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Australian supporters can sit back, relax and take a breath. The pain is over. When all is said and done, two teams from New Zealand – the Blues and Highlanders – will be contesting the first-ever Super Rugby Trans-Tasman final.
The Kiwi sides have dominated the tournament, winning 23 out of 25 matches, and they have offered the Super Rugby AU competition a very dry dose of perspective in the process.
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He too should be fizzing. But Christie, who knows a thing or two about big finals (he has played in four provincial deciders with the Tasman Mako), presented a cool, calm demeanour following the first of the Blues’ two main training hitouts of the week. He preferred to concentrate on the looming task, than ratchet up the excite-o-meter too much. “Try and play it like just another game,” he said when asked if his team were embracing the stakes. The Blues, after all, haven’t lifted any silverware since 2003, when Helen Clark was Prime Minister and you could buy a house in central Auckland for well under half a mill. “If you get too caught up in it you can get nervous. Back in the day I probably would have got nervous, but I try to keep those nerves at bay now.”
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