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New Zealand Under 85kg Side Hold Off Strong Sri Lankan Challenge

Match report by Jamie Wall

The New Zealand Under 85kg side have held off a much improved Sri Lanka in Colombo, winning 27-16 in a hard fought match. After dominating the two fixtures last year, the weight grade side were confronted with an extremely physical Tuskers outfit who were determined to use their considerable size advantage and attack in the most direct way possible. 

It paid dividends with Akash Madushanka crashing over for the first try, after a massive scrum won the home side a penalty and field position. However, the New Zealanders managed to hit back immediately through prop Simon Sia, who pounced on a charged down kick to score.

From there, it became a fitting war of attrition on Anzac Day. Despite the Under 85kg grade being associated with free-flowing rugby, space was at a premium against the hard-tackling Sri Lankans. So the New Zealanders had to take a direct route of their own off a well-earned penalty and lineout, with number eight Pasia Asiata driven over for a lineout drive.

Janidu Dilshan crossed to close the gap with a well taken try in the corner for the home side, with the big crowd very much realising this was a far more fired up team to the one that convincingly lost both games last year. Then Sri Lanka looked to have snatched the lead with a try on the stroke of halftime, however it was called back for a forward pass.

The second half saw the crucial injection of the New Zealand bench, with lock Jack Laity and front row replacements Tom Rowland and Matt Treeby making immediate differences at set piece. However, the impact of Suji Vosikata was arguably the game-changing factor, with the Fijian-born loose forward absolutely outstanding on both sides of the ball.

Vosikata’s line-breaking ability opened up the tight contest into one that saw the New Zealanders edge out to six point lead through the boot of skipper Jarred Percival. It was a crucial margin because for all their passion and intensity, the Sri Lankans were finding it increasingly difficult to gain any sort of meaningful field position.

Treeby sealed the win with a cheeky try off a quick lineout try in the last 10 minutes. While the scoreline looked comfortable, the sheer physical exertion of playing in 30 degree heat and 90 percent humidity made it anything but.

Coach Ben Sinnamon said that while the side was pleased with the win, they must improve before next weekend’s next game.

“The Tuskers really showed how much they wanted it tonight, their physicality and pressure was outstanding. However, we backed our systems in some really trying conditions.”

Discipline was an issue for both teams, with Dilshan needlessly yellow-carded when he stomped on Percival after scoring. Asiata was unlucky when his attempted tackle slipped high on a Sri Lankan ball carrier.

Percival described the match as a “classic ding-dong battle”.

“Credit to the Sri Lankans, they really brought it to us in the first half. I’m really proud of the way we problem-solved on the go and the boys who came off the bench, they were crucial.”

The two sides now head to Kandy for the second match of the tour.

New Zealand Under 85kg 27 (Simon Sia, Pasia Asiata, Matt Treeby tries; Taine Cordell-Hull 3 pen, con; Jarred Percival pen, con)
Sri Lanka 16 (Akash Madusanka, Janidu Dilshan tries; Thenuka Nanayakkara 2 pen)
HT: 16-13