Crusaders beat 14-man Lions for 8th Super title

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Crusaders beat 14-man Lions for 8th Super title
Canterbury Crusaders were brilliant on the field as they won their first Super Rugby title since 2008.

Johannesburg - The match at Ellis Park stadium took a decisive turn just before half-time when Lions flanker Kwagga Smith was red-carded for tackling airborne Crusaders full-back David Havili

By AFP

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Published: Sat 5 Aug 2017, 10:18 PM

Last updated: Sun 6 Aug 2017, 12:21 AM

Canterbury Crusaders survived a rally by 14-man Golden Lions to triumph 25-17 in Johannesburg on Saturday and win a record-extending eighth Super Rugby title.
The match at Ellis Park stadium took a decisive turn just before half-time when Lions flanker Kwagga Smith was red-carded for tackling airborne Crusaders full-back David Havili.
An already dominant visiting team took full advantage of having an extra man as they stretched a 12-point half-time lead to 25-3 before the home side rallied with two late tries.
"You were not in a realistic position to contest for the ball," South African referee Jaco Peyper told Smith before sending him off.
A debatable yellow card by Peyper against 2016 Player of the Year Beauden Barrett had helped the Lions defeat another Kiwi side, Wellington Hurricanes, in the semi-finals.
Victory for a clinical, disciplined and defensively brilliant Crusaders outfit brought a first Super Rugby title since 2008.
It was a second successive final loss for the Lions, who fell by 17 points to the Wellington Hurricanes in New Zealand last year.
Defeat robbed Lions coach Johan Ackermann of a fairytale farewell as it was his last match in charge before taking over English Premiership club Gloucester.
Crusaders broke the deadlock after eight minutes with a turnover offering winger Seta Tamanivalu a chance to dart unopposed from his half and score.
Fly-half Richie Mo'unga converted and the Christchurch outfit were seven points ahead as they sought to avoid losing a third final since their 2008 triumph. Lions seemed rattled by the setback and fell further behind on 12 minutes when good work by centre Ryan Crotty and hooker Codie Taylor set up centre Jack Goodhue to score.
Mo'unga saw his second conversion drift across the posts and wide and Havili was also off target with a long-range penalty attempt.
Lions finally got points on the scoreboard after 27 minutes as leading 2017 Super Rugby scorer and fly-half Elton Jantjies slotted a penalty. The South Africans had another, easier penalty opportunity soon after, but opted to kick for touch in the hope of scoring a pushover try. But the gamble backfired thanks to a Crusaders turnover and then the match took a decisive turn in favour of the New Zealanders when Smith was red-carded.
Almost immediately a seven-man Lions scrum was pushed back, penalised, and Mo'unga kicked a penalty for a 12-point half-time advantage.
The last thing the depleted South Africans needed early in the second half was to concede another try, but that is what happened.


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