WELLINGTON, New Zealand (AP) - The first really wet weekend in Super Rugby saw a reduction in scorelines and a rearrangement of the standings which leaves the defending champion Blues in playoff jeopardy.
Wet weather rugby shakes up the Super Rugby standings and sees the Blues slip
WELLINGTON, New Zealand (AP) - The first really wet weekend in Super Rugby saw a reduction in scorelines and a rearrangement of the standings which leaves the defending champion Blues in playoff jeopardy.
The average points per match in the weekend's 10th round, mostly played on soggy grounds, was 40.6. That's significantly down on the ninth round, played mostly in dry conditions, where the average was 54 points
By way of comparison, the second round of the season played in summery conditions on hard grounds saw an average of 74.8 points per match.
The Hamilton, New Zealand-based Chiefs were the only team to flourish in the conditions, beating the Dunedin-based Highlanders 46-10 to return to the top of the competition table, edging the Crusaders on points differential.





