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Record-breaking Crusaders beat Blues in pulsating Super Rugby Pacific final in Auckland

The Crusaders were on top from the outset and claimed a deserved victory. (Getty Images: Hannah Peters)

The Crusaders have dominated the ladder-topping Blues to win the Super Rugby Pacific final 21-7 at a sold-out Eden Park in Auckland.

The powerhouse Christchurch-based franchise claimed a record-extending 11th Super Rugby crown as they snapped the Blues' 15-match winning streak with a ruthless display in wet and slippery conditions.

Scrum half Bryn Hall and winger Sevu Reece scored tries either side of half time, while Richie Mo'unga ran the game with a brilliant display at fly half and contributed 11 points from the boot.

The Blues, roared on by a big home crowd, were simply unable to get on the front foot and unleash their talented backs until it was too late.

Scrum half Finlay Christie gave them a sniff of hope with an opportunist try in the 59th minute, but a defensive mix-up gifted Reece a score four minutes from time to put the result beyond doubt.

The playing squads were littered with All Blacks in a game played at Test match intensity. (Getty Images: Hannah Peters)

It was a sixth straight title for the Crusaders under coach Scott Robertson after they won the last three editions of trans-continental Super Rugby and the domestic Super Rugby Aotearoa competition in the last two years.

"We've always talked about effort on both sides of the ball," said All Blacks lock and Crusaders veteran Sam Whitelock.

"It's not always about scoring points, sometimes it's about stopping them from scoring."

Scott Robertson has breakdanced his way to yet another Super Rugby title. ((Photo by Phil Walter/Getty Images))

Super Rugby relaunched this year as a Pacific-focused championship, but the final result was the same as 10 of the 24 editions of the pre-COVID competition.

On display were the steely defence, dominant set-piece, forwards who battle for every breakdown and backs who looked to attack at every opportunity that are in the DNA of the Christchurch-based dynasty.

The Blues, dominant in the early years of the competition, had looked to usurp the Crusaders on the back of a high-octane attack but initially looked shell-shocked at the intensity of the contest.

For all their domination of territory and possession in the opening half, the Crusaders had only a drop goal and penalty from Mo'unga to show for their efforts until just before the break.

Leicester Fainga'anuku had earlier been held up over the line and the hulking winger was stopped just short when he launched himself at it again.

Argentine flanker Pablo Matera was pushed back from close range but Hall cleverly dabbed the ball down for a try through a jumble of legs after an excellent ruck clean out by Whitelock, who was dominant in the loose and at the lineout, which the Crusaders dominated.

It was a turnover from another fluffed Blues lineout that led to a Crusaders penalty which Mo'unga converted for a 16-0 lead after 46 minutes.

Christie finally got the Blues on the board when he pounced on a loose ball at the back of a Crusaders scrum for a converted try that cut the deficit to 16-7, but even that was too steep a mountain to climb against the visiting defence.

"Tonight wasn't our night, we really weren't good enough," said Blues fly half Beauden Barrett.

"Really disappointing, we had a good season, we wanted to come here and do a job here tonight. It's a tough one to swallow." 

ABC/Wires

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