2017 Super Rugby Final

2017 Super Rugby Final
Event 2017 Super Rugby season
Date 5 August 2017
Venue Ellis Park Stadium, Johannesburg
Referee Jaco Peyper (South Africa)

The 2017 Super Rugby Final was played between the Lions and the Crusaders. It was the 22nd final in the Super Rugby competition's history and the second but concluding installment under the current expanded 18-team format since a reduction to a 15-team format beginning from the next season. The Lions had qualified in first place of the log standings during the regular season, while the Crusaders had qualified in second place. Both teams hosted quarter-final and semi-final matches. In the quarter-finals the Lions beat the Sharks while the Crusaders beat fellow New Zealand team the Highlanders. For the semi-finals it was the Lions defeating last years winners the Hurricanes in Johannesburg and the Crusaders defeating the Chiefs in Christchurch. Because of being the higher placed team in the regular season log standings, the final was held in Johannesburg.

The match was won by the Crusaders who beat the Lions by eight points. The Crusaders, stretched their record number of Super Rugby wins to eight. A very strong Crusaders defence, several errors committed by the Lions and a red card were the losers downfall in the highly anticipated Super Rugby final that attracted a record crowd attendance of 62,000.[1]

Road to the Final

Finals Series qualifying teams
Conference leaders
Pos Team W D L PD TF TA TB LB Pts
1 South Africa Lions1401+32281279065
2 New Zealand Crusaders1401+24177377063
3 South Africa Stormers1005+5464613043
4 Australia Brumbies609+3641323734
Wildcard teams
5 New Zealand Hurricanes1203+32489319158
6 New Zealand Chiefs1212+14155306157
7 New Zealand Highlanders1104+18062405251
8 South Africa Sharks915+6938371342
Source: SANZAAR [2]

The 18 teams were grouped geographically in two regional groups, each consisting of two conferences: the Australasian Group, with five teams in the Australian Conference and five teams in the New Zealand Conference and the South African Group, with six South African teams, one Argentinean team and one Japanese team split into a four-team Africa 1 Conference and a four-team Africa 2 Conference.[3] The four conference winners qualified for the Quarter Finals, where they had home ground advantage against the four wildcard teams, made up of the third to fifth placed teams in the Australasian Group and the third placed team in the South African Group.

In the quarter-finals, there were wins for Hurricanes over the Brumbies, Crusaders beat Highlanders while keeping them with no points, Lions beat Sharks and Chiefs triumphing over Stormers. In the semi-finals, the Crusaders defeated Chiefs in Christchurch and the Lions defeated Hurricanes in Johannesburg.

The play-off fixtures were as follows:

 
Quarter-finalsSemi-finalsFinal
 
          
 
22 July – Cape Town
 
 
South Africa Stormers11
 
29 July – Christchurch
 
New Zealand Chiefs17
 
New Zealand Crusaders27
 
22 July – Christchurch
 
New Zealand Chiefs13
 
New Zealand Crusaders17
 
5 August – Johannesburg
 
New Zealand Highlanders0
 
South Africa Lions17
 
22 July – Johannesburg
 
New Zealand Crusaders25
 
South Africa Lions23
 
29 July – Johannesburg
 
South Africa Sharks21
 
South Africa Lions44
 
21 July – Canberra
 
New Zealand Hurricanes29
 
Australia Brumbies16
 
 
New Zealand Hurricanes35
 

Quarter-finals

Semi-finals

Final

Details

5 August 2017
Lions 17–25 Crusaders
Try: Malcolm Marx  64' Corné Fourie  72'
Con: Elton Jantjies  65', 73' (2/2)
Pen: Elton Jantjies  26' (1/1)
Try: Seta Tamanivalu  7'
Jack Goodhue  11'
Kieran Read  43'
Con: Richie Mo'unga  8', 44' (2/3)
Pen: Richie Mo'unga  41', 52' (2/2)
Lions
Crusaders
Lions:
FB15Andries Coetzee
RW14Ruan Combrinck
OC13Lionel Mapoe
IC12Harold Vorster
LW11Courtnall Skosan
FH10Elton Jantjies
SH9Ross Cronjé
N88Ruan Ackermann
OF7Kwagga Smith Red card 38'
BF6Jaco Kriel
LL5Franco Mostert
RL4Andries Ferreira
TP3Ruan Dreyer
HK2Malcolm Marx
LP1Jacques van Rooyen
Substitutes:
HK16Akker van der Merwe
PR17Corné Fourie
PR18Johannes Jonker
LK19Lourens Erasmus
FL20Cyle Brink
SH21Faf de Klerk
IC22Rohan Janse van Rensburg
FB23Sylvian Mahuza
Coach:
South Africa Johan Ackermann
Crusaders:
FB15David Havili
RW14Israel Dagg
CE13Jack Goodhue
SF12Ryan Crotty
LW11Seta Tamanivalu
FH10Richie Mo'unga
SH9Bryn Hall
N88Kieran Read
OF7Matt Todd
BF6Jordan Taufua
LL5Sam Whitelock
RL4Scott Barrett
TP3Owen Franks
HK2Codie Taylor
LP1Joe Moody
Substitutes:
HK16Ben Funnell
PR17Wyatt Crockett
PR18Michael Alaalatoa
LK19Luke Romano
FL20Peter Samu
SH21Mitchell Drummond
FH22Mitchell Hunt
WG23George Bridge
Coach:
New Zealand Scott Robertson

Man of the Match:

Assistant Referees:

References

  1. "Mistakes cost the Lions their first Super Rugby trophy". Randburg Sun. 5 August 2017. Retrieved 5 August 2017.
  2. "SA Rugby Log – 2017 Vodacom Super Rugby". South African Rugby Union. Retrieved 20 September 2016.
  3. "Outline of the Super Rugby competition structure" (PDF). All Blacks. 1 May 2014. Retrieved 1 May 2014.
Preceded by
2016 Super Rugby Final
Super Rugby Final
2017
Succeeded by
2018 Super Rugby Final
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