At AAMI Park, Melbourne: Hurricanes 39 (Ardie Savea 13’, 28’, Josh Moorby 36’, Salesi Rayasi 65’, Jordie Barrett 78’ tries, Barrett 4 con, 2 pen) Rebels 33 (Brad Wilkin 3’, Lachie Anderson 46’, Carter Gordon 55’, Richard Hardwick 68’, 74’ tries, Gordon, Reece Hodge 3 cons). HT: 24-7
All Blacks star Ardie Savea has apologised for producing a throat-slitting gesture towards an opponent following a heated exchange during the Hurricanes’ spiteful Super Rugby Pacific win over the Melbourne Rebels, saying “there is no excuse” and he “needs to be better”.
Savea scored two tries and set up another for fullback Josh Moorby as the Hurricanes survived a tense final 10 minutes to edge the Rebels 39-33 in an entertaining Super Round fixture at AAMI Park on Friday.
Jordie Barrett’s 78th minute try ultimately sealed the Hurricanes’ 10th consecutive win over the Rebels after opposition number eight Richard Hardwick made them sweat with a late double to cut the deficit to just one point.
But the Hurricanes’ thrilling win was overshadowed by an ugly incident right before halftime, which saw Savea shown a yellow card.
After being singled out by referee James Doleman following a melee involving players from both teams, Savea produced a throat-slitting gesture towards Rebels halfback Ryan Louwrens as he made his way to the sin bin.
Savea was given 10 minutes on the sidelines for “escalating” the situation, according to referee Doleman, after Dane Coles and lock Josh Canham wrestled on the ground and players came flooding in.
Savea took it upon himself to remove Rebels first-five Carter Gordon before throwing him to the ground.
Savea initially defended his actions, telling the referee he was just trying to pull Gordon out. But Doleman felt his reaction was excessive and issued the number eight with a yellow.
Savea immediately apologised after the game.
“I can understand the fans are furious around the gesture that I made,” he told Sky Sport.
“It’s just a heat of the moment kinda thing. It’s footy. Kids are watching us, we’re in the heat of the moment. Usually that’s out of character for me, so I put my hand up first and I apologise for that.
“I’m just glad to get the win. The Rebels brought it tonight. Credit to them. They were physical with their forward pack, so something for us to look in the mirror [at].
Savea’s frustration appeared to stem from his yellow card, which he felt was soft.
“It’s just normal banter in the game. For me, to get a yellow card for a push and shove, that’s just where rugby’s going,” he added.
“I’ve got to be better. We’re trying to clean up the game. I understand… there’s no excuse for me, I’ve got to be better.”
With Savea already in the bin, the Hurricanes were then reduced to 13 men when prop Tevita Mafileo was shown a yellow card for dropping a late shoulder into an opponent.
Mafileo’s yellow was then upgraded to a red card under the new laws, as it was deemed to have met the threshold for the harsher punishment.
Savea was greeted with boos when he returned to the field early in the second half.
The Rebels, who were hosting Super Round for the second year in a row, struck first on Friday night with Brad Wilkin burrowing over inside three minutes following a lineout drive.
But the Hurricanes’ response was emphatic, scoring 24 unanswered points to take a 16-point lead into halftime after Savea powered over for tries in the 13th and 28th minutes.
The numerical advantage allowed the Rebels back into the game. They scored twice, through Lachie Anderson and Carter Gordon, before Salesi Rayasi produced a superman dive in the left corner to swing the momentum back in the Hurricanes’ favour.
However, the Rebels continued to throw everything at the Hurricanes, and their pressure was rewarded when Ryan Hardwick crashed over for two tries in quick succession late on to close the gap to just one point.
But the Hurricanes held strong to continue their unbeaten start to the season.