CHIEFS complete Hurricanes blowout
Super 12: Hurricanes v Chiefs, WestpacTrust Stadium
COW BELLS rang in victory while the home crowd sat silent and stunned after seeing the Hurricanes thrashed 51-27 by a rampant Chiefs squad.
Expecting the hometown
Hurricanes to continue their charge to Super 12 glory with a
fifth consecutive win the fans packed the stadium and were
rewarded for their faith when after only three minutes quick
hands and a Norm Hewitt pirouette enabled Paul Steinmetz to
find the space to dash in to score the opening
try.
However if it was meant to be a Hurricanes day
someone forgot to tell the Chiefs and despite falling behind
they promptly started to take control of the game and
actually crossed the line three times before their dominance
finally paid off in the 33rd minute when from a tap burly
centre Keith Lowen scored to give the northerners a 10-5
lead with 1st five eighth David Hill's conversion.
At
this stage the Chiefs pack with backrowers Deon Muir, Marty
Holah and Jonno Gibbes especially prominant were allover the
Hurricanes eight and after winning a turnover Holah broke
clear beating several tacklers before passing to Muir who
fed pacy wing Bruce Reihana who ran in a spectacular try.
From the kick-off following Hill's conversion the
Chiefs attacked again and from a simply worked lefto Reihana
scored his second to give his team a 22-5 half-time
lead.
Maintaining their dominance up-front and holding
a monopoly on possession and territory the Chiefs with a new
pivot in Glen Jackson continued their form into the second
half.
Jackson slotted a couple of penalties as the
Hurricanes were forced into desperate defence and Reihana
earned his hatrick of tries when pressure rugby
paid off
allowing him to capitalise on a loose ball and sprint 50
metres to score.
At 35-5 the Hurricanes looked down
and out but they regained some pride and proved their worth
when tries to Brent Thompson, Jason Spice and Daryl Lilley -
scored in a thrilling ten minute period - took the score to
38-27 and sparked a sense of possible
revival.
Unfortunately time wasn't on the Hurricanes
side and ten minutes of sublime skill wasn't enough to
overtake a Chiefs team whose rugged forward domination and
hard running backplay had earned a deserved lead.
And
with two more Jackson penalties and a last minute Michael
Collins try the Chiefs highlight their control by securing a
very convincing 51-27 victory that will go a long way toward
gaining them a semi-final
berth.