Kampeli Latu scored the only try of the game with the clock on 80 minutes to put a cherry on top of Border's 19-3 victory over Kaierau at Dallison Park in Waverley. Photo / Lewis Gardner
Good tactics lead to good results and the game plan was obvious when Waverley Harvesting Border and Wanganui Car Centre Kaierau clashed on Saturday.
The heavens opened 10 minutes into the Tasman Tanning Premier Wanganui Rugby semifinal, making an already muddy Dallison Park completely boggy.
This is not an uncommon scene during a rugby season, especially in New Zealand and both teams knew what they needed to do to win the game.
The game became about forcing turnovers, kicking long and into space from your own half and keeping tight on attack, using the pick and go effectively.
Both teams changed tactics, but Border executed their game plan more efficiently, scoring a try on fulltime to win 19-3 and claim a place in the final.
Border coach Ross Williams said playing in such sloppy conditions was a good lesson for his team.
"Early on we were running into the wind and that was going to be a challenge. We weren't going to kick a lot, but that rain came in and narrowed things up," he said.
"At the end of the day it was the team that could hold on to the ball longer and create the most pressure that was going to get the result."
Kaierau were quick out of the gate, kicking high and forcing Border to spill the ball into the hands of winger Te Tua Kemp who went for a gallop.
Kemp was tackled and Kaierau sent the ball to midfielder Ethan Robinson who grubbered ahead and was taken out late, earning his side a penalty.
First five-eighth Shandon Scott lined up a shot at goal and struck it accurately, but the ball held up in the swirling wind and dropped short.
It was Border who earned the next shot at goal and as the ball sailed up to the right of the posts, the rain came down.
The match was scoreless after 20 minutes, but Border had momentum, turning Kaierau around with big kicks into space and chasing them hard.
They did it on the back of their forwards, such as No 8 Chris Brewer who went ahead with every run he made before coming off early in the second half.
After an extended period of attack, Border were rewarded for their efforts when Kaierau were penalised and Nick Harding slotted the first points of the match.
Kaierau were on the back foot, their discipline was letting them down, kicks were landing straight in the hands of Border players and passes were going to ground.
Soon enough they were penalised again, and again Harding kicked a penalty goal to double Border's lead.
Border were making all the right moves at all the right times, but Kaierau kept fighting and finally they found a way into the game.
Unbelievably, Scott was lining up a shot at goal to put Kaierau on level terms with Border, but it was too good to be true and the ball hit the left post.
Williams said his team deserved to be leading at the break.
"Defence from both sides was really excellent, but we were the ones at the right end of the field getting those penalties.
"I don't take anything away from Kaierau though, they're a hell of a football side. They came down here and really gave it to us."
Unfortunately for Kaierau, it was more of the same in the second half with kicks failing to find space, penalties being conceded and ball being dropped.
Border invited them back in with their lineout struggles, but despite this, it was them that scored first, again through a Harding penalty 55 minutes in.
From there the teams went back and forth for some time, with neither looking like getting close to the try line.
With 10 minutes remaining, Border finally got it right, won a lineout and got a huge rolling maul in motion, which was dragged to the ground, resulting in a penalty.
A pressure shot at goal to put Border two scoring plays clear was called for and when Harding nailed it, a Kaierau win felt impossible.
And it was.
Kaierau threw everything they had left at Border in an effort to score a try, even pulling off a cross field kick, but, they continued shooting themselves in the foot.
Errors kept giving the ball back to Border, who went back to their driving maul tactic with time practically up and this time when it went down, they carried on.