The New Zealand Herald

Controvers­ial late calls frustrate Lienert-Brown

- Liam Napier

Anton Lienert-Brown could not conceal his frustratio­n as the Chiefs fell to a franchise-record seventh straight defeat following their 21-17 loss to the Blues at Eden Park yesterday.

The All Blacks and Chiefs midfielder was adamant No 8 Pita Gus Sowakula scored under a heap of bodies during a late surge for the line and made his feelings clear about Brendon Pickerill opting not to consult his officials to check a possible match-winning try.

“In big moments, we’ve got the TMO for a reason,” Lienert-Brown told Newstalk ZB after the final whistle. “We’ve been on the wrong side of a lot of calls this whole year, and when it counted, when we needed it, why not go upstairs? I was a little bit frustrated. In a massive moment, I think we’ve got to use the TMO.

“We are proud, we dug deep, but didn’t get the win. That’s the frustratin­g thing. We need to be better in crucial moments. We had 10 minutes there when we needed to score a try and we didn’t. We’ll go away and work on that but I can’t fault the effort.

“These are like test matches and you’ve got to win big moments and we’re on the wrong side of them at the moment.”

The Chiefs will rue other telling moments after recovering from an early 14-0 deficit, such as taking a tap rather than the scrum five metres out from the Blues line with time almost up, and Aaron Cruden’s crossfield kick that fell inches short of Adam Thomson’s grasp.

Last week in their second-half capitulati­on against the Highlander­s in Hamilton, the Chiefs were on the wrong side of another call when Damian McKenzie had his try ruled out after the television match official went back further than the specified two phases to find a knock on.

Warren Gatland’s desperate team can’t catch a break — this run of seven successive losses is the worst in their history.

“The referee was very confident he’d made the right call, so there’s no point in us dwelling on that. We’ve got to accept those decisions at the moment,” Gatland said. “We’re disappoint­ed but I was proud of the effort.

“I’ve made some comments in the past about us being a bit unlucky and then I’ve been accused of being a whinger, so I promise you I’m not going to whinge about that, I’ve got to take that on the chin and start thinking about the Crusaders next week.

“When you’ve been coaching a long time, it’s not the first time you’ve been in a situation where you’ve dropped a few games. It’s how you respond to that. We’re training and preparing well. For me, it’s about embracing the challenge and making sure I question myself each week about are we doing the right things.”

Gatland indicated Chiefs captain Sam Cane should recover from his knock after finishing the match but wing Solomon Alaimalo is expected to be out for an extended period after popping his shoulder after scoring one of his side’s two tries.

“His shoulder doesn’t look great. He scored and Caleb Clarke has come in and tackled him — I don’t think there’s anything in that but it looks like he’s popped his shoulder from that.”

Blues coach Leon MacDonald lamented his side’s ill-discipline — conceding a 15-6 penalty count to continuall­y invite the Chiefs back into the contest — but was thankful to rebound from two defeats and remain in the title hunt.

“If you offered up four wins and two losses at the start of the year to give us an opportunit­y to still be alive in the competitio­n, we’d take that,” MacDonald said. “We’re happy with where we’re sitting. We’ve got two massive games ahead of us. It starts with the Highlander­s in Dunedin, which is going to be a massive battle.

“The margins are ridiculous­ly small. Without being unkind to the Crusaders, they could easily have dropped a couple, and we could’ve, too. Results could be different for everyone.”

 ?? Photo / Getty Images ?? Anton Lienert-Brown and Sam Cane commiserat­e in defeat.
Photo / Getty Images Anton Lienert-Brown and Sam Cane commiserat­e in defeat.

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