logo
Super Rugby Pacific: Five takeaways from Moana Pasifika's loss to Chiefs

Super Rugby Pacific: Five takeaways from Moana Pasifika's loss to Chiefs

RNZ News25-05-2025

Wallace Sititi of the Chiefs.
Photo:
Jeremy Ward/Photosport
There was one thing both Fa'alogo Tana Umaga and Ardie Savea agreed on about the Chiefs on Saturday night.
Following the 85-7 thrashing at FMG Stadium in Hamilton in front of 17,666 fans, the Moana Pasifika head boys both stated that they, Moana Pasifika, still need to grow.
To grow from what they are to a championship side that the Chiefs showed they are.
Both agreed their host were ruthless, precise and too clinical across the field, and denied Moana Pasifika any real chance to get any momentum going.
In the end, the two conceded their players were hurting and the team will need to figure out what went wrong and return better prepared for their last competition game against the Hurricanes in the new week.
So what went wrong?
Umaga said they just didn't get the chance to fire their own shots against the Chiefs.
Well, they did get a few - one resulted in a try by Savea after the second half started.
Two or three others, slim chances, were lost in the procession of trying to organise themselves, either through turnovers or knock-ons.
Oh, yes there were two yellow cards that went against them - which proved critical because in the process of being down one man at each part of the game when Patrick Pellegrini then Samuel Slade got sent off to cool off for 10 minutes on the sideline, the Chiefs raked up around 20 points.
Many may ask, did the hard fought win over the Blues the weekend before took its toll on the players?
Were the players mentally tuned on for the Chiefs game?
That is something Umaga and his coaching and leadership team will need to review, moving forward.
And in the process, also take note of the five learning from the weekend.
In rugby, having the possession, the ball, in hand is a prerequisite of having the chance to chance to make play and something happen.
The Chiefs knew that and their focus, as their head coach Clayton McMillan said, was to deny Moana Pasifika any chance of getting into a roll.
Moana Pasifika had about 20 percent of possession, the Chiefs enjoyed around 80 percent, the result in the end telling the story.
Knowing that Moana Pasifika had a mobile pack that could do damage if they started rolling and had the momentum they needed, Chiefs captain Luke Jacobson rallied his own pack to win the collisions, secure the set-pieces and defended like demon possessed.
Jacobson said that was the message they were given.
Umaga conceded the Chiefs were just ruthless and clinical across the field.
It proved to be the difference in the end.
Savea conceded his side just could not respond to the pressure they were under.
He said they tried everything they could think off but the Chiefs were just too good.
It is an area Savea pointed to as a key issue they would need to work on in the new week as they prepare for their must win game against the Hurricanes, if they are to secure a top six finish.
If there is something Moana Pasifika will focus on this coming week, it is turning the lessons they have learned into positives.
Savea said the players were down in spirit but he urged them to stay focused on the next job and turn those negatives into positives.
It will be a tough challenge, especially coming off a big loss and heading to Sky Stadium to meet the Hurricanes.
But Umaga believes his men can do that and lift their performance one more time.
The Chiefs, according to Umaga, have shown that they are on a different level at the moment, heading into the play-offs.
They have raised the par one more time and showed, not only Moana Pasifika, that they are a serious challenger for the top title.
Moana Pasifika will need to lift themselves to that standard.
A new week of preparation.
One more game to go.
Making sure the lessons are learned and put into practise will be a key to improve performance in last and final round of the regular competition games.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

More recognition for New Zealand's queen of cycling
More recognition for New Zealand's queen of cycling

RNZ News

time2 hours ago

  • RNZ News

More recognition for New Zealand's queen of cycling

Ellesse Andrews on the podium at last year's Paris Olympic Games where she won two gold and one silver medal. Photo: Alex Whitehead/ The most successful cyclist in New Zealand Olympic history has dedicated her latest honour to the people who supported her decorated career - and it isn't over yet. Four-time Olympic medallist and double Olympic champion Ellesse Andrews has been made a Member of the New Zealand Order of Merit (MNZM) in this year's King's Birthday Honours for services to cycling. The 25-year-old sprinter said front of mind was her parents who were there when it all began. Her father, John Andrews, was no stranger to the cutthroat world of elite cycling when he introduced his young daughter to the sport. He won a Commonwealth Games bronze medal in the time trial, and knew the speeds she would be reaching when she raced the steeply banked oval tracks of the velodrome. He also wore the silver fern at the 1992 Olympics in Barcelona and at the 1994 Commonwealth Games in Victoria. While mother Angela Mote-Andrews knew about competing on two wheels as an elite mountainbiker. Currently competing in Japan with the New Zealand team, Andrews said the honour was a bolt from the blue. "It means a lot to me but also really signifies the support that I have to had to get to this point," Andrews said. "Absolutely my family, my friends and everyone has been so supportive and I guess beyond that the community that we have within cycling in New Zealand." Andrews grew up in Luggate and attended Wānaka Primary School and Mount Aspiring College until her final two years when she attended St Peter's in Cambridge. She set new standards in the sport after winning gold medals in the Women's Sprint and Keirin along with a silver medal in the Women's Team Sprint at last year's Paris Olympic Games. She became the first New Zealand cyclist to win two gold medals and three medals in total at a single Olympics. Together with the silver medal she attained in the 2021 Tokyo Olympic Games, taking her Olympic medal haul to four medals. The previous best was two medals won by cyclist Hayden Roulston at the Beijing Olympic Games in 2008. Alongside her Olympic medals, Andrews won the the Keirin title at the World Track Cycling Championships in Glasgow in 2023. She also won three gold medals at the 2022 Birmingham Commonwealth Games. While the medals on the track have come thick and fast, she didn't have an honour like this on her radar. "I didn't really expect it at all so it was really a massive surprise to read the email and then to see it come out today - yes, it's a huge privilege." "I'm really proud to have been a part of it and I'm really proud to go out there on the world stage and really to continue to put New Zealand on the map because we have so many talented riders." Sign up for Ngā Pitopito Kōrero , a daily newsletter curated by our editors and delivered straight to your inbox every weekday.

Auckland City's Club World Cup campaign includes football giants
Auckland City's Club World Cup campaign includes football giants

RNZ News

time2 hours ago

  • RNZ News

Auckland City's Club World Cup campaign includes football giants

Auckland City striker Angus Kilkolly and Bayern Munich striker Harry Kane will play in the same group at the Club World Cup. Photo: Photosport/AFP A "bunch of amateurs from New Zealand" will live out their football dreams at the Club World Cup. Auckland City are the only amateur side to qualify for the expanded 32-team tournament in the USA, starting on 15 June. Auckland have represented Oceania 11 times at the Club World Cup with a best result of a third place in 2014. But this year is different. This year Auckland City have been drawn in the same group as six-time European champions Bayern Munich, Portuguese heavyweights Benfica and Argentina's Boca Juniors. Auckland's high profile opponents have brought a lot of attention to what the club are trying to accomplish, striker Angus Kilkolly said. "But at the same time, we're still a bunch of amateurs from New Zealand who dream of playing football on the world stage, and then go there and do the best we can." Auckland City, a club established just 21 years ago, may lack the history of some clubs at the tournament and operate with a smaller budget without the same state-of-the-art facilities of powerhouse professional sides, but the Club World Cup could be the "peak" of some players' careers and is an opportunity for the club to reach new audiences. When the draw for the tournament was made in late 2024 Auckland City general manager Gordon Watson said the club's story "resonates not just with football fans but with people from all walks of life". "Representing Mount Roskill, Mount Albert, Sandringham, and all corners of our domestic football pyramid-including the wider Pacific region-is both a privilege and a responsibility," Watson said. Angus Kilkolly of Auckland City FC celebrates his goal with Nathan Lobo. Photo: Andrew Cornaga/ This tournament will be the fifth time that Kilkolly has played a Club World Cup, once previously with Team Wellington and the rest with Auckland. To be drawn in Group C "was probably what we all kind of dreamed about", Kilkolly said. "No matter who we got drawn against we would have been underdogs regardless. So I'd rather be an underdog against some of the powerhouses of European football and South American football. "For us to be drawn against some household names and playing against some household sort of players, in a sense, I don't think we could have wanted anything different, really." Kilkolly has nothing but good memories from playing football in different parts of the world with Auckland City since he joined the club in 2020, and he recognised what this type of tournament could do for his team mates and him. "We've got some young boys who are obviously hoping to go and have careers in pro football so this is a great opportunity for them to test themselves and see if they're at that level, or how far away they are from that level. "We've got other players, probably the bracket I'm more in, who have been to a few Club World Cups this is probably the peak of our careers. "I think we're going there a little bit naive and going there for dream and a bit of a hope that we can come back with our own special story." By expanding the Club World Cup, FIFA has changed the way it is run. The format mirrors a 32-team international World Cup. Eight groups of four teams in each. The top two teams from each group will make it through the last 16, while the bottom two teams in each group will be eliminated. Cross over games will happen with the last 16, with the winners of those games moving on to the quarterfinals, semifinals and final. "Normally would go to a tournament that has seven teams" Kikolly said, "Would play a one off game. If we win, we play another one. If we lose, we come back. "The difference with this one is we get a group stage. We know we've got guaranteed of three games in the tournament. "A big positive for us is sometimes these previous Club World Cup games, we maybe took 30 minutes to get up to the speed, because the speed is a completely different level to what we used to. So to have three games, it gives us an opportunity to really get to our peak and show what we are capable of." More games also meant more opportunities for playing minutes for the wider squad. "Normally it's a one off game you might only have the starting 11 and three or four subs, so there definitely is spots up for grabs in every game, and with tournament football I don't know if anyone's really fit enough to play back to back 90s the whole way through." When Auckland City arrive in USA they will have a training camp, play some friendly games against Philadelphia Union before facing UAE giants Al Ain FC, and then a week later go into the FIFA bubble. "We're giving ourselves the best opportunity to get over there early, get climatised, play against some good opposition, so when that first game does come around, it's not as big of a jump as it would be going straight from New Zealand to there." Bayern Munich's Harry Kane. Photo: INA FASSBENDER Several European players and coaches have raised concerns over player welfare with the revamped Club World Cup meaning less time off between seasons. Bayern Munich's striker and England captain Harry Kane was vocal about the increased games and shorter rest periods. "I don't think the players are listened to that much, if I'm totally honest. But also everyone wants their piece, their tournament, their prize, and the players are kind of the people who have to get on with it," Kane said. "But it is what it is. I love playing football, so I'm never going to complain about playing football. I think if you manage it well, with your coaches and your manager and your clubs, there are ways of getting more rest in certain moments. "But it's not an easy question, it's not an easy situation. I think there could be a balance from both sides, but we'd have to see how that pans out." The Professional Footballers' Association has also taken legal action against FIFA, calling the football calendar "overloaded and unmanageable." According to FIFPRO, the global union for professional players, Club World Cup-bound players are among the most overworked for the 2024/25 season already, with Benfica's Kerem Akturkoglu making the most appearances (55) followed by the likes of Real Madrid's Luka Modric (54); Atletico Madrid's Julian Alvarez and Real's Federico Valverde are among players on 53 appearances up until 1 April. It is estimated that Uruguayan Valverde, who has made 43 back-to-back appearances up until 1 April with less than five days of recovery time prior to these matches, could potentially reach 65 back-to-back appearances for club and country come the end of the season, racking up close to 7000 minutes and 78 games. Auckland City play in the New Zealand domestic football competition (Northern League, National League Championship and Chatham Cup) and Oceania Football Confederation (OFC) Champions League. Auckland City FC captain Mario Ilich celebrates with trophy and team. Birkenhead United FC v Auckland City FC, Men's National League Football final at North Harbour Stadium, Auckland. Photo: Andrew Cornaga/ The build-up to the Club World Cup has included 19 matches across three competitions since March. "Our schedules are hectic for an amateur team that everyone works sort of 40 hours a week to be playing 45 games. That definitely takes its toll and it is a big sacrifice being made by everyone to keep giving the club success," Kilkolly said. Auckland will take a squad of up to 27 players to the USA. Before they left for the tournament on 2 June, they played a Northern League game against West Coast Rangers on the May 30 and a Chatham Cup game against Onehunga Mangere United the following day. Kilkolly could see the benefit of two games in three days before travelling across the world. "When there is a lot of games in a short period of time, it does make it easier to make sure everyone is match fit, because everyone wants to be going to America fully fit, fully ready to play and contribute as much as they can to the team." Auckland City captain and defender Mario Ilich made his debut in 2012 and has been a stalwart of the defence ever since, playing 161 matches and even scoring 13 goals. A typical day in his life reflects the balance Auckland players need to find to keep playing. "Wake up at 5am, gym, breakfast, then off to work by 7.30, finish by 5, straight to training for two hours, home by 8.30 or 9, dinner, and then do it all again." Similar to Kane, Auckland players also give up time off (annual leave) to attend to the Club World Cup. "For a lot of us our workplaces understand the enormity of what we're going to do. My manager loves football, so he understands it's an awesome experience for me," Kilkolly said. "On the downside of it, I won't have any annual leave left when I get back. There won't be any other trips coming up anytime soon." Bayern Munich - The most successful club in German football history celebrated the first of their 34 league titles in 1932. Bayern won 11 consecutive league titles between 2013 and 2023 and won the latest season 2024/25. The club has also had success outside Germany with six UEFA Champions League titles (previously the European Cup), two Intercontinental Cups and two FIFA Club World Cup trophies. Bayern won the Club World Cup for the first time in 2013 and again in 2021. Notable players include England captain centre forward Harry Kane, German midfielders Jamal Musiala and Joshua Kimmich, French winger Michael Olise and Canadian left back Alphonso Davies who is currently injured. German forward Leroy Sané could be gone by the time the Club World Cup starts and former German international striker and club legend Thomas Müller is leaving at season's end which might mean he doesn't play in the Club World Cup. SL Benfica players Photo: VALTER GOUVEIA Benfica - The club from Lisbon has more than 120 years of history and has spent 91 years in Portugal's top flight competition. The club is celebrated for historic European Cup victories and a world-class academy. Benfica won the Portuguese League Cup for the eighth time in the 2024/25 season and finished second in the premier competition. Notable players include Spanish midfielder Álvaro Carreras, Portugal centre back António Silva and Greek centre forward Vangelis Pavlidis. Boca Juniors' midfielder #22 Kevin Zenon Photo: ALEJANDRO PAGNI Boca Juniors - One of South America's most decorated clubs was formed in 1905 and has gone on to be one of the most successful clubs in the world. The Argentinian powerhouse has 18 international titles and 52 domestic crowns including six Copa Libertadores title. Often associated with Diego Maradona and a fervent fanbase. Notable players include winger Kevin Zenón, Uruguay forward Miguel Merentiel and left back Lautaro Blanco Europe: Real Madrid, Atletico Madrid, Manchester City, Chelsea, Borussia Dortmund, Paris Saint-Germain, Juventus, Inter Milan, FC Porto, FC Salzburg. South America: Palmeiras, Flamengo, Fluminense, River Plate, Botafogo. North and Central America and the Caribbean: Pachuca, Monterrey, Seattle Sounders, Inter Miami, Los Angeles FC Africa: Al Ahly, Wydad, Esperance de Tunis, Mamelodi Sundowns Asia: Al Hilal, Al-Ain, Urawa Red Diamonds, Ulsan HD Paris Saint-Germain players Desire Doue (L) and Marquinhos celebrate after their Champions League quarter-final second-leg match against Aston Villa. Photo: AFP The winners of this year's tournament will earn up to $218 million, FIFA said, from a total prize pot of $1.74 billion. About half of the total prize money will be divided between all 32 clubs, with the amount per club based on sporting and commercial criteria, meaning clubs such as Manchester City and Real Madrid will receive a greater percentage than smaller clubs. A further $827 million will be awarded on a performance-related basis. Auckland City are set to receive $6.25 million for participating, as well as a potential $2.5 million for any win. The tournament will be held in 12 stadiums around the USA from 16 June -14 July.

In-form Billy Proctor wary of 'desperate' Moana Pasifika
In-form Billy Proctor wary of 'desperate' Moana Pasifika

1News

time5 hours ago

  • 1News

In-form Billy Proctor wary of 'desperate' Moana Pasifika

In-form Hurricanes midfielder Billy Proctor, a man who will have attracted the attention of All Blacks head coach Scott Robertson this season, has displayed an appropriate lightness of touch when considering the visit of Moana Pasifika and former home-town hero Ardie Savea this weekend. Savea and his men arrive in Wellington for a final-round match on Saturday which will probably decide their season. Should the Blues beat the Waratahs at Eden Park in the afternoon, Moana Pasifika must beat the fourth-placed Hurricanes that evening to qualify for the playoffs for the first time. Proctor, the 26-year-old who made his Test debut last year and is the form Kiwi centre in Super Rugby, was today asked about former Hurricanes' captain Savea's return to the Cake Tin for the first time since joining Moana Pasifika. 'It will be awesome for him to come back to Wellington,' was Proctor's reply. 'It's his home town and I'm sure the fans will be excited to see him too. 'If you give them the momentum and let their big boys get a roll on, they're going to be hard to stop. We understand they're going to be pretty desperate and have an edge about them after last week. We know they're going to be physical and come down here and be willing to play and throw everything at us.' ADVERTISEMENT Moana Pasifika's collapse against the Chiefs in Hamilton at the weekend likely makes their final regular season match a must-win but, for all of Moana's breakout performances in 2025, the form book will heavily favour the home side. Their come-from-behind victory over the Chiefs in Wellington recently gave an indication of their grit and game-breaking ability and there were similar scenes in Brisbane at the weekend when they fought back to beat the Reds in an entertaining 31-27 victory. 'We've secured our spot in the playoffs and that's all you can ask for at this stage of the season,' Proctor said. 'It was our goal at the start of the year to be in the playoffs. 'I think, within this group, we always believed we had the ability to be one of the better teams in the competition.' Proctor's quiet confidence appears to be well placed. It's all on the line this weekend for Ardie Savea, the Moana Pasifika skipper and former Hurricane. (Source: Photosport) In halfback Cam Roigard and No.10 Ruben Love the Hurricanes have one of the form inside back combinations of the competition, with Peter Umaga-Jensen part of an extremely competent midfield operating outside a pack which includes Du'plessis Kirifi, a loose forward at the top of his game. ADVERTISEMENT After missing the first half of the season with an Achilles injury, Proctor has returned with a vengeance and will be putting pressure on Rieko Ioane for the black No.13 jersey in July. 'I'm pretty happy with where I'm at,' he said. 'It's been, what, four or five games? So I'm finding my feet and feeling pretty good. 'I'm just here to do my best for this team. That's all I can control and all I can worry about. 'Getting a taste of [the All Blacks] last year, it's definitely where I want to be – being in that environment and playing for the best team in New Zealand. I want to be playing international footy, but my focus is on here at the moment.' The Hurricanes, in fourth place on the table behind the Chiefs, Crusaders and Brumbies, cannot finish any higher but they can finish fifth if they lose and the Reds beat the Drua this weekend. Such is the Hurricanes' danger factor, the Crusaders will be hoping to beat the Brumbies in Canberra this weekend to avoid Proctor and his men in the quarter-final. A win for the Crusaders would put them into a quarter-final against the Reds – a far more benign opponent whom they've already beaten this season. ADVERTISEMENT That would pit the Hurricanes into a playoff against the Brumbies in Canberra – a place where they have already won this year.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store