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Jacinda Ardern's perfect sledge as crowds return in New Zealand

Jacinda Ardern, pictured here before a massive crowd turned out for the Highlanders and Chiefs game.
Jacinda Ardern delighted in the return of crowds. Image: Getty

New Zealand has led the rest of the world in returning to packed stadiums for live sporting events.

Mitch Hunt kicked off the opening match in Super Rugby Aotearoa on Saturday and, as he hoisted the ball high, he was accompanied by the roar of the crowd.

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It was a milestone moment. For the past three months New Zealand sports stadiums and most of those around the world have fallen silent because of the coronavirus pandemic.

But on Saturday a capacity crowd of more than 22,000 pressed into the Forsyth Barr Stadium in Dunedin to watch Hunt's Highlanders, the home team, beat the Hamilton-based Chiefs 28-27 in a match which had a thrilling finish.

Replacement five-eighth Bryn Gatland, in his first match for the Highlanders, kicked a dropped goal with two minutes remaining to give his team a narrow and unexpected win over the Chiefs, who are coached by his father, British and Irish Lions coach Warren Gatland.

A few minutes earlier, All Blacks playmaker Damien McKenzie kicked a dropped goal which had put the Chiefs ahead 27-25 in a match which featured five lead changes.

The match was played under new rules allowing for golden point extra time to separate teams locked together at the end of regulation.

That wasn’t necessary; instead, one of rugby's most traditional and under-used scoring forms - the dropped goal - was called on to separate the teams.

McKenzie struck his from close range in the 75th minute to put the Chiefs ahead for the first time in the second half.

Gatland then slotted a low dropped goal from around 35-metres to regain a lead the Highlanders were able to defend as the clock ran down.

Highlanders supporters, pictured here watching on during the match against the Chiefs.
Highlanders supporters watch on during the match against the Chiefs. (Photo by Dianne Manson/Getty Images)

Jacinda Ardern’s perfect reply to sledge

There was a mood of obvious celebration and relief as fans, deprived in lockdown of the shared experience of live sport, were able to return for the first time to a stadium in numbers limited only by the venue's capacity.

There were no restrictions on their contact; they could hug, high-five, crowd in for selfies. There was no need for masks or social distancing.

They could cheer as often and loudly as they wished and they did so enough to make the rafters ring at the 22,800-capacity indoor stadium.

Fans and commentators flocked to social media in celebration, and even Prime Minister Jacinda Ardern got in on the action.

Ardern was spotted wearing a Chiefs jersey as she watched the match and delivered the perfect retort when finance minister and Highlanders supporter Grant Robertson said things might be ‘awkward’ in the next cabinet meeting.

“I think you’re forgetting who chairs the meeting #LeaveTheScarfAtHome,” she responded.

Landmark moment for professional rugby

The match marked a new development not just for New Zealand sport or for professional rugby, which has been suspended since March, but for high-profile professional sports leagues.

The players were expected to be rusty and to be tested physically in their first match in three months but their fitness held up well and they did their best to produce an attractive spectacle, worthy of a historic milestone.

This was a major step back to normality after the forced austerity of the coronavirus era.

New Zealand has almost eradicated COVID-19 after shutting its borders and imposing an early and thorough lockdown. There are no active cases and New Zealand has recorded no new infections in 22 days.

That made it possible for crowds to return to professional sport and they have done so with relish.

The match between the Blues and Hurricanes in Auckland on Sunday is expected to have a crowd of almost 40,000, the largest for almost 15 years for a Super Rugby match in New Zealand's largest city.

with AAP