Rugby: Canterbury are provincial rugby professionals

Ryan Crotty
Ryan Crotty
Given it's finals weekend in the ITM Cup it's only fitting that Canterbury are playing.

Tonight will mark the sixth consecutive occasion they've appeared in provincial rugby's biggest game when they meet Wellington at Westpac Stadium.

Canterbury are the five-time defending champions and that run at the top began in 2008 when they edged Wellington 7-6 in the final in terrible conditions at the Cake Tin.

And while Canterbury have mastered the art of winning national provincial championship titles during the past decade, Wellington have specialised in finishing second.

They've been defeated six times in the showpiece game since they last won it all in 2000 and curiously that victory 13 years ago came against Canterbury with a 34-29 triumph in Christchurch.

Both sides come in to tonight's contest as the best teams in the competition, which should make for an entertaining spectacle.

They've already got together once at Westpac Stadium this year, when Wellington squeezed past Canterbury 25-19 in week six.

Canterbury midfielder Ryan Crotty said the side had moved on from that loss.

"We were nowhere near as good as we could have been that night, which was probably the frustrating thing and Wellington were quite good," Crotty said.

"They won some key moments and they definitely deserved the win then. But it was halfway through the comp, we are at the back end of it now and we've had a lot of development and got a lot better within our game since then so that's probably the exciting thing."

Canterbury bulldozed their way to the final with a 56-26 win over Auckland in Christchurch last weekend as they appear to be coming good at the right time.

Crotty, who will look to add to his sole All Blacks cap on this season's end of year tour, has been involved in every provincial title for the past five years after he made his Canterbury debut in 2008.

Canterbury always start with a strong squad on paper but you still have to translate that to success on the pitch.

"Being a part of all of them is pretty special," Crotty, 25, said. "I guess it's just that confidence and self-belief and belief in our game plan, the team and within each other."

For all of Canterbury's success in recent seasons, Wellington have been the form team of this year's ITM Cup.

They've been largely unchallenged during their campaign and won nine of their 10 regular season games - the only blip on the radar was a 35-24 loss against Hawkes Bay in the final match of the round-robin - and the Lions have looked pretty good in the process.

Wellington base their play around a dominant forward pack, namely loose trio Brad Shields, Ardie Savea and Victor Vito, while their backs have enjoyed consistency of selection with Lima Sopoaga directing traffic from pivot.

Sopoaga's influence will be crucial tonight and as Lions coach Chris Boyd pointed out after their 41-10 semifinal victory over Counties Manukau in Wellington last weekend, the Highlanders first-five is starting to get the hang of the wind patterns within Westpac Stadium.

Many players have long wondered about the breeze at the Cake Tin, as it swirls at ground level, while there are certain pockets of space which blow stronger than others.

Some nights it seems like there's no consistency to the gusts but Sopoaga will likely have a greater handle on it than Canterbury first-five Tyler Bleyendaal.

It might just prove the difference.


Wellington: Charlie Ngatai, Matt Proctor, Tim Bateman, Shaun Treeby, Alaptai Leiua, Lima Sopoaga, Frae Wilson, Victor Vito (captain), Ardie Savea, Brad Shields, Api Naikatini, Mark Reddish, Jeffery Toomaga-Allen, Motu Matu'u, John Schwalger. Reserves: Reggie Goodes, Eric Sione, Kaipati Gaualofa, Faifili Levave, Adam Hill, Tomasi Palu, Joe Hill.

Canterbury: Tom Taylor, Patrick Osborne, Adam Whitelock, Ryan Crotty, Johnny McNicholl, Tyler Bleyendaal, Andy Ellis, Nasi Manu, George Whitelock (captain), Luke Whitelock, Luke Katene, Joel Everson, Nepo Laulala, Ben Funnell, Joe Moody. Reserves: Marcel Cummings-Toone, Paea Fa'anunu, Dominic Bird, Jordan Taufua, Willi Heinz, Rob Thompson, Colin Slade.


 

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