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Defending champions the Auckland Blues are in bullish mood as they seek to end the Canterbury Crusaders' ominous home play-off record in the Super Rugby semi-finals on Friday.
The Blues were surprise 20-19 winners in their elimination match against the top-seeded Waikato Chiefs last weekend thanks to All Blacks veteran Beauden Barrett's late conversion.
It set up a semi-final against the Crusaders in Christchurch, where the 14-time tournament winners have won 30 play-off matches and never lost.
"Yet," said Blues coach Vern Cotter when confronted with those numbers after the Chiefs game. "All I'm saying is... nothing lasts forever."
Cotter, the former Scotland and Fiji head coach and forwards coach of the Crusaders when they won titles in 2005 and 2006, continued his fighting talk this week.
"They're going to lose one day. When I was at Clermont we won 77 (home) games in a row and, in the end, the pressure was heavy," he said.
"One day we knew it was going to happen. They're on 30 and one day it's going to happen. Will it be this week? I don't know, but the boys will be up to push it as best they can."
The Crusaders are gunning for an eighth title in nine years after a poor 2024 season which saw them miss the play-offs entirely in coach Rob Penney's first year in charge.
They enter Friday's clash without All Blacks prop Tamaiti Williams after he succumbed to a knee injury in the dominant 32-12 win over the Queensland Reds in their qualifying final.
Fellow All Black George Bower comes into the starting side.
- Lifeline -
The Chiefs are aiming to bounce back from their loss to the Blues when they host the ACT Brumbies on Saturday in Hamilton.
Their lifeline came courtesy of a new format for Super Rugby, where the three qualifying final winners, and the top-ranked loser, go through to the last four.
Chiefs lock Naitoa Ah Kuoi said they planned to capitalise.
"It was a weird Monday but coach (Clayton McMillan) came in and reminded us that we were top of the table coming into the finals, which gave us a lifeline and we can't waste it," Ah Kuoi said.
"We've got to be grateful that we're here and make sure we nail that opportunity now that we've been given this extra week."
Brumbies coach Stephen Larkham said his side was up to the challenge of facing the Chiefs, after they ended the Wellington Hurricanes' season in a high-scoring 35-28 win in Canberra.
"The boys can get a lot of confidence out of the way that we're playing," Larkham said.
"There's a lot of stats that show that we’re playing very good footy and we've also shown consistency throughout the season."
P.Benes--TPP