Above: Greg Mullany dives in to score one of Poneke's four tries against Marist St Pat's, to help put them in the Jubilee Cup starting next week.
Poneke, Tawa and the Upper Hutt Rams have clinched the final three spots that were up for grabs at the start of the day for the 2016 Jubilee Cup in a pulsating 13th and final round of Swindale Shield matches around Wellington today.
Four teams started the day still in the chase for three places available for the ‘top 8’ championship round starting next weekend, and Northern United were the team that dipped out by finishing ninth.
The teams inside the Jubilee Cup tent in order of finishing are winners Old Boys University, Oriental-Rongotai, Wellington, Marist St Pat’s, Wainuiomata, Tawa, the Upper Hutt Rams and Poneke.
Norths, Hutt Old Boys Marist, Petone, Avalon, Paremata-Plimmerton and Johnsonville are the six Swindale Shield clubs contesting this year’s Premier 2 Hardham Cup competition.
These Hardham Cup clubs will be joined by first round Harper Lock Shield winners the Marist St Pat’s second XV and the Old Boys University seconds who sealed second place in the Premier Reserve competition.
In a dramatic conclusion to the Swindale Shield, Tawa made sure of their Jubilee Cup place with a 26-13 win over Norths on the latter’s Old Timers’ Day at Porirua Park. Tawa were fast out of the blocks and struck early with two tries en route to a 26-3 halftime lead. Norths came back into the game in the second 40 minutes but the damage was done and they retained the Sammy Saili Trophy.
Norths supporters were thus left sweating on the outcomes of two games elsewhere – and neither went their way.
At Evans Bay Park, Poneke came out on the wrong side of a tight battle for the Horan-Millar Trophy and the Bill Brien Challenge Cup to lose 22-23 to Marist St Pat’s.
However Poneke earned two bonus points, either of which proved enough for them – if they had lost and not earned a bonus point then Poneke and Norths would’ve finished equal and Norths would’ve gone through in their place on the basis of beating them earlier in the round-robin.
The other match was at the Petone Recreation Ground, where the Upper Hutt Rams came back to beat Petone in the final few minutes to decide their own fate and also knock Norths out that way.
There was joy at the conclusion of that match for the Rams, who were trailing the young Villagers side 22-26 heading into the shadows of fulltime after Petone’s Losi Filipo had scored to put them in front for possibly the final time.
But the competition’s leading points scorer, second five-eighth Joyner Key, was involved in a kick ahead and race to the line for a Rams try that put them 27-26.
The Rams then sealed the win with their young wing Salesi Rayasi sprinting 90 metres to give them a 34-26 win, passage into the Jubilee Cup and possession of the interclub Ted Connolly Cup for another year.
Meanwhile, lost in the radio static and twitter hum-drum was that Old Boys University were presented with the Swindale Shield at the conclusion of their match at Helston Park against Johnsonville.
The OBU Goats had already won the Swindale Shield last week, but they sealed it with a 64-5 win over Johnsonville. They now have possession of both major pieces of Wellington club rugby silverware and will now turn to their defence of the Jubilee Cup.
For OBU, centre Wes Goosen crossed for two of their nine tries. Johnsonville’s sole try was scored by Hurricanes prop Chris Eves, playing No. 8.
Oriental-Rongotai sealed second in the Swindale Shield with a 67-12 win over 13th placed Paremata-Plimmerton at Ngatitoa Domain. Tuga Mativa scored a hat-trick and Aukuso Tuitama and Ken Aperira both scored braces.
The Wellington Axemen finished third, beating Wainuiomata 33-26 for the Bill Jones Cup at William Jones Park. With Hurricane Vaea Fifita at lock, the Axemen wrestled control of this contest late in the piece. Paddy Hughes for Wellington and Tau Mamea for Wainuiomata each scored two tries. Hughes finished the first round with 13 tries to his name – the leading try-scorer.
Hutt Old Boys Marist finished off their first round campaign in 10th place with a 47-20 win over 12th placed finishers Avalon at the Hutt Recreation Ground for the Billy Herbert Memorial Trophy.
In a close game between the Hutt Valley neighbours, Avalon held a 15-11 lead after halftime, but the Eagles swooped in the second 40 minutes. Hooker and captain James O’Reilly and utility back Blake McGregor both score two tries.
Marist St Pat’s were presented with the Harper Lock Shield today after their 45-12 win over Poneke in the final round.
The OBU Goats accounted for Johnsonville’s second side 62-5 to grab the second promoted place to the Hardham Cup.
Petone actually finished second, after beating the Upper Hutt Rams 44-24 today, but can’t advance as their top team will be filling the clubs’ place at the Hardham Cup.
In other last round Harper Lock Shield results today, Paremata-Plimmerton beat Ories 50-43 and HOBM beat Avalon 69-28 in two high scoring clashes and Wainuiomata defeated Wellington 38-20 and Norths came back in the second half to defeat Tawa 22-13.
The opening night of the second round Women’ championship saw wins to co first round champions Northern United, Wainuiomata, Marist St Pat’s and Hutt Old Boys Marist.
The 10-team competition has now been split into the A division contesting the Victoria Tavern Trophy and the B division playing for Senior Women’s honours.
Norths defeated Avalon 77-3, with the Collins sisters scoring seven of their 13 tries. Second five-eighth Helen nabbed five tries, while flyhalf Brenda scored two. Norths led 5-0 after20 minutes and then 27-3 at halftime, before pulling clear after the interval.
In the other Victoria Tavern fixture, Wainuiomata earned a four tries to three victory over Old Boys University. Wainuiomata broke a 7-7 deadlock with a try on halftime, turning around with a 14-7 lead and keeping their noses in front until the end to win 28-17. Ories had the first round division A bye.
In the Senior Women’s section, MSP cleaned out the Upper Hutt Rams 73 and HOBM defeated Poneke 34-14. Johnsonville-Tawa had the first round bye.
The second round Colts division A John E Kelly Memorial Trophy kicked off with two matches on Friday night.
Ories defeated HOBM Green 11-3 in one game under lights, while Tawa beat Norths 39-14 in the other.
In Saturday’s fixtures, first round winners Old Boys University beat first round Division 2 winners and promoted Johnsonville 50-12, Poneke tipped over first round runners-up MSP 15-12 and the Upper Hutt Rams overcame the Wellington Squires 38-19.
In week one second round First Grade Johnsonville Centennium Cup results received, there were bonus point wins for first round winners OBU, the Petone Brotherhood and the Avalon Wolves
OBU beat Poneke 31-12, the Brotherhood beat Tawa 41-10 and the Wolves overcame the Saxons 39-24.
The Tawa Titans edged out the Kapiti side 22-19 in the first round of Paul Potiki Memorial Shield 85kg games.
The Avalon Wolves beat the OBU Bunnies 21-20, while Eastbourne and the Upper Hutt Rams drew 20-20. Johnsonville beat the Poneke Cavs 40-7 in the other game. First round winners Wellington had the bye.
In Division 2, the Wests Roosters plucked the OBU Spartans 67-7, MSP Green beat Petone 3-5 and MSP Red beat Wellington B 33-0. All three were bonus point winners. Stokes Valley defeated HOBM 13-12 in the other match.
There were three WelTec Premiership fixtures contested today, with Scots College, Bishop Viard and Rongotai all registering second round wins today.
Scots College took down St Pat’s Silverstream 21-20 in the match of the day, while Rongotai pipped Wairarapa College 22-20 in Masterton and Bishop Viard defeated St Bernard’s College 31-22 in Lower Hutt.
The competition resumes this coming Wednesday when St Pat’s Silverstream hosts Wellington in the opening salvoes of the third round.
SCOTS WIN IT AT THE DEATH (match report):
(By Albert Fairbrother)
Scots College 21 (Malo Manuao, Tommy Prescott tries; Malo Manuao 3 pens, 1 con) St Patrick's College, Silverstream 20 (Lucas Dutton 2, Jarrod Harawira tries; Kienan Higgins 1 con, 1 pen) HT: 3-13.
Scots College have prevailed in a tight, bruising contest on Silverstream's Number 1 field. The boot of winger Malo Manuao, silencing the home crowd in the dying moments.
Scots started the game on the front foot with good ball retention and physical hit-ups. Manuao kicked a penalty from 32m out to make it 3-0.
Silverstream scored the opening try when Manuao had the ball stripped off him by flanker Richard Douglas. Douglas passed to Jarrod Harawira who crossed in the corner.
Silverstream struck again through speedster Lucas Dutton. He weaved past the Scots defence down the right touch line to score after good build up play in the Scots 22.
Mistakes started creeping into Scots game, but fluency wasn't Silverstream's strong-point either and they only went to halftime with a 13-3 lead.
In a game full of big moments one of the biggest turning-points of momentum happened early in the second-half . Silverstream's captain Harawira lost consciousness after a sickening head clash and had to leave the field. Scots applied the pressure and flanker Tommy Prescott scored a try to make it 13-8. Shortly after Manuao kicked a penalty to make it 13-11.
Silverstream centre Albert Polu has shown an ability to break defences regularly this season. He powered into Scots 22 and won Stream a penalty. Stream tapped and Lucas Dutton finished off a slick backline move to take the score to 20-11.
Scots struck back when Manuao once again found a gap in Stream's tiring defence to dart through and score under the posts. He quickly converted to bring it back to 20-18.
Stream suddenly started to rush things, a vast difference from the rest of the game where they dictated the flow and the scoreboard. Mistakes piled up and Scots took the lead for the first time when they charged into the Silverstream half and Manuao made it four success from five attempts.
Stream regained the kick-off and started to build phases with their last chance of the game. They were rewarded a penalty advantage 10m, right in front. They took this advantage and halfback Callum McLachlan passed the ball to second-five Kienan Higgins who set up for the drop-goal, but pushed it to the right of the uprights. The Silverstream faithful rejoiced loudly at the thought of an easy penalty kick after time. However Higgins cruelly missed and Scots won a thriller.
Standouts for Silverstream included Year 11 Iona Apineru who ran with purpose and determination. Higgins who created numerous opportunities and Dutton who finished with precision.
Scots had many standouts, but none more so than No8 Jack Loader who was ruthless on attack and in defence. Manuao had a good day with the boot and on attack, particularly in the second half.