Troubled Beauden Barrett stars for Hurricanes in Blues win

16 April 2017 - 02:00 By Reuters
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Beauden Barrett of the Hurricanes celebrates with team mates after scoring a try.
Beauden Barrett of the Hurricanes celebrates with team mates after scoring a try.
Image: MARTIN HUNTER / AFP

Lock Mark Abbott scored his second try of the match with seven minutes left to give the Wellington Hurricanes a 28-24 victory over the Auckland Blues in a scrappy, error-ridden game at Eden Park yesterday.

Abbott, inside-centre Ngani Laumape and flyhalf Beauden Barrett crossed in the first half for the visitors while fullback Jordie Barrett slotted four conversions.

Scrumhalf Augustine Pulu, winger Melani Nanai and lock Scott Scrafton all scored tries for the home side with Piers Francis adding two conversions while replacement flyhalf Bryn Gatland added a penalty and conversion.

The Hurricanes, who had been sublime in the first half against the New South Wales Waratahs last week, looked muddled yesterday, had their potent running game shut down and lived off the Blues’ errors.

While Hurricanes coach Chris Boyd might be pleased with the win, he will be concerned around his flyhalf’s disciplinary record after Barrett received a first-half yellow card for a deliberate knockdown while on defence.

The 25-year-old was sent off last week against the Waratahs after he received two yellow cards for the same offence.

A disciplinary hearing earlier this week decided not to impose any other sanction, though they may take a more dim outlook should he appear before them again.

Barrett, however, had demonstrated how important he was to the Hurricanes attack, setting up first-half tries for Abbott and Laumape, with his pace getting him behind the Blues defence.

He then crossed for his own try when Sonny Bill Williams dropped the ball in midfield and the flyhalf pounced to run 45m untouched.

While Pulu and Nanai finished off two of the Blues’ try-scoring chances in the first half, the home side blew several more opportunities that could have put them well in control of the match.

The wastefulness of both sides continued in the second half with the only points for the first 25 minutes a penalty to debutant Gatland, the son of British and Irish Lions coach Warren.

Scrafton then barrelled over to give the Blues a 24-22 lead with 15 minutes remaining before Barrett again exploited some space behind the line to launch another counterattack that sparked 16 phases of play and ended with Abbott crossing in the corner.

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