Herald on Sunday

RUNNING AWAY WITH IT

Crusaders close in on title

- Liam Napier in Hamilton

The Crusaders are one win away from the inaugural Super Rugby Aotearoa title after a controvers­y-tinged victory in Hamilton.

Rebounding from their first home loss in four years, to the Hurricanes last week, the Crusaders compounded the Chiefs’ misery by handing Warren Gatland’s men their eighth straight defeat, one which again put the officials in the spotlight.

The Chiefs have felt dudded by the officials several times this season. Gatland was again left frustrated after a crucial decision midway through the second half helped the Crusaders kick clear.

With 20 minutes remaining and one point separating the teams, Sevu Reece scored after what appeared to be a knock on from Quinten Strange. The Crusaders lock dragged the ball forward with momentum before Reece swooped.

Referee Ben O’Keeffe and television match official Glenn Newman ruled in favour of Reece to hand the visitors an eight-point lead that proved too difficult to overturn.

The Crusaders scored a classy try after Reece’s strike — Richie Mo’unga injecting himself on an inside ball to send Leicester Fainga’anuku over. But Reece’s dubious try influenced the outcome in front of 15,082 locals.

“I thought Sevu Reece’s try was a knock on but you’ve got to take those calls, as we’ve been doing. I can’t deny the Crusaders were outstandin­g in a number of areas,” Gatland said.

“It’s a big call. They see it differentl­y. For me, where the contact with the body is and where the ball bounces, even though he’s run through, it’s definitely going forward, but you’ve got to take that on the chin at the moment. They’re always going to make a mistake or two. The Crusaders deserved the victory; they played exceptiona­lly well.”

Close but not good enough remains the sad story of the Chiefs’ season. Five tries to one again highlights their attacking struggles. Not even Aaron Cruden’s 100th Super Rugby match could inspire them to snap their record losing streak.

Everyone other than Crusaders supporters wanted a Chiefs victory to keep the title race alive but it was not to be. Instead the bonus-point victory celebrates Sam Whitelock’s 150th match and pushes the Crusaders seven points clear of the Blues at the top of the table.

Scott Robertson’s side need only one win from their remaining two fixtures — against the Highlander­s in Christchur­ch and Blues at Eden Park — to claim the crown.

“We are pretty clear on what the table looks like. It’s a big week for us. We know how small the margins are in this competitio­n,” Robertson said. “It would mean everything, especially after last week. Our home record was important to us, so to lose that hurt. We had an honest week and it took everything up here.”

If the Chiefs are searching for positives, they need look no further than Lachlan Boshier, their everywhere man. In another losing effort, Boshier produced a standout performanc­e at the breakdown and lineout, and on defence, and claimed his side’s only try in a 63-minute shift while carrying an ankle knock.

The loose forwards mix for the All Blacks is incredibly competitiv­e but

Boshier continues to state his case.

The Chiefs trailed 17-10 at halftime and never led, chasing the game from the outset after a poor start, particular­ly on defence.

Will Jordan and George Bridge often popped up at first receiver, but whenever Mo’unga challenged the line, the All Blacks first-five was lethal with his stepping and offloading frequently causing havoc.

Sam Cane and Boshier were

supreme defensivel­y and at the breakdown, where they both snaffled turnovers. On attack, fellow Chiefs loose forward Pita Gus Sowakula stormed off the back of the scrum with telling carries.

The Chiefs’ kicking game, however, left a lot to be desired. They kicked too much and inaccurate­ly — too often straight to the Crusaders back three which allowed them repeated counter-attacking chances.

While the Chiefs did well to recover from the opening onslaught and work their way back into the match, they went to the sheds one man short and seven points down.

Shaun Stevenson’s night went from bad to worse when he was yellow carded for intentiona­lly knocking the ball down and Codie Taylor then rumbled 15 metres over from a lineout drive to strike on halftime, as the Crusaders so often do.

Reece’s strike will leave a sour taste for the Chiefs but their losing habit is near impossible to break. With a final round bye, They have one more chance to end this winless run in Wellington next week.

Chiefs 19 (L. Boshier try; D. McKenzie con, 4 pens) Crusaders 32 (T. Sanders, W. Jordan, C. Taylor, S. Reece, L. Fainga’anuku tries; R. Mo’unga 2 cons, pen). HT: 10-17.

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 ?? Photo / Getty Images ?? Quinten Strange appears to knock on in a crucial call for the Crusaders last night.
Photo / Getty Images Quinten Strange appears to knock on in a crucial call for the Crusaders last night.
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