| Tokyo Cup 2nd Div Final: The New Musashino |
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| Monday, 16 June 2008 07:23 | |||
Out came the Gaijin for a big must win final against a team we had beaten over the past few seasons, the last time being 2004. Musashino clearly were a better side and we expected as much with the pre-match reconn raising the fact that they had 1) not scored less than 36 points in any game in the Tokyo Cup (even during the mud bog semi final), 2) had been winning due to a solid platform by their forwards and 3) they had two classy looking wingers with pace to burn. The Gaijin came into the match after blowing their Round 1 assignment against Fuji who succumbed to Musashino in the Semi 36-0. We had come good since then and racked up some 50+ scores to reach the playoff stage and had won our Semi-Final in the mud 7-0 by playing much of the game within our half and on our try line. As a team we certainly felt we had the character and talent to win against anyone and we were in for a tough match.
The game started well for the Gaijin as our forwards dominated loose play. Errors were coming from Musashino's backline who looked rattled. Their forwards also were clearly emotional and fired up, letting loose with some wild tackles that were penalized promptly by the referee who it must be said looked short of finals-level experience. The Gaijin battled hard through Garrett Washington on open side, Joe Fisher at loose head and Chris Fearon at Hooker, all carrying the ball up well. Joffa Harris worked hard but as the first half wore on it was clear his injured knee was affecting his play. In the backs, Jo Iwasaki was solid at outside center but Apisai Bati was having a handful as it became clear he was being targeted defensively. Some nice kicking from Adam Shockley, playing his first match at first-five in place of the injured Matthew Downer, also had us moving in the direction we wanted early on.
Scrums at the early stage of the match were fairly even but it did not take long before the tight five from Musashino started to show their goods and it was clear they were a tight crew who trained well. Lineouts also started to became a challenge for the Gaijin as the first half wore on; with few of our own throws being taken and only a rare overthrow coming our way on defense. However it was the Gaijin who struck first and they did so through the fast wheels of Ken Kondo out on the left wing. After 15 minutes we were well placed with a ruck on the 10-meter line when the ball was whipped out and passed through the line to Jo Iwasaki who stood in a tackle to offload to Yoichi Ohira coming into the line from fullback. Yoichi also stood strong in his tackle and allowed the overlap for Ken Kondo to run on to, though he still had to beat the covering fullback and it was to a loud chorus of applause from a record number of Gaijin supporters that he dived over in the far corner. It was a fine try and one well required after a long spell in Musashino territory. The TGRFC were up 5-0.
It did not take long for the opposition to come back. Repeated offences at the breakdown from Gaijin forwards who could not fathom the referee's interpretation of the laws led to penalty after penalty and the Gaijin could not find their rhythm. Musashino were let back into the match and scored an easy try from a scrum feed from 30 meters out in a perfectly executed back line move: skip pass to the outside center running on to the ball at pace and getting around his tackler to set up his winger in the corner. They converted and - when considering the increasing problems at set piece time - the game had turned. 5-7 to Musashino.
The second half required a more disciplined effort when dealing with the referee who was happy to blow his whistle at anything to keep control of the game. In all he blew up 35 penalties; 19 of them against the Gaijin. It was becoming clear that the Gaijin were making strong inroads through their ball carrying and quick recycling from the ruck and that was how they got in to score their third try to regain the lead. In the build up, Chris Fearon switched from hooker to half back in the lineout and took the ball off the top, charged out behind the shortened lineout and smashed his way through a number of would be tacklers. From half way the Gaijin surged forward with Joe Fisher taking the ball up strongly and Mark "Kevin" Armstrong making huge ground with his ferocious style of running. Garrett Washington also worked hard, while Murray Clarke, Dave Kelver and Sean O'Donoghue supported them to recycle the ball. After several lost chances from the set piece the Gaijin finally worked their way back into the opposition half and Joe Fisher again crashed up with his crew in support. Clarke picked up a loose ball and had a sniff at the line, but it was Fisher who picked and went back infield off the side of the ruck to crash through two tacklers and get a grain of chalk on the ball. It was enough for the referee and the Gaijin were back in the lead, looking dominant. 17-14.
The Gaijin had all of 30 seconds from the restart and that was the game. Heartbreaking as it was, it was a fantastic game to be part of and for the lead to change as it did it was an exciting, tense match for those on the sidelines. The Gaijin would end this season as Second Division Runners Up.
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| Last Updated ( Wednesday, 18 June 2008 02:31 ) |