Rugby: Highlanders a different team now - Cowan

Jimmy Cowan. Photo by Getty
Jimmy Cowan. Photo by Getty
Jimmy Cowan is going back to his roots - back to Dunedin to face the team he played more than 100 times for, a team he freely admits is much better now.

Cowan, on the reserves bench for the Blues against the Highlanders under the roof tomorrow, played 108 times for southerners between 2003 and 2012, a lean period in terms of success.

The Highlanders' glory days were between 1998 and 2002 when they lost three semifinals and a final. They've encountered a few rough patches since - the worst of which was probably in 2013, the year after Cowan left for his two-year stint at Gloucester, when Jamie Joseph's men finished 14th of 15 teams and won only three games all year.

They're on the rise again now, though. The Highlanders finished sixth last year after losing a qualifier match to the Sharks and last week they reaffirmed their title aspirations when beating the Crusaders in Christchurch. They have already beaten the Chiefs in Hamilton, a feat few teams achieve these days.

"It will be a challenge because of the way they are playing," Cowan said of the Highlanders, currently sitting in fifth place overall compared with the Blues' 13th. "It was a bit different when I was there. They're playing a winning brand of rugby but when I was there they aren't quite where they are at the moment.

"You have to give them credit, they're playing very well. They put the Crusaders away last week, and they beat the Chiefs away. They're one of the form teams of the competition and we realise what's ahead.

"We're looking forward to it, it's a great place to play and I've had a season under the roof there in Dunedin. I think our boys will enjoy the roof and the dry ball."

Halfback Aaron Smith emerged as a force in Cowan's final year at the Highlanders, forcing the now 33-year-old on to the bench. It's a position Cowan finds himself in on his return, with John Kirwan preferring Jamison Gibson-Park as a starting No9 recently - although Cowan was unavailable for last weekend's victory over the Brumbies due to the birth of his second daughter.

All Blacks Aaron Smith, namesake Ben Smith and Malakai Fekitoa have ensured the Highlanders are capable of striking when teams least expect it, as Cowan noted.

"We all know how they play, they're a very passionate bunch and if you look at last week's game they're taking every opportunity. They have threats right across the park, a backline that's playing very well. Aaron is leading them well at scrumhalf and you've got Lima [Sopoaga] steering the ship well too."

By Patrick McKendry of NZME. News Service


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