The New Zealand Herald

Chiefs’ inglorious end down to numbers game

- Kris Shannon

The story of both the Chiefs’ season and their semifinal defeat can be told in two numbers.

The first will prove galling as Dave Rennie and his coaches assess where it all went wrong — zero, as in the competitio­n’s second-highest try scorers failed to cross the line for the first time all year.

The second, though, will provide nothing but encouragem­ent about the franchise’s future — 23, or the average age of the starting XV who ran out at Westpac Stadium on Saturday night.

Together, they capture a campaign that could be called over-achieving, one that met an ignominiou­s end as an injury-hit and youthful side struggled to fire a shot against the Hurricanes.

After scoring 76 tries in 16 games, the Chiefs were unable to find their way across the line for just the third time in Rennie’s five-year reign. They were suffocated by the Hurricanes’ outstandin­g defence, certainly, but they also had themselves to blame after squanderin­g several chances, particular­ly during a frustratin­g firsthalf spell that eventually defined the match.

“We weren’t good enough,” Rennie said. “We created some opportunit­ies but just weren’t clinical enough. I think the couple of balls that were thrown over the sidelines in the last five minutes probably summed up our night.”

The coach pinpointed a few factors to explain his side’s profligacy — finding no solution to the opposition’s relentless line speed, an inability to feed the right man at the right moment, leaving “our hands in Africa”. The travel was never used as an excuse, though the Chiefs must look back with regret at the finalround defeat in Dunedin, where they could have locked up home advantage throughout the playoffs.

One mitigating reason possibly behind that setback — although it was never used by Rennie — was the Chiefs’ relative inexperien­ce. In addition to the average age, there were another couple of figures to consider — the 15 players the Chiefs lost over- seas at the conclusion of the previous campaign and the 12 men who missed the semifinal through injury.

Rennie will once more be at the helm of that group, chasing a third title that has proven elusive since winning the competitio­n in consecutiv­e seasons to begin his tenure. Given the Chiefs had reached the playoffs only twice before Rennie arrived to punch a post-season ticket five years in a row, his legacy is already secure.

But it was with mixed emotions that he viewed the state of the Chiefs.

“Whenever you lose, you’re thinking about what happened [in the game], as opposed to what we achieved over the last few months,” the coach said. “But from a club point of view, we’re in good shape.”

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from New Zealand