Super Rugby Final | Crusaders makes it a decade of triumph!
Article by: Sport24
Christchurch – Richie Mo’unga kicked the Crusaders to a record 10th Super Rugby title, and their third in a row, with a 19-3 victory that left the Jaguares in tears in Christchurch on Saturday.
In a match complicated by a slippery ball, the Crusaders scored the only try through Codie Taylor and Mo’unga landed four penalties and a conversion for the defending champions as they beat the Argentines.
To chants of “three-peat” from the capacity home crowd of 18 000, they extended their run to three back-to-back titles, remain unbeaten in their last 31 games on home soil and have won all 24 of their home playoff games since the competition’s inception in 1996.
“Thank God for that,” coach Scott Robertson said after the final whistle.
“It was a massive relief, and it was a party tonight even though the rugby was pretty uneventful in a rugby sense in terms of points, on defence it was tough, it was a grind but everyone climbed into it and knew that a bit of history was going to be made.”
In a clash of Test-match proportions, with most of the players either All Blacks or Pumas, the Jaguares put up a gallant showing but could not break the Crusaders defence and their forwards melted as the game wore on.
But their stubborn early resistance and the playing conditions, meant the Crusaders could not make any headway until they abandoned their free-flowing game plan.
“It was actually quite slippery out there so we actually found we were better without the ball than with it,” captain Sam Whitelock said.
“So we kicked those contestable kicks a bit more and tried to put their skills under pressure and at times it worked for us.”
It was a tactic that also made Crusaders flank Matt Todd and the Jaguares’ Pablo Matera the two central figures in the game as they fought for possession.
The Jaguares have been the surprise of the season, winning their last seven games to make the grand final in only their fourth year in the competition.
They believed they could go all the way, and were unhappy even though they lost to the most successful side in the history of the competition.
“No one likes losing so of course there’s a bit of frustration,” coach Gonzalo Quesada said.
“Everyone must imagine that the guys should be proud and just happy to be here but the dressing room is very sad and terrible. They guys are in tears.”
The Jaguares produced a rock-solid defensive effort to withstand a powerful opening attack by the Crusaders over the first 10 minutes.
A subtle break by Matais Moroni then put the Jaguares on attack where Joaquin Diaz Bonilla opened the scoring with a 40-metre penalty.
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