St Aloysius may not have been the best opposition Trinity met in this competition, but they were probably the smartest, working out a game plan and sticking to it with good discipline. They starved Trinity of possession for the first twenty minutes, and took a lead after Kennedy caught a drop-out inside his own half and made a great run into Trinity's quarter that eventually led to an Aloys line-out from which the forwards rolled over. Williams converted for 7-0. Aloys should have built on that advantage. Cameron Orr was given ten minutes in the bin for "stomping". It was a touch judge's report. What Orr actually did was ruck the back of an Aloys player who was lying on the Trinity side of the ruck. It looked a bad decision to me, but I guess rucking has pretty much gone out of the game now. When he went off Malaki came on to replace Hazell, who had a back injury. He lasted about a minute before he was given ten in the bin for a lifting tackle - a correct decision, I thought, but one that left 13 playing 15.
Aloys should have done better in that stage of play, but Debreczini (whose timing was a bit erratic today) played well, slowing play down and getting Trinity into safe field position. Henry Clunies-Ross went over in the corner from a neat move and Debreczini converted for 7-7. Williams added a penalty just before half time so Aloys went in up by three points.
Early in the second half Trinity battered the Aloys line for a time before Debreczini elected to level the scores by taking an easy penalty. The penalty was for offside at the ruck on the Aloys line - the offender was practically standing at scrum half for Trinity - why this was not a yellow card offence I don't know. Not long after, Clunies-Ross crossed for his second and Pat Kennedy went off injured. A pity that Kennedy's outstanding season ended that way, and I thought Trinity would run riot at that point, especially as their scrum became completely dominant, snatching a couple of tight heads. Pat Sio (whose handling was poor throughout the game) produced a trademark charge to score in the corner and Alex Logan hit a short pass from Debreczini to score, and it was 29-10, but Aloys kept trying and were rewarded with a try to their No10 after a rather over-ambitious chip kick from Jamieson Clarke was charged down inside his own quarter.
So Trinity finished ten from ten. Today I though Cameron Orr and Harrison Orr had excellent games, running really strongly. Logan had a great game, flawless in defence, holding up a pass nicely for the first Clunies-Ross try, and scoring one of his own. The back line as a whole lacked its usual cohesion and maybe tried to be too flashy, but Debreczini still controlled the game at the stages that mattered. Mae seemed to be everywhere, perhaps an under-rated flanker.
You wouldn't say that this Trinity team is the best that the CAS, or even the school, has seen. What is undeniable, though, is that there has never been such a dominant team throughout a competition. Their average was something like 45 points a game, and that isn't something that happens very often: and they allowed twenty points only once (in a game when they scored 63). It has been a team with some obvious and infuriating weaknesses (hopeless lineout, poor discipline at times) but with quite remarkable strengths. Well done to them.