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Chiefs top Highlanders; Blues defeat Force

  • 5 hours ago
  • 3 min read

Updated: 1 hour ago

Quinn Tupaea offloads in the Chiefs win over the Highlanders PHOTO: JOHN CASWELL/LINTOTT PHOTOGRAPHY
Quinn Tupaea offloads in the Chiefs win over the Highlanders PHOTO: JOHN CASWELL/LINTOTT PHOTOGRAPHY

Away winners in the second round of Super Rugby Pacific, but both the Blues and Chiefs didn't cement the victories quite how they wanted.


The Chiefs survived a fierce effort from the Highlanders to record a quality 26-23 win in Dunedin.


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It makes it eight straight wins for the Chiefs against the Highlanders, starting their year with two quality away wins.


The Highlanders were playing with emotion after the tragic passing of prop Angus Ta’avao’s son Leo, with a moving tribute paid to him before the game.


Jona Nareki got the hosts off to the perfect start when a perfect cut-out from Folau Fakatava created the space for the winger to eventually cross.


Samisoni Taukei’aho responded for the Chiefs at the back of a powerful rolling maul to level the scores after nine minutes.


The visitors, who lost Jahrome Brown early to a HIA, started to break the Highlanders open through their wingers, forcing some desperate scramble defence.


Eventually, a wild period of play led to a spectacular Leroy Carter try, and the Chiefs led at the break.


Quinn Tuapea was the mastermind, catching the Highlanders napping after watching a cross-field kick fly just out of the reach of Sean Withy.


Tuapea proceeded to take the resulting lineout drop out quickly and race clear, finding his fellow All Black Carter for the five-pointer.


Cameron Millar reduced the margin to a point after the break with two early second-half penalties, only for another deadly Chiefs counterattack to turn the momentum.


Locks Josh Lord and Tupou Vaa’i combined for a stunning 90 metre effort and while Vaa’i was brought down, Nareki would go to the bin for a professional foul.


The hosts rallied and stopped several certain tries, with Taukei’aho held up and Simon Parker denied after failing to control the wicked bounce from Kyren Taumoefolau’s kick.


But as soon as Nareki returned from the bin, Taukei’aho got his second thanks to an errand line-out five metres from the Highlanders lineout that landed in the hooker’s grasp. Kalyum Boshier extended the lead with 13 minutes to go, giving the Chiefs a 13-point.


Caleb Tanigtau and Veveni Lasaqa both scored in the final ten minutes to record a losing bonus point, with missed conversions ending any hopes of an emotional victory.


Meanwhile the Blues scored a 42-32 away win over the Force in Perth crossing for six tries in total - all converted.


the victory extended the Blues' winning streak over the Force to 14 matches and consigned Simon Cron's Perth side to a sorry eighth successive Super Rugby Pacific defeat stretching back to round eight last year.


The Force had snatched an unlikely 17-14 halftime lead when Tizzano - the competition's top try scorer last season - forced his way over after the siren had sounded.


Despite prop Harry Johnson-Holmes barging over for an 11th-minute try and three goals from the flawless boot of flyhalf Ben Donaldson, the Force had trailed after two first-half strikes from goalkicking No.10 Stephen Perofeta and prop Josh Fusitu'a.


he Blues ran in four tries to two after the interval to follow up a hard-fought 26-23 loss to the Chiefs last week in their season opener.

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