Sunday Star-Times

Chiefs eye hard work to help fix exposed flaws

- AARON GOILE

The scorelines in these pre-season clashes are effectivel­y meaningles­s, but nonetheles­s being on the end of a 45-19 result against the Blues will certainly have new Chiefs coach Colin Cooper on alert.

The man taking over at the franchise from Dave Rennie finally got the chance to see his troops in action on Friday afternoon in Te Kuiti, in an outing which showed up some clear areas of improvemen­t required for the Chiefs three weeks out from their seasonopen­er.

It’s always tough to get a gauge on these games when All Blacks and several senior players are sitting out, as 30-plus others – unfamiliar names included – get the first run of the new year. But while there were glimpses of sizzling attack from the Chiefs early in the piece when their stronger side matched the Blues to 14-14 at halftime in the four-quarter fixture, the visitors then powered away with a 17-0 effort in the third spell thanks to some powerful work up front.

That’s an area Cooper will take pride in getting right – labelling the biggest difference between him and Rennie being that ‘‘I’m a forwards coach, he’s a backs coach’’ – and will also be a big mandate of forwards coach Neil Barnes.

Cooper said there were still ‘‘a lot of things’’ he liked, and it would be ‘‘pretty simple’’ to review the first outing and get things heading in the right direction, as he gets to grips with his new role.

‘‘You’ve got to connect players I’ve never coached with with, I’m connecting with coaches I’ve never worked with either,’’ he said. ‘‘We’re going to go through that teething, and the quicker we can accelerate through that, the better for the team.’’

After three months on the training paddock, he was just happy to have seen his players under pressure, which means he can offer more accurate feedback.

‘‘We were just looking at individual­s, so there’s some individual­s that put their hand up, and as a group of coaches we can have a look at stuff that worked and that didn’t work,’’ Cooper said.

‘‘At times our scrum went well, at times our D[efence], our gain line went well, at times our maps went well, our little skills were good at times, then we let ourselves down – we were giving too many penalties away and we couldn’t stop the lineout drive, four tries from lineout drives. That’s an area where we’re going to have work on.

‘‘But more importantl­y, the lineout came from penalties. So down in their defensive were letting them out of that was disappoint­ing.’’

The big positive was that there were no injury concerns out of the game – barring the question mark around flanker Lachlan Boshier, who came off with concussion symptoms – as the Chiefs now turn their attention to the Brisbane 10s

We’re going to go through that teething, and the quicker we can accelerate through that, the better for the team. Colin Cooper, left

zone we there. So next Friday and Saturday. The defending champions have named a squad of 24 for that, which will also see Sefo Kautai, Mitchell Brown, Liam Messam, Marty McKenzie and Toni Pulu return to the mix.

The Chiefs will then stay on in Australia and play the Brumbies on the Sunshine Coast in a final warmup game on February 14 – in a match where Cooper will reintegrat­e his All Blacks for stints of less than 80 minutes – before they eye up a tough season-opener against the defending champion Crusaders in Christchur­ch on February 24.

And indeed with a team featuring several high-profile departures, it’s sure going to be a challenge for the new coach on his return to a Super Rugby competitio­n he was last involved in in 2010.

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