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Rugby: Chiefs' title defence in real doubt

By Kris Shannon

The Chiefs were left dejected after their fifth loss of the season threw their title defence into real doubt. Photo / Getty
The Chiefs were left dejected after their fifth loss of the season threw their title defence into real doubt. Photo / Getty

Chiefs 17
Waratahs 33

When Dave Rennie described today's clash with the Waratahs as season-defining, this was far from what the coach had in mind.

The Chiefs' title defence suffered a serious, perhaps fatal blow in the Waratahs' gutsy win in New Plymouth and the question now for the defending champions will be whether they can even make the playoffs.

If they were humiliated last week against the Hurricanes, this was arguably worse for the Chiefs. While the Waratahs showed why they are second overall in Super Rugby, this was a match the Chiefs of old would have won.

They hung on for dear life in a woeful first half that saw them lucky to be only 10 points behind, and they took the lead late in the game through Bundee Aki's double off the bench. But rather than close out victory against a tiring opposition, the Chiefs fell asleep in defence and fell behind on the scoreboard when Waratahs captain Dave Dennis secured a deserved four points.

His try also saw the Chiefs come away empty-handed and left staring at a six-point gap between themselves and the New Zealand conference-leading Crusaders, with three matches remaining after the international window.

The month off will hardly be a pleasant break for Rennie, coming after a fifth defeat and second on the trot, an ugly pair of results that suggested victory over the Blues before their bye was merely a false dawn.

The Chiefs have struggled for much of the campaign, performing at their best exclusively in patches as the rest of the competition quickly created a blueprint to negate their strengths.

Last season's leading scorers managed just one spell of sustained possession inside the opposition 22 during the first half of today's match - and that came after the hooter.

The Chiefs failed to retain the ball for much of the match, with errors and turnovers as ever-present as they have been all season.

Make no mistake, though, the Waratahs deserve ample credit for their influence on proceedings. Without the ball, they were swarming, aggressive in their line speed and confrontational at the contact area, before tiring as the Chiefs grabbed a brief lead.

The champs' aura of invincibility is well and truly diminished at this point and the Waratahs treated their opposition as if they were the competition's bottom-feeders. And the visitors were equally impressive in attack, easily the more incisive of a pair of powerful backlines, prevented from further points only by the Chiefs' scrambling defence.

The Waratahs enjoyed clear advantages in every attacking statistic and it was surprising to see Israel Folau's try as the sum total of their efforts in the opening half.

Far from rescuing his side's season, Aaron Cruden appeared rusty in his first start in seven weeks, although his clever kick created Aki's first try, a feat repeated by Tom Marshall moments later.

But the lead was short-lived as Dennis and Bernard Foley managed late tries to seal victory, leaving the Chiefs' title defence in real doubt.

Chiefs 17 (Aki 2 tries; Cruden pen, 2 cons)
Waratahs 33 (Folau, Dennis, Foley tries; Foley 3 pens, 3 cons, Beale pen)
HT: 3-13

- APNZ

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