A showdown to savour in Super Rugby final – Kriel v Savea

Meeting Jaco Kriel in the flesh is surprising. Given his power, speed and physicality, you expect a larger person. Kriel is not as tall nor as bulky as he appears on the field. He’s 1.83m tall (6 foot) and weights 97kg, and no one who’s been on the receiving end of one of his bone-crunching tackles, or who’s had to take him on in a sprint will pour scorn on his vital statistics. If there were any doubts about his abilities, those would have been quashed in Saturday’s semi-final clash between the Lions and Highlanders as he put in a super-human effort – exhilarating in attack, fearsome in defense, inspirational in leadership. A showdown looms in the Super Rugby final between Kriel and All Black flanker Ardie Savea, younger brother of speedy winger Julian. Savea Jnr is a little taller than Kriel and a couple of kilograms heavier. He’s also very fast, having first made his mark in New Zealand rugby playing for the Sevens team. A battle royal is in the offing, as Sport24’s chief writer Rob Houwing explains. – David O’Sullivan

From Sport24

Cape Town – There will be numerous others to get pulses racing in Saturday’s Vodacom Super Rugby final, but the looming individual duel between open-side flank tearaways Jaco Kriel and Ardie Savea already looks a particularly difficult one to surpass.

This speedy, thrillingly game-breaking pair, neither of whom would look remotely out of place if stationed game-long among the outside backs, enter the showpiece for the Lions and home-town Hurricanes respectively off thunderous performances in their semi-finals on different parts of the planet.

Lions_Jaco_Kriel
Jaco Kriel

Savea starred virtually from start to finish in the Wellingtonians’ comfortable 25-9 triumph over the Chiefs, whilst Kriel, also serving as acting leader in the absence through injury of Warren Whiteley, similarly put a major personal stamp on his team’s 42-30 victory over defending champions the Highlanders.

You could hardly have wished for more from either open-sider on Saturday, whether on attack or defence.

But there is much more in common between them, entering the red-letter day this weekend, than simply sparkling current form at Super Rugby level.

Both recently made their maiden appearances at Test level as substitutes, and will view the coveted final of the franchise competition as wonderful opportunities to press harder claims for starting rights once the Castle Rugby Championship begins a fortnight beyond.

Savea made two All Black appearances from the “splinters” during the June series against Wales, and Kriel did likewise for 20 minutes or so in the decisive third Test for the Springboks against Ireland in Port Elizabeth.

As things stand, Savea, 22, is the primary “fetching” understudy to Sam Cane for New Zealand, and 26-year-old Kriel is behind Francois Louw in the South African open-side pecking order.

Yet both are sure to be rising in public and pundit affection levels for greater Test deployment.

They are also proud one-team Super Rugby servants; Savea is Wellington-born and has been in the ‘Canes squad mix since 2013, and Kriel – although born some 150km from Johannesburg, in Mpumalanga-based Standerton – a loyal Lions man stretching back to the 2011 season.

Apart from leading a couple of exhilarating break-outs by the Hurricanes against the Chiefs at the weekend, Savea displayed rare zeal in the tackle department — a development that has taken him to the top of the competition-wide stats in that regard (192), now one above the Mooloo Men’s Cane, his superior for the time being  in All Black selection terms.

Two or three of his hits were borderline ones in legality, coming close to the coat-hanger type, but they all played a key role nevertheless in stunting the Chiefs’ raids.

Meanwhile at Emirates Airline Park just a few hours later, Kriel similarly revelled in virtually all areas, including making a crucial catch of a finely-weighted Elton Jantjies cross-kick with the sun in his eyes to streak away for a try in the corner midway through the second half.

As if to confirm the durable, turbo-infused qualities to his engine, the Lions’ No 6 just seven minutes later thundered a long distance to rein in a flying ball-carrier Matt Faddes and tackle him in textbook style into touch, to the accompaniment of an approving roar from the Jo’burg faithful.

The vital statistics of Savea and Kriel are not far removed, into the bargain: the former 1.88m and 100kg, the latter 1.84m and 98kg.

Savea can claim bragging rights from their last match-up, the ordinary-season game in April, when the ‘Canes were collectively at their most imperious in a 50-17 thrashing at Emirates Airline Park – perhaps the lone really low point of the Lions’ otherwise vibrant campaign.

The whole visiting pack excelled in thoroughly outwitting and outplaying the Lions at the breakdown, so it might be overly cruel to suggest Kriel specifically played glaring second fiddle to Savea in that area.

Yet figures for the season as a whole so far suggest Kriel is at least the match for Savea for industry and value to the greater cause.

Ardie Savea. Photo: Twitter @SuperRugby
Ardie Savea. Photo: Twitter @SuperRugby

Savea leads the tackling head-to-head by a pretty wide 192-107 margin (success rate 92.8 percent to Kriel’s 89.9), plus boasts more clean breaks (20-16), offloads (10-7) and passes (90-45).

Then again, Kriel rules the roost for tries (6-5), carries (143-135), metres earned (822-620), and defenders beaten (55-35).

He is also clearly a more useful occasional option as a lineout-bagger, having claimed 14 to Savea’s solitary effort.

But when these two balls of fire lock horns on Saturday, stats are likely to be the last thing on most onlookers’ minds.

Marks in pencil? Jaco Kriel and Ardie Savea just seem to offer so much more to rugby union than that.

Bring on this one… – Sport24

Source: http://www.sport24.co.za/Rugby/SuperRugby/kriel-v-savea-one-for-connoisseurs-20160801

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