The Chiefs will face the toughest test to their unbeaten start to the Super Rugby Pacific season since it began with an upset over the Crusaders when they take on the Blues on Saturday (5.05pm AEDT) in a sixth round match.
After their shock first round win over the defending champions, the Chiefs have padded their 5-0 record with wins over lowly ranked teams. They now face the fourth placed Blues, who have a 3-2 record and a large contingent of All Blacks but are playing below the level that such squad strength should guarantee.
The Chiefs enter Saturday’s home match on the back of an uninspiring win over the NSW Waratahs, while the Blues had an equally unimpressive win over the Western Force in a match in which most of their All Blacks were rested.
The Chiefs have a break next week and will follow that with testing matches against the Hurricanes and Fijian Drua before they face the Crusaders for a second time. The Blues will face the Melbourne Rebels, Drua and Moana Pasifika before they again play the Crusaders, to whom they lost 34-28 in round four.
The next few rounds likely will have a major role in shaping the top four.
The Blues season would benefit a great deal from a win over the Chiefs, at least from a sustained performance. Again this season, they have a tendency to fade late in matches.
While the Blues beat the Force comfortably and did so without most of their international stars, it was a performance they likely would want to move on from.
“We’ll turn this round quickly,” head coach Leon MacDonald said.
“We’re going to have about 13 new players turning up Monday pretty fresh after a break and pretty excited about the week ahead.”
MacDonald said the Blues players are looking forward to taking on the Chiefs on the home ground.
“We love that challenge,” he said. “It’s definitely one of the games the guys get up for. Hamilton is a place we like to go and win at. It’s one of the better feelings in rugby.
“We know we can play a game that can beat them if we’re on. We’re backing ourselves to go there and get the job done.”
Coach Cameron McMillan acknowledged the Chiefs win over the Waratahs was far from perfect but said often it is better to win ugly than “lose pretty.”
“Our ball carrying height was pretty poor,” McMillan said.
“We carried high. We allowed them to get two people in the tackle. It was slow. We weren’t getting to ground on our terms.
“Everyone has games like that. You scrap to the end and you wish you had played a lot better. But that’s the beauty of our game – there are always things to work on.”
The Blues and Chiefs are neighbours, separated by the Bombay Hills which divide Auckland from Waikato. That adds intensity to their matches.
“The Blues are a team that we always love playing,” McMillan said.
“It’s the Battle of the Bombays. We only get them once this year in round robin play, so that adds to the motivation.”
CHIEFS (15-1): Shaun Stevenson, Emoni Narawa, Daniel Roma, Rameka Poihipi, Etene Nanai-Seturo, Damian McKenzie, Brad Weber (co-c), Luke Jacobson, Sam Cane, Samipeni Finau, Tupou Vaa’i, Brodie Retallick, John Ryan, Samisoni Taukei’aho, Ollie Norris
Reserves: Tyrone Thompson, Aidan Ross, George Dyer, Naitoa, Pita Gus Sowakula, Cortez Ratima, Bryn Gatland, Liam Coombes-Fabling
BLUES (15-1): Stephen Perofeta, AJ Lam, Rieko Ioane, Harry Plummer, Caleb Clarke, Beauden Barrett, Finlay Christie, Hoskins Sotutu, Dalton Papalii (c), Anton Segner, Sam Darry, Cameron Suafoa, Nepo Laulala, Ricky Riccitelli, Jordan Lay
Reserves: Kurt Eklund, Ofa Tuungafasi, James Lay, Patrick Tuipulotu, Tom Robinson, Sam Nock, Corey Evans, Jacob Ratumaitavuki-Kneepkens/Zarn Sullivan
Referee: Angus Gardner