After a state of emergency was declared in a water-logged Christchurch, Crusaders coach Scott Robertson called his team into a meeting four hours before their quarter-final against the Highlanders and briefed his forwards on how they could lead their team to the safety of a victory and a semifinal place.
His starting pack, which included seven All Blacks, plus two on the reserves bench in Wyatt Crockett and Luke Romano, wouldn't have needed too many instructions. "It was a case of 'here we go'," Robertson said after his team's 17-0 victory at AMI Stadium.
Already keen on righting the perceived wrongs of their defeat to the Hurricanes in Wellington a week earlier, which deprived them of a chance to finish top of the table and the automatic right to hold a home final, his forwards would have relished the opportunity 48 hours of rain in the city had given them.
In the miserable wet and cold conditions, last night was not the time for running rugby at which the Highlanders have become specialists. It was a night for dead-eyed efficiency at the set piece and breakdown, of knocking men off their feet, and getting up and doing it again, and Robertson's men delivered.
Given the quality up front at Robertson's disposal, including captain and lock Sam Whitelock, the All Blacks starting front row of Owen Franks, Codie Taylor and Joe Moody, plus national team skipper Kieran Read, it was probably no surprise that the Crusaders took a grip on the game and never relented.