Manawatu Standard

Chiefs set to rest raft of players for Blues clash

- Aaron Goile

As much as assistant coach David Hill tried to deny it, the Chiefs look set to keep their powder very much dry for the Super Rugby Aotearoa final.

With their place in the May 8 decider against the Crusaders in Christchur­ch locked in, the Chiefs have the luxury of a dead rubber final-round clash against the Blues in Auckland on Saturday night, which they can use in whatever way they feel will give them the best preparatio­n for the big one.

And by the look of their training yesterday at their Ruakura headquarte­rs, the visitors to Eden Park are indeed going to make a raft of changes to their lineup, as they rest their big guns for next weekend.

Star playmaker Damian Mckenzie – matchwinne­r from the past four games – has played every minute of the campaign so far and will be the most obvious man to freshen up.

Fellow All Blacks Anton Lienert-brown (all but 40 minutes), Brad Weber (started every game) and Tupou Vaa’i (missed one with concussion and started the rest) are others, while the likes of prop

Angus Ta’avao, hooker Samisoni Taukei’aho, flanker Mitchell Brown and winger Etene Nanai-seturo have also logged big minutes, and two-test loosie Luke Jacobson could be given an extra week to ease back from a concussion issue. Fronting media prior to training, Hill tried to suggest the Chiefs wouldn’t go down the rest and rotation route, for a Battle of the Bombays he said was their ‘‘biggest rivalry’’.

‘‘I don’t think we’re willing to rest anyone,’’ he said. ‘‘We had a pile of players come in Monday morning ready to play again. So they’re obviously enjoying their rugby, they’re always keen to play and pull on the Chiefs jersey. And, I think playing the Blues, that rivalry has got a few of them pretty excited.’’

But, even if it kills the Chiefs’ winning momentum – now five victories on the trot – the bigger picture will most surely be at the forefront of the coaches’ minds.

Making that an even easier decision is the team’s draw, which saw their byes come in rounds one and six, meaning two lots of four games in a row. That becomes five this time with the final, then the trans-tasman competitio­n starts straight after and that’s 10 on the trot, and if they were to make the decider of that one, it’s a whopping 11.

The Chiefs are already counting the cost of the brutal all-kiwi comp, with yesterday’s announceme­nt that a trio of loose forwards – Kaylum Boshier, Mitchell Karpik and Simon Parker – had been ruled out for the rest of the Super season.

That has seen Tom Florence and Liam Messam called in, and they could potentiall­y take the park as soon as this weekend.

Hill also confirmed injured midfielder Quinn Tupaea has been replaced bywaikato utility Gideon Wrampling for just the rest of the Aotearoa campaign.

 ??  ?? Damian Mckenzie
Damian Mckenzie

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