The Canterbury Crusaders showed they remain a force to be reckoned with as they began life without Robbie Deans and Dan Carter by beating the Waikato Chiefs 19-13 yesterday.
Despite the closeness of the score, the Crusaders were never behind in their opening Super 14 match and there was a familiar pattern to their play.
The standard bearers of New Zealand rugby soaked up the best a fired up Chiefs could throw at them in the second half and then came back to put the result beyond doubt with a try in the 80th minute.
The Chiefs, with a reputation for being slow starters and under achievers, have nevertheless been the Crusaders’ bogey team in recent years, winning their last two matches.
And after turning 5-14 down at halftime and narrowing the gap to 13-14 with 20 minutes remaining, they had reason to feel they could make it three in a row.
But when the pressure was on, the Crusaders came up with a try to answer questions about how the most successful team in Super 14 rugby would fare with All Blacks fly-half Carter unavailable and coach Deans now in Australia.
Casey Laulala was the standout performer for the Crusaders, with the former All Blacks center scoring the first and last tries of the match and generally making life difficult for incumbent All Black Richard Kahui.
The Chiefs threatened at the base of the pack, where Liam Messam, Tanerau Latimer and Sione Lauaki proved a formidable trio and half-back Brendon Leonard was a constant danger with probing runs around the side of the ruck.
In the clash of the fly-halves, a focus of New Zealand rugby this year with Carter injured, rising Crusaders pivot Colin Slade held an edge over All Black Stephen Donald, although both suffered with their tactical kicking.
Donald was fortuitously rewarded for one wayward clearing kick that looked to be a gift for the Crusaders until it bounced backwards and sideways into the arms of Lelia Masaga, who ran 50m to put Richard Kahui over in the corner.
Slade was also rewarded with a delicate chip kick to put Laulala in for the first of his tries. Tim Bateman scored for the Crusaders from an 80m solo run and Slade added two conversions.
Kahui and Leila Masaga scored for the Chiefs, with Donald landing one penalty.
■WARATAHS V HURRICANES
AFP, WELLINGTON
The New South Wales Waratahs overcame a serious territory deficit by producing a rock-solid defense to pull off a bonus-point 26-22 win over the Wellington Hurricanes in their Super 14 clash yesterday.
Although only in the Hurricanes’ half for less than 20 minutes of the match, last year’s beaten finalists made the most of their limited chances.
Their first three attacking raids all produced tries and within half an hour they were up 19-0.
They then produced their bonus-point fourth try at a crucial stage of the game, with 10 minutes remaining and the Hurricanes closing fast.
Sam Norton-Knight opened the scoring during the Waratah’s first foray inside the Hurricanes 22, running off a break by outstanding center Rob Horne.
Lote Tuqiri came off his wing to take an inside pass for the second try and then Lachlan Turner latched on to a misdirected chip kick from Ma’a Nonu to run 90m for the third try.
Two conversions by Kurley Beale and the visitors were up 19-0 before the Hurricanes were able to justify their huge territorial advantage with a try by fly-half Dan Kirkpatrick.
Kirkpatrick, who missed two early penalties and the conversion, found the posts with a penalty and converted Dane Coles second-half try as the Hurricanes closed the gap to 15-19 with 15 minutes remaining.
But if the Hurricanes thought they could pull off a come-from-behind win they were mistaken, as the Waratahs made a rare charge upfield and a kick pass from Beale put Horne over in the corner for a try that Beale converted.
The Hurricanes replied immediately with their third try, wide out to Hosea Gear, but they were unable to breach the Waratahs’ defense again.
■LIONS V CHEETAHS
AFP, JOHANNESBURG, SOUTH AFRICA
The Golden Lions, who finished last season at the bottom of the Super 14 table, began the new one at the top after a 34-28 win over the Central Cheetahs Friday in an all-South Africa thriller.
A seesaw struggle at Ellis Park saw the Lions surrender a 14-point lead during the second half, only to snatch victory through late drop goals by replacement back Andre Pretorius and fly-half Earl Rose.
Ill discipline cost the Bloemfontein-based Cheetahs dearly, with the Lions scoring two tries while flanker Heinrich Brussow was in the sin bin and another after center Meyer Bosman received a yellow card. The Cheetahs also squandered chances when three points adrift during a fiery finish, opting for a scrum from a free-kick and failing to secure possession, infringing when pressing the Lions and losing a line-out on their throw.
Injury-plagued right wing Ashwin Willemse, back in South Africa after a spell with French club Biarritz, scored two tries for the Lions and captain and flanker Cobus Grobbelaar and left wing Henno Mentz also crossed the line. Rose converted the four tries and the tally was completed by the two drop goals that secured success for the Lions, a feat they achieved just twice last season in 13 outings.
No. 8 Frans Viljoen, Brussow and center Jacques-Louis Potgieter touched down for the Cheetahs, who finished one position above the Lions last season.
Taiwanese world No. 1 women’s doubles star Hsieh Su-wei on Saturday overcame a first-set loss to win her opening match at the Madrid Open. Top seeds Hsieh and partner Elise Mertens of Belgium, with whom she last month won her fourth Indian Wells women’s doubles title, bounced back from a rocky first set to beat Asia Muhammad of the US and Aldila Sutjiadi of Indonesia 2-6, 6-4, 10-2. Hsieh and Mertens were next to face Heather Watson of the UK and Xu Yifan of China in the round of 16. Thirty-eight-year-old Hsieh last month reclaimed her world No. 1 spot after her Indian
EYES ON THE PRIZE: Armed with three solid men’s singles shuttlers and doubles Olympic champions, Taiwan aim to make their first Thomas Cup semi-final, Chou Tien-chen said Taiwanese badminton star Tai Tzu-ying yesterday quickly dispatched Malaysia’s Goh Jin Wei in straight sets, while her male counterpart Chou Tien-chen beat Germany’s Kai Schaefer, as Taiwan’s women’s and men’s teams won their Group B opening rounds of the TotalEnergies BWF Thomas and Uber Cup Finals in Chengdu, China. World No. 5 Tai beat Goh 21-19, 22-20 in a speedy 33 minutes, her fourth straight victory over the world No. 24 shuttler since they first faced each other in the quarter-finals of the 2018 Malaysia Open, where Tai went on to win the women’s singles title. Malaysia followed up Tai’s opening victory
Chen Yi-tung (陳奕通) secured a historic Olympic berth on Sunday by winning the senior men’s foil event at the 2024 Asia Oceania Zonal Olympic Fencing Qualifiers in United Arab Emirates. Chen defeated Samuel Elijah of Singapore 15-4 in the final in Dubai to secure the only wild card in the event, making him the first male Olympian fencer from Taiwan in 36 years and only the sixth Taiwanese fencer to ever qualify for the quadrennial event. The last appearance by a Taiwanese male fencer at the Olympics was in 1988, when Wang San-tsai (王三財) and Cheng Ming-hsiang (鄭明祥) competed in Seoul. The
Rafael Nadal on Tuesday lost in straight sets to 31st-ranked Jiri Lehecka in the fourth round at the Madrid Open, while Taiwan’s Hsieh Su-wei advanced to the semi-finals in the women’s doubles. Nadal said that he was feeling good about his progress following his latest injury layoff. Nadal called it a “positive week” in every way and said his body held up well. “I was able to play four matches, a couple of tough matches,” Nadal said. “So very positive, winning three matches, playing four matches at the high level of tennis. I enjoyed a lot playing at home. I leave here with