Tom Donnelly. Photo by Peter McIntosh.
Tom Donnelly bristled at suggestions the Highlanders are
already locked on a familiar Super 14 rugby path of woe as the
competition's nearly men hope history repeats itself in
Bloemfontein on Sunday (NZT).
By allowing the Crusaders to clear out in the final quarter
in Christchurch and then surrendering a lead to the Blues at
Carisbrook, the Highlanders' inability to close out games
appeared to have resurfaced in the first two rounds.
Not that abrasive All Blacks lock Donnelly noticed a trend.
"It's only two games mate. It's a long season," he said as
the Highlanders prepared for the Cheetahs.
The Highlanders lost six of their nine games last year by
seven points or fewer and with just a bonus point to show for
their 15-19 loss to the Blues, their playoff aspirations
likely rest with this three-match trip to South Africa.
Donnelly said effecting a change in fortune was fairly
straightforward: "We just have to cut stupid mistakes out of
our game. We've played good for 50 minutes and then errors
have cost us".
The Highlanders, who also play the so far unbeaten Bulls and
Stormers on this tour, have won narrowly on their last two
visits to Bloemfontein. However, the Cheetahs, the wooden
spoon winners last year, look unlikely to retain that
unwanted crown this campaign.
They recovered from a 34-51 loss to the champion Bulls to
edge the Sharks 25-20 in Durban.
"They played awesome last week and they've got three of the
best loose forwards in the competition," said Donnelly of
Springboks Juan Smith and Heinrich Brussow, with Frans
Viljoen adding an attacking dimension off the back of the
scrum.
The Highlanders responded by selecting a mobile back row of
Adam Thomson, Alando Soakai and first-time starter John
Hardie, the 21-year-old Southlander rewarded after adding
impact from the bench.
Meanwhile, young first five-eighth Michael Hobbs is becoming
more accustomed to the playmaker role after starting on the
bench against the Crusaders.
Hobbs sparked a Highlanders resurgence in Christchurch with
two tries and crossed again in Carisbrook against the Blues -
who he toured South Africa with last year.
Yet for all his tryscoring exploits, Hobbs has been mixed
with the boot - a chip kick let the Crusaders off the hook
and at Carisbrook he missed a conversion and two penalties,
the point of difference in a low-scoring encounter.
"Goalkicking has been a huge work on," he said. "I need to
keep chipping away at it and have a positive frame of mind. I
was disappointed to miss a couple of easy kicks last week
that let the boys down."
New Zealand Rugby Union kicking coach Mick Byrne saw footage
of Hobbs' lapses last week and made a courtesy call from
Japan, where he is an assistant to head coach John Kirwan.
"He's given me some thing to focus on...getting my head and
chest in the right place and then kicking through the ball.
"I'm trying to keep my processes correct and keep faith in
them really and just back myself to knock the ball over."
Hobbs said he was happy with his progress since replacing an
injured Matt Berquist, but with the Hawke's Bay pivot now in
the reserves he needs a polished performance to retain the No
10 jersey.
"It was nice to make a good fist of it (against the
Crusaders), now I've got to kick on and try and get the boys
across the line."
Like Donnelly, he said the side were still buoyant despite
their winless start to the season.
"No one's getting too down on themselves but we understand
where we're at and that you can't let teams get away on you
early. This is an important match for us - we're a little bit
on edge."
Bookmark/Search this post with:
A name, residential address, and (preferably residential) telephone number is required from readers who comment on ODT Online. These details will not be visible to site visitors.