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Sea of Blue keeps the faith
- Wayne Smith
- From: The Australian
- April 22, 2010 12:00AM
IN the space of a few hours yesterday, when James O'Connor was ruled out for the Western Force and Dan Carter ruled in for the Crusaders, what had shaped as a mismatch in Perth tomorrow night suddenly took on the appearance of a foregone conclusion.
Not, however, in the eyes of passionate Force supporters -- the so-called Sea of Blue -- who are expected to flood Members Equity Stadium in such numbers that Rugby WA chief executive Vern Reid is predicting a king tide, the first sell-out at the club's new 20,500-capacity home ground.
If so, this could become the highest-drawing round in the history of Super rugby in Australia, with tomorrow's other match, the Reds-Stormers tipped to attract more than 30,000 and Saturday's Waratahs-Brumbies derby on target for a 35,000-plus crowd.
It is more than blind optimism driving the Perth ticket sales. In the same way that the Brumbies have the wood on Queensland and the Reds keep sneaking wins at the expense of the Bulls, so the Force usually punches well above its weight against seven-time champions the Crusaders, scoring a win and two unlucky draws against them in four meetings.
But if the Force is to claim a second major scalp this season to add to the Stormers, it will need to summon up more than history.
The Crusaders, stopping over in Perth on their way to a difficult tour of South Africa, will be arrayed in all their might, with not only Carter returning but also fellow All Blacks Brad Thorn, Kieran Read, Zac Guildford and Owen Franks. Losing O'Connor to a shoulder injury was a blow the luckless Force did not deserve but overall their team looks stronger for the inclusion of halfback Brett Sheehan, fellow Wallaby Pek Cowan, hooker Ben Whittaker, winger Nick Cummins and lock Ben McCalman.
At the height of Perth's injury crisis two months ago, McCalman provided valuable service as a flanker but he now returns to the starting side intriguingly as Nathan Sharpe's second-row partner.
http://www.theaustralian.com.au/news...-1225856612686