Herald on Sunday

Umaga shoulders blame

- By Liam Napier

One step forward, two back — it’s all too familiar for the Blues. Dejected and searching for answers, coach Tana Umaga could do no more than attempt to shoulder the blame after the Blues’ shock loss to the Sunwolves in Tokyo yesterday.

Embarrassi­ng results are not foreign for the Blues. Last year, they were thumped 43-5 by the Lions in Johannesbu­rg. But being the first Kiwi side to lose to the Sunwolves, and conceding 41 unanswered second half points in the process, is without doubt a new low.

From the high of rolling the British and Irish Lions at Eden Park to this shambolic 48-21 defeat, Umaga tried to shield his players from criticism by putting himself in the firing line.

To put the result in perspectiv­e, after two seasons, the Sunwolves’ only victories have come over the Bulls, Jaguares and, now, Blues.

In their last two matches in South Africa against the Stormers and Lions, the Japanese outfit conceded 146 points and scored 22.

Umaga questioned everything from basing themselves in Japan for 12 days to acclimatis­e to the heat to his side’s poor attitude.

“You can’t take anything for granted in this competitio­n,” he said. “I’ve got to look at myself and the way I help prepare this team and whether we did that right coming over early and trying to motivate them for a oneoff game after the break. I’ll look at myself first before I look at the players and that performanc­e.

“Did I help them enough? I can’t play but I can still have an influence on how they prepare. We thought what we were doing was right but obviously it wasn’t.

“We can’t go pointing fingers at players and what they’re doing; we’ve got to look at ourselves. It’s probably symptomati­c of our season and not being able to live with being favourites and the pressure that comes with that.

“They wanted it more. That’s down to attitude. At the contact area, they challenged us there and their defence was relentless. It made us make errors. When you haven’t got the attitude right, we get what we got [yesterday].”

The loss means the Blues finish worse off than in Umaga’s first season, with one fewer win (seven from 15 games) and two competitio­n points (37 compared with 39). They are again last in the New Zealand conference, 14 points behind the Highlander­s.

Instead of honouring departing All Blacks Charlie Faumuina and Steven Luatua and heading into next year harnessing positivity, the pressure will be on Umaga to reach the playoffs in the final year of his contract.

“I’m positive in what I can do and confident in my own ability. I have to be, otherwise I shouldn’t be here,” said Umaga. “I’ve got another year on my contract. I’ll see that out and see what happens after that.

“We all realise this is a resultsdri­ven game. As long as we’re improving, hopefully I keep putting opportunit­ies up there for myself. Everyone remembers your last performanc­e and it’s not a good one for us going into our end of season. The hardest thing is we’ve got guys who put a lot into this club and to send them off on that note is not fitting from us.

“We’re at the point we are because of these inconsiste­ncies we’re showing. We’re not being able to front games where we’re meant to do well in. That’s attitude and preparatio­n and mindset, and we’ve got to keep pushing on that,” said Umaga.

“I’m still happy with certain aspects of this season and if we can get more of those, we could be in a different spot this time next year. We’ve got to make sure everything about our season doesn’t fall into this one game.”

Sunwolves 48 (T. Lafaele 3, K. Shigeno, Y. Tokunaga, K. Uchida, R. Yamanaka tries; penalty try; Y. Tamura 2 cons, J. Ogura con) Blues 21 (M. Collins, G. Cowley-Tuioti, J. Parsons tries; I. West 3 cons). Halftime: 14-21.

 ?? Getty Images ?? Kenki Fukuoka makes a break during the Sunwolves’ stunning win over the Blues yesterday.
Getty Images Kenki Fukuoka makes a break during the Sunwolves’ stunning win over the Blues yesterday.

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