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| Gaijin v Crusaders |
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| Written by Blake Walker | |
| Thursday, 05 October 2006 | |
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A
stronger lineup took the field for the Gaijin than in the last game and
the team showed promise in the opening stanza with some solid defense
and early turnover ball. An early knock-on from the Crusaders gave the
Gaijin an attacking opportunity, albeit quite a distance out. The game
was punctuated by strong tackling and intense encounters at the
breakdown. It was proving to be the typical type of hard rugby that
two teams of Western influence would deliver. Neither side was
budging, but the Crusaders looked as if they did have momentum at the
breakdown and were beginning to take an extra yard or two at the
tackle. This was to prove to be the catalyst for what Not to be outdone the Crusaders followed soon after with a try in the corner. They had strung numerous phases together and were stretching the Gaijin on the flanks with some long sweeping passes. Good to watch but very tiring for both sets of forwards on the paddock. With the try converted the Crusaders had their first lead of the game, and would not relinquish it. 7 v 3 to the Crusaders. Although the TGRFC were performing admirably there was nothing special happening. Promising phases were being snuffed out by silly errors, most likely a sign of the confrontation upfront as much as the sapping conditions. At a stage late in the first half there was potential for embarrassment. A stray kick bounced short of the sideline and bounced back infield. With the TGRFC thinking the ball had gone out, the wing for the Crusaders sped up the sideline only for Captain Nimmo to beat him narrowly in a footrace and dot down for a dropout. It was eventually called out by the referee, but a moment of not playing to the whistle almost cost the TGRFC. The second try of the half was due to some slack cover defence. With an opportunity to stop the movement in the corner some lazy tackling left Crusaders standing in the tackle?and they scored and converted the try to stretch the lead out to 14 - 3 at the break. There was a very upset English team psychologist on the sideline ( Steve Bull) who decided to call the man out who he believed was the culprit. Not surprisingly for Steve, the culprit was Shaunne Hughes. A player Steve has always stood in the highest regard. Fortunately we were able to drown out Bully`s tirade with an icy cool Kirin. The most memorable moment of the first half was the run made up the field by the new man on the wing, Tucker McEwen, formerly a running back in American football. With some open field to play with from a stray kick he raced up field shrugging off several tacklers. With only 1 man to beat he chose the spinning corkscrew move to try and drill the oppositions upper torso. In hindsight the wrong decision as the ball was lost in the ensuing phase. 10 points for effort. When we can teach him the finer subtleties of the game he could be a devastating player, much like the former raging menace on the wing, Todd ‘the body’ Collins.
With
halftime came a rest for the boys and a chance to rehydrate and
regroup. It was not a time to panic as the team was playing reasonably
well. Just hold on to the ball and make some more of the possession we
were getting and with a bit of luck we would start putting some points
on the board. The second half was very much a topsy-turvey kind of
half. Neither team looked to ever take control of the game even though
both teams had opportunities. For quite a while in the second half the Gaijin were camped in the oppositions` half with the forwards, led by big Rob Reinebach, pounding away. They also blitzed the the Crusaders scrum a few times but just didn`t seem to have the punch in the back-line to score a try. After a string of penalties, which the Crusaders seemed happy to give away to stop the Gaijin from scoring, a try seemed to be on the cards. The famous ‘double pod’ move, invented by ex-Kiwi-captain Joe Fisher was called for only about 15 metres out from the Crusaders line. Jesse Takahashi took the first hit-up and things looked menacing with Reinebach lined up to take the next charge. Unfortunately, new boy David Huffman who has only seen the move once, got in halfback Alistair Nimmo`s way, picked up the ball, ran blind and was belted. The Crusaders picked up the loose ball and took off downfield. The ball was kicked ahead but luckily it was willed into touch 5 meters out from the Gaijin line. Another promising chance that came to nothing.
That`s what kind of day it was. Man Of the Match: Rob Reinebach TEAM 1. Rob Poulton (England) 2. Dave Orwig (USA) 3. Takayuki Kitajima (Japan) 4. Jesse Takahashi (USA) 5. Sean O`Donoghue (Ireland) 6. Paulo de Berriozabal (Basque) 7. Dave Kelver (USA) 8. Rob Reinebach (USA) 9. Alistair Nimmo (England) 10. Shaunne Hughes (Australia) 11. So Nagashima (Japan) 12. Niall Conlon (England) 13. Yoichi Ohira (Japan) 14. Tucker McEwen (USA) 15. Jonathon Dean (Canada) Reserves: Toru Kanamori (Japan), David Huffman (Canada), Chris Lucas (Australia), Mauro Sauco (Argentina), Mike Parks (England), Dana Post (USA), Jo Iwasaki (Japan), Tomohiro Nakayama (Japan) |
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| Last Updated ( Thursday, 02 November 2006 ) |
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