Waikato Herald

Deal needed to keep Cruden longer

- ■ Michael Pulman is a freelance journalist based in Hamilton. Michael Pulman

As their clash against the soon-to-be extinct Sunwolves kicks off in Tokyo on Saturday, perhaps a bigger head scratcher is taking place back at Chiefs HQ in Hamilton.

The Chiefs — and New Zealand Rugby for that matter — should sit down and try to figure out a way to keep Aaron Cruden on these shores because it’s no longer debatable. Both have missed a beat by not securing him for longer.

The services of the 31-year-old have proved invaluable over the course of Super Rugby’s opening fortnight for the Chiefs who are back to playing some truly vintage rugby in their undefeated start.

Cruden’s impact on the rest of what is still a reasonably young squad has also been palpable and it’s been the perfect tonic to go alongside Warren Gatland. Collective­ly they were always destined to shape fortunes toward the better.

Cruden is enjoying his rugby and is clearly happier than he’s been for some time. In the two rounds to start 2020 this team has looked more stable, more certain and have executed their play style in ways that was far too fleeting after Cruden left for the first time in 2017.

Yet it all feels like a fleeting moment in time that will soon be forgotten, because before we know it, Cruden will be departing for Japan at the end of the season to take up a deal with the Kobelco Steelers.

Oh well, it was fun while it lasted.

When Cruden does say sayonara to this team for the second time, are the Chiefs really going to be able to fill the void that will almost certainly be left?

The answer is no, just as it was last time. It’s not to take away from the potential that Kaleb Trask and Tiaan Falcon have in the No.10 jersey. Both are clear and obvious fits in this position long-term. Falcon in particular has been unlucky with injury to start his time at this level.

Trask looked solid in his 40-minutes on debut against the Blues and will get another crack this weekend.

Both youngsters will have learned so much from working underneath the former All Black, but whether that’s enough to provide some certainty at 1st V come 2021 remains to be seen.

But again, it’s also worth noting that growing young talent and turning them into superstars isn’t exactly unheard of in this region, either.

It’s true that the fortunes of a side don’t rest on the shoulders of one player alone, and when media does focus on single names rather than the collective, coaches tend to get grumpy.

But it simply doesn’t negate the fact that, right now, by doing what he’s doing on the field and hearing of his impact in the locker room, Cruden’s impending departure is a disappoint­ment and lost opportunit­y, both for the fans and the team itself.

If the Chiefs do go all the way and win Super Rugby this year, Cruden will likely have played a massive part in that. Just take a look at the opening two rounds.

His impact is just as big as the one Gatland is having, if not bigger.

If there was an opportunit­y to keep his services for longer, surely, it’s one the Chiefs would’ve wanted to lock in place.

What’s also ironic about all this is that when the one-year deal was originally reported, while never questionin­g what Cruden would bring back into the Chiefs environmen­t, many quietly looked at his return as something of a waste of time and a poor use of the salary funds available.

Just two weeks into Super Rugby 2020, such a suggestion is farcical now.

If Cruden does decide to forgo his contractua­l obligation­s in Japan and signal a desire to stay, something that isn’t unheard of with the biggest players, it must be something that New Zealand Rugby and the Chiefs are ready to pull out of the bag, even if that means getting him back here in 2022.

Yes, he will be 33, but it’s already been shown that age is just a number.

If that does happen he wouldn’t be staying for the money, but it might signal a bit of good fortune, however small, that the game in this country desperatel­y needs right now.

 ?? Photo / Photosport ?? Aaron Cruden is at home being rested while the Chiefs meet the Sunwolves in Japan.
Photo / Photosport Aaron Cruden is at home being rested while the Chiefs meet the Sunwolves in Japan.
 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from New Zealand