logo
Super Rugby playoffs set: Chiefs and Blues to face off again

Super Rugby playoffs set: Chiefs and Blues to face off again

Fox Sports2 days ago

Associated Press
WELLINGTON, New Zealand (AP) — The pieces of the playoffs puzzle in Super Rugby locked into place match by match during the last round of the regular season. The Hamilton-based Chiefs sealed first place and the defending champion Blues claimed sixth while Moana Pasifika's best-ever season ended in defeat.
The Chiefs and Blues will now meet next weekend in a repeat of last year's final.
Matches on Friday decided the top-three places which carry home advantage in next weekend's first playoff round, while Saturday's games sorted fourth to sixth place, setting up a series of competitive semifinals.
The second-placed Crusaders will meet the Queensland Reds in Christchurch on Friday; the Chiefs will host the Auckland-based Blues in a contest between neighboring teams Saturday and the ACT Brumbies will face the Wellington-based Hurricanes in Canberra. History shows home advantage is a key factor in Super Rugby playoffs.
The last-placed Highlanders gave the first-placed Chiefs an unexpectedly tough time Friday before losing 41-24.
The Chiefs scored three tries and rushed out to a 19-0 lead in better than even time. But a lengthy injury break around the 20th minute when Chiefs midfielder Quinn Tupaea suffered a head injury broke the Chiefs' momentum and the Highlanders scored two tries to cut the lead to five points at halftime.
The Highlanders trailed by 10 points with six minutes remaining and went close to scoring another try which would have made the final minutes tense. But lock Tupou Vaa'i scored his third try in the 80th minute to inflate the Chiefs' winning margin.
While the Highlanders finished last, the losing margin was less than seven points in eight of its 11 defeats. Crusaders leap Brumbies
The Crusaders scored a contentious late try to beat the Brumbies 33-31 in Canberra to take second place and consign the Brumbies to third.
The Brumbies have now qualified for the playoffs in eight of the last nine full Super Rugby tournaments. They last qualified in first place in 2004, a year they went on to win the title.
'It's been 21 years and every year we start the season and talk about top two as a goal,' coach Stephen Larkham said. 'So yeah, we've missed an opportunity there again.
'It makes it a little bit harder for us. We're going to need a little bit of luck to get a home semifinal but that's out of our control now.' Moana Pasifika falls short
The Hurricanes beat Moana Pasifika 64-12 to take fourth place. Moana Pasifika won six matches in a season for the first time, beating the Blues and Crusaders and finishing five points short of the playoffs.
The Moana Pasifika players and fans celebrated the end of their season with enthusiasm, led in song by captain Ardie Savea.
'You know, everyone doubted us, God believed in us,' Savea said. 'These boys came together and we brought people together.
'We're not satisfied. Our goal was to win the thing and make the top six but that wasn't meant to be.'
The Blues started the last round in seventh place and moved into the playoffs with a 46-6 win over the New South Wales Waratahs who also were in playoffs contention.
Their clash with the Chiefs next weekend repeats last year's final in which the Blues beat the Chiefs 41-10. This year, the Chiefs start as firm favorites.
The Reds beat the Fijian Drua 52-7 in the final match of the regular season and finished fifth. The Drua won four matches in the regular season but lacked the ability to win away from home.
___
AP rugby: https://apnews.com/hub/rugby
recommended

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

What the ECHO knows about Jarrad Branthwaite transfer interest as Everton braced for serious offers
What the ECHO knows about Jarrad Branthwaite transfer interest as Everton braced for serious offers

Yahoo

time38 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

What the ECHO knows about Jarrad Branthwaite transfer interest as Everton braced for serious offers

Everton are braced for another summer of interest in Jarrad Branthwaite. The centre-back remains on the radar of several Premier League clubs. The Blues rebuffed two bids for the 22-year-old from Manchester United last summer. Neither offer, with the second for a package worth around £50m, came close to meeting the club's valuation of a player who had enjoyed a stunning breakthrough year. Advertisement The potential for the Old Trafford club to return 12 months on has diminished after their failure to qualify for Champions League football but interest from Tottenham Hotspur, whose Europa League final success over Man Utd secured a place in Europe's premier competition, is understood to be serious. Chelsea are also believed to be considering a move for Branthwaite, though it is Spurs whose interest is felt to be stronger at this early stage of the transfer window. READ MORE: Everton new transfers could face wait after key date passes READ MORE: Matt O'Riley Everton transfer move examined as David Moyes faces dilemma David Moyes is eager to keep hold of the England international , who became a key pillar of one of the top flight's most stringent defences after missing the opening weeks of last season through injury. Advertisement The Blues boss has set his sights on building the squad that will take Everton into their stunning new stadium around a defensive axis of goalkeeper Jordan Pickford and the centre back pairing of Branthwaite and James Tarkowski. That plan has already been dealt one setback, with 32-year-old Tarkowski requiring surgery on a hamstring injury that ruled him out of the final month of the season. The operation is understood to have gone well but there is concern the recovery period could eat into pre-season preparations. Branthwaite is under contract at Everton until the end of June 2027, having signed a new deal following his emergence into the first team in the opening months of the 2023/24 campaign. Everton, who signed him from Carlisle United in 2020, are in a strong position to rebuff speculative interest as a result. The player, meanwhile, is understood to be content on Merseyside and appreciative of the opportunities Everton have provided him - and can continue to offer him with the move to the Hill Dickinson Stadium. An offer of Champions League football could hold an appeal, but only if Everton are offered a deal the club deemed to be serious - something Man Utd failed to do last season . Advertisement Ahead of the World Cup in 12 months' time, England manager Thomas Tuchel is yet to select him since he took over the senior national squad and, of those chosen ahead of him so far, Levi Colwill and Dan Burn will be competing in the Champions League next season with Chelsea and Newcastle United respectively. Marc Guehi will also be playing in Europe after Crystal Palace won the FA Cup. Should a high-profile offer be turned down there would be an expectation of contract talks reflecting the club's value of him, given that his current deal was built around his status as a rising star within the Everton squad. Given Branthwaite was bought for just £1m, any sale would be significant from the perspective of Everton's position in relation to the league's Profit and Sustainability Regulations (PSR). The hangover of previous difficult years will still play a role in the club's PSR figures ahead of the June 30 deadline but, from the beginning of the new football financial year on July 1, Everton should have the freedom to be more ambitious in the transfer market. The club's financial outlook has been strengthened since last summer due to the stability provided by The Friedkin Group since their takeover was completed in December.

Everton handed Jarrad Branthwaite verdict as key transfer domino could fall
Everton handed Jarrad Branthwaite verdict as key transfer domino could fall

Yahoo

time39 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

Everton handed Jarrad Branthwaite verdict as key transfer domino could fall

Everton supporters knew it was coming. The Jarrad Branthwaite transfer rumour mill has sprung into life again. The England international enjoyed another fine campaign for the Blues and after being the subject of two bids from Manchester United last summer - both were rejected - there is set to be more interest in the centre-back in the coming weeks. Advertisement Tottenham Hotspur hold a serious interest in Branthwaite and could offer him Champions League football. David Moyes is said to be keen to keep hold of the defender this summer though, as the Blues begin a new era at Hill Dickinson Stadium. READ MORE: What the ECHO knows about Jarrad Branthwaite transfer interest as Everton braced for serious offers READ MORE: Matt O'Riley Everton transfer move examined as David Moyes faces dilemma With that in mind, is it imperative Everton keep hold of their star defender this summer? Our Blues writers have their say. Joe Thomas David Moyes already viewed Branthwaite as key to his summer plans before the injury to James Tarkowski. The hope with Tarkowski is that his recovery from the hamstring issue that curtailed his season is a successful one. But it could eat into pre-season and fears of long-term consequences of an injury that required surgery will linger until he is back playing, particularly for a player whose durability is essential to his game. Advertisement With that in mind, I'd be keener than ever to keep hold of Branthwaite. The emergence of Jake O'Brien does offer a degree of protection should an offer that is too good to turn down come in, but unless there are any PSR concerns that are not in public view, he is a superstar to build the Everton of the future around. I do think everyone has to be realistic. If a club offering Champions League football met Everton's valuation of him, then it may require everyone to be sensible. It would represent a lot of profit for the Blues and provide a real opportunity for the 22-year-old to stake a claim for the World Cup squad next year. He should be able to do that from Merseyside but Thomas Tuchel's unwillingness to select him so far has been notable. But unless and until someone meets the valuation the club have in mind - and they will have one - my hope is Everton and Branthwaite can move forward together. Should that be the case, I do think Everton would need to reward him with a new contract. The flip side of turning down £50m+, as they did last year, is they cannot then take it for granted that he is content with the salary of a player who signed a deal reflective of having just broken into the first team. Chris Beesley Is keeping hold of Jarrad Branthwaite essential to Everton's summer? Advertisement Well, no, but is Branthwaite staying the best outcome for player and Everton alike? I believe yes. Some 21 years ago, in his first stint as Blues boss, David Moyes lost his prize asset when Wayne Rooney defected to Manchester United. Over two decades on, it's still a sore point with many Evertonians as they reminded the lad who once sported the 'Once a Blue, always a Blue t-shirt,' when he returned for Goodison Park's final Premier League fixture. Rooney might now be in his 40th year and of course the Croxteth-born star became Goodison's Prodigal Son when he re-signed for a second playing stint in 2017/18, but while there's been enough water under the bridge to fill the Mersey since his controversial move to Old Trafford, his blue-blooded Scouse brethren may have forgiven but they haven't forgotten. For his part, Moyes went from finishing 17th with just 39 points to steering Everton to their highest-ever Premier League position of fourth the following season in the second of his nine top eight placings with the club between 2002-13. Advertisement It's understood that Moyes 2.0 would like to build his new-look team around the three linchpins at the back of Jordan Pickford, James Tarkowski and Branthwaite. But having already lost the club's aforementioned most-gifted home-grown hero when he was just 18, cashing in on Branthwaite would not be the end of the world, so long as The Friedkin Group were able to get a proper valuation for a potentially generational talent among centre-backs. As reported by the ECHO on Monday, Tottenham Hotspur are Branthwaite's latest potential suitors but their owner Daniel Levy, the shrewd businessman who is understood to have tried to renege on an agreed price for Richarlison when he thrashed out a deal with Bill Kenwright over the table at swanky Mayfair seafood restaurant Scott's, is not known for over-paying. So, that could be bad news for Blues chiefs as well as Branthwaite himself, as Spurs were an absolute basket case this season. Yes, they could offer 'The Carlisle Kaiser' Champions League football next term courtesy of their back door entry after defeating fellow under-achievers Manchester United in the worst European final in living memory in Bilbao – a game that resembled two bald men fighting over a comb – but he's already experienced that on loan with PSV and as Everton's 75-cap England number one Pickford has shown, that's not the be-all and end-all for top players. Let's also not forget that the Blues now find themselves at a unique and exciting time in their history. As Branthwaite himself declared when answering questions from young supporters in March ahead of Junior Fan Day when asked about his ambitions to wear the armband: 'To be captain one day would be something I'd be thrilled to do. Obviously, I'm still young at the moment and there are more-experienced players than me in the team. Advertisement 'I think to play at Bramley-Moore as well, you can see how good the stadium is. So, to play there for Everton would be something I look forward to do as well.' Matt Jones There aren't many clubs in world football to whom the transfer foodchain doesn't apply. Everton are not one. Typically, I wouldn't be completely averse to a sale should the Blues get a fair price for Branthwaite, as good as he's been for the club. Everton will sadly always lose their best players and selling at the right time - and reinvesting - will be key to their progression. However, this summer might be one to dig their heels in over Branthwaite. Just because of the amount of change going on at the club already. Advertisement Moyes and the club's new-look recruitment team will have a huge job filling the gaps that are currently in the squad. Finding a replacement for Branthwaite would add another enormous task to an ever-growing list. An influx of cash would help Everton potentially fill a number of positions and give their PSR position a big boost given Branthwaite only arrived for £1 million. Plus, the player himself would no doubt be attracted by the potential of Champions League football. But a major restructuring of the team feels exciting when Everton have their strong defence to rely upon, of which Branthwaite was a significant part. Without him, the summer rebuild job would feel a lot more rife with jeopardy given the plethora of moving parts already in motion.

Dallas Wings Get Bad News on Monday
Dallas Wings Get Bad News on Monday

Yahoo

time2 hours ago

  • Yahoo

Dallas Wings Get Bad News on Monday

Dallas Wings Get Bad News on Monday originally appeared on Athlon Sports. The Dallas Wings will take the court without their rookie point guard Paige Bueckers on Tuesday night against the Seattle Storm after she was ruled out under the WNBA's concussion protocol on Monday. Advertisement Bueckers, the No. 1 overall pick in the 2025 WNBA Draft, sustained the injury late in Thursday's 97-92 loss to the Chicago Sky, and Dallas-based reporter Grant Afseth announced on X that she would miss at least Tuesday's game. This latest setback comes as the Wings continue to search for their identity early in the season, sitting at 1-6 after back-to-back losses to Chicago, tied for last place in the league standings. Despite the lofty expectations surrounding Bueckers entering her rookie campaign, the Wings have struggled to gain traction. In 2024, Dallas finished with a 9-31 record, ranking fifth in the WNBA's Western Conference under head coach Latricia Trammell. Advertisement Entering 2025, Dallas hoped to improve upon that record by blending veteran scorers like Arike Ogunbowale (22.2 points per game last season) and emerging talent in NaLyssa Smith, Maddy Siegrist, DiJonai Carrington and Bueckers. However, the season has not gone as planned. Dallas Wings guards Paige Bueckers (5) and DiJonai Carrington (21).David Butler II-Imagn Images After opening the year with four straight defeats, the Wings finally notched a win against the Connecticut Sun on May 27 with a 109-87 victory featuring 21 points, seven assists and five rebounds from Bueckers. Unfortunately, they followed that up with consecutive losses to the Sky. Through her first six games, Bueckers was averaging 14.7 points, 6.7 assists and 4.7 rebounds per contest, while leading the team in assists, steals (2.0) and blocks (1.0). Advertisement Related: Lexie Hull's Mother Sends Indiana Fever Message After Third Straight Loss Related: Angel Reese Sends Message After Announcement on Friday This story was originally reported by Athlon Sports on Jun 3, 2025, where it first appeared.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store