Chiefs get reprieve as McKenzie cleared but another All Black sidelined

The Chiefs have got a positive diagnosis for Damian McKenzie who was forced off the field early in the second half against the Crusaders in the opening round of Super Rugby Pacific.
New Zealand publication Stuff reports the first five-eighth will be available to play in Melbourne for the Super Round after the rib injury was confirmed as bruising.
After giving up a 27-10 lead without McKenzie on the park, the Chiefs will be relieved to have their playmaker back against the Brumbies.
One-time All Black Josh Ioane showed flashes of brilliance but lacked control as the Crusaders mounted a comeback to take the lead 29-27. Two late Ioane penalties allowed the Chiefs to hold on.
Chiefs midfielder Anton Lienert-Brown passed his HIA test after being pullled from the field late but his partner Quinn Tupaea has failed an assessment which rules him out of Super Round.
The returning All Black played his first game for the Chiefs since 2022 but will face another short stint on the sidelines.
The Crusaders are also dealing with key injuries after the derby with All Black prop Tamiati Williams going down after nine minutes after what appeared to be a hamstring injury.
Stand-in first five-eighth Rivez Reihana also suffered a shoulder AC injury after copping a shot late in the game, which leaves the Crusaders down to last year's New Zealand U20 rep Taha Kemara as cover with Fergus Burke still sidelined.
The Hurricanes came through relatively unscathed against Force, with flanker Devan Flanders the only concern after coming off in the first half.
The Blues and Highlanders came away without any concerns ahead of their clash in Super round.
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Go to commentsNo full games on the IRU YT channel unfortunately, all on subscription? Looks a fairly good level (1A).
Yes I mean I wouldn’t really know the local ratio of origin here, but certainly as a province with less resources mine has a ratio that veers heavily towards club rep. The club stories are often the best so get probably an imbalanced proportion of coverage to where most players actually come from though.
Those were a couple of Ulster (regional) clubs too, good good. Those clubs/size towns are very much where you find most talent coming from (compared to the big city), so your productivity depends very much on your systems in place for scouting talent. With the more wealthy and popular sport of NRL (hence more info out there) I’ve seen some interesting studies on player origins in this respect, which I think would be a very balanced base of data to draw conclusions from.
Yes I’m wondering how those names as examples compare to the likes of Bryne getting squeezed out for a lack of places. I’m only thinking of effects far down the line as a result of Irelands #1 ranking and increased publicity/interest and how Irelands system will take advantage of them.
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