
in the opening salvo of the second half and were rewarded
when Holwel darted over for superb try in the 14th minutes.
The talented No 10's added conversion sent the score to 27-0
and even with 30 minutes remaining it appeared unlikley the
Brumbies challege would fail.
The Aussies did respond
with a Mark Batholomeuz try but minutes later the Hurricanes
replyed in epic style when Lomu stampeded upfield through
the hapless tackles of six Brumbies before popping the
perfect pass for Jason Spice to run onto and over for one of
the best tries of 2001.
With a bonus point earned the
Hurricanes may have relaxed and the determined Brumbies
revealed character to score two late tries that saw them
retain dignity in suffering a 34-19 defeat.
In analysing such a complete performance against world-class opponents it is diffucult to select individuals from a total squad effort. However while the highlights packages will reveal the magnificence of Lomu, Cullen and Tana Umaga; the ever-imroving rare talent of Fleming and the emergence of Steinmetz as genuine midfielder of international class it is false to assume these outsides were the reason for Friday's success.
As the Brumbies will agree the Hurricanes
victory was built on the hard work of a dominant pack that
was based on a rugged front five who overpowered their
opponents and allowed the loose trio - containing certain
All Black and man-of-the-match Jerry Collins - to
flourish.
This loose trio of the outstanding Collins;
human battering ram Filo Tiatia; and the extremely exciting
Brent Thompson ( who pulled off a blinder after being bagged
for not having the pace to compete with Brumbies breakaway
George Smith) paved the way for such a convincing win by
securing turnovers, linking with the outsides and defending
with crashing authority.