Sat, Apr 13, 2024 7:46 PM
Jack Malcolm
Blenheim Coverage via Pete Jones.
Kahurangi has bounced back from a first-up loss with a strong 36-18 win over Waimea Old Boys.
At Sports Park Motueka, Kahurangi didn’t take long to get on the board as they scored two tries in quick succession to take the early lead after a WOB penalty.
While WOB fought back to be within one point with a try to Flynn Bainbridge and another penalty, a costly mistake at the back saw Kahurangi score on the stroke of halftime to take an eight-point lead into oranges.
With WOB letting a seemingly nothing sort of kick bounce and bobble inside their 22, a hospital pass and a slip saw Brodie Robinson glide through to score.
A halftime message of keeping the momentum in their corner for Kahurangi saw them extend their lead in the second half with some pieces of individual brilliance.
Brodie Robinson would score his second as he was floated a great pass out onto the wing off the back of a chip and chase that put WOB on the back foot.
WOB were able to respond by capitalizing on a mistake by Kahurangi at the back, but it came after a penalty had extended the deficit and without enough time on the board to mount a comeback.
Kahurangi would then score again with another chip and chase which put Stewart Cruden in space to sprint away for their fifth try of the game.
Kahurangi captain Josh Te Hira says the message at the break was as much about momentum as it was about making the little moments count.
“All it takes is one play.
“It was a big step up from last week, but the boys really pulled through.”
Josh was proud of how his forward pack stood up to the challenge today, with their early scrum under all sorts of pressure.
“Being from a small local town, the crowd really does get behind us.
“it’s such a good fan base who come week in and week out to support us.”
Waimea Old Boys captain Codey Grimes says he felt like they were in it through the first 40 minutes.
“Mistakes cost us pretty badly. We just couldn’t score when we had the opportunity and left those moments out there.”
But he was also proud of his team, saying it was one of those games where the scoreboard didn’t show the full picture.
From a team that struggled to get numbers at training last year, he says the coaches are now struggling to pick a team with a wealth of talent.
“Last year we were sort of battling to field a backline consistently. . . now there’s competition [for spots] at training.”
It has been some time since both Marlborough teams in the Tasman Trophy competition tasted victory on the same day, but that is exactly what happened today.
Central hosted Marist at Lansdowne Park, in a 2023 grand final replay, and repeated the dose, coming away with a 15-14 victory, while Moutere underlined their potential this season with an equally-tight 8-5 win over Nelson at Awarua Park.
The Magpies have shown their potential in patches this year and, while being far from their best today, illustrated they have the resolve and firepower to get across the finish line.
After a best-forgotten scoreless first half, where both sides spurned a myriad of scoring opportunities through poor option-taking and an inability to handle the slippery ball for long periods, the second 40 minutes was more cohesive.
Moutere scored first, after 55 minutes, hooker Monu Moli at the back of a relentless driving maul which covered 15m to the Nelson tryline. His try was unconverted.
Despite the home side looking more potent in the latter stages Nelson found a way back into the game on the back of a couple of penalties, their reliable centre Nick Foxley crashing over out wide.
The conversion was also missed and, with five minutes to play, the game was well and truly on.
Fortunately for the home support, it was the visitors who blinked first, their inability to exit their danger zone being punished with a penalty handy to the posts, which Moutere replacement Corey Bovey duly converted.
The home side’s scrum was dominant, with hooker Johnny Vakaloa and prop JP Koen to the fore. Moana Pasifika lock Mike Curry, hard-running loosie Sekope Lopeti-Moli, Jack Burdon and Monu Moli carried hard and did their core jobs efficiently, while the halfback pairing of Bray Taumoefolau and Ben Finau combined well. Out wider Clyde Paewai and Senetenari Ponesi always looked dangerous.
Nelson’s best were hooker Blake Craddock, loosie Kwaid Ah Hoi and first five Matt Soper, plus elusive fullback Fletcher Hewitt-Smart.
Meanwhile, at rugby headquarters, Central relied on a huge first half defensive effort to grind their way to victory over Marist.
The Blues were forced to dig deep for much of the first spell as Marist laid siege to their line, their resilience forcing Marist to settle for two penalty goals which made for a 6-0 halftime scoreline.
A third penalty pushed the visitors ahead 9-0 before Central began their comeback.
Midway through the half, lock Jack Powell found himself on the end of a long pass out wide and carried three defenders across the line to haul the Blues back into the match.
That try was unconverted but the Blues repeated the dose soon after, a Quentin MacDonald try from a rolling lineout drive, and subsequent conversion from fullback Cam Hansford, pushing them into a 12-9 lead.
However, Marist were not done, reclaiming the lead with a try out wide, which went unconverted.
With four minutes to play Central established field position and held possession long enough to earn a penalty 30m out which Hansford converted to eke out the win.
Player/coach MacDonald said the Blues’ first half defence “typified our effort”.
“We were quite happy at halftime having held them out for so long. The guys really stood up on defence.”
He mentioned the efforts of lightweight loosie Jack Kelly, hard-working lock Matt McCormick, halfback Ethan Jones and midfielder Ben Filipo.
This match was the side’s first defence of the coveted John Goodman Challenge Shield, which will go on the line at every home game, a “big motivation” for the team, according to Quentin.