All Blacks captain Sam Cane has thrown his support behind vilified referee Ben O鈥橩eeffe 鈥 saying the online abuse is unacceptable 鈥 and moved to clarify his notable absence from the Chiefs post-match press conference following their Super Rugby final defeat.
聽with a message on his Instagram page on Tuesday to reveal the string of vitriolic abuse and threats he received following the Crusaders 25-20 victory over the Chiefs in the Super Rugby finale in Hamilton on Saturday.
The Chiefs received three yellow cards 鈥 one to Cane late in the match 鈥 and were on the wrong side of a 15-8 penalty count.
O鈥橩eeffe and his officials missed one clear forward pass that set the platform for a Crusaders try in the first half but Anton Lienert-Brown, who has since received a three-week suspension, was fortunate to escape with a yellow card for his tackle on Crusaders wing Dallas McLeod.
Chiefs coach Clayton McMillan highlighted the forward pass incident post-match but then phoned O鈥橩eeffe after his public post to check on his welfare.
Cane called on the New Zealand rugby public to improve their attitudes towards officials.
聽鈥淭he dark side of social media is people can throw shade or abuse from behind their phone,鈥 Cane told the Herald as the All Blacks launched their Adidas World Cup jersey in Auckland on Wednesday. 鈥淩eferees are no different to players, I believe, in the sense that they鈥檙e out there doing their absolute best. They鈥檙e making split-second decisions.
鈥淭here will always be decisions they make that players, teams and people don鈥檛 agree with. But we don鈥檛 have a game without the referee. They鈥檙e in a tough job. We appreciate that. Us as players there鈥檚 no way we鈥檙e going to abuse a referee.
鈥淲e respect them and their job. It is a shame people feel the need to do that but it鈥檚 awesome to see he鈥檚 called it out and a lot of people have got in behind him. That sort of behaviour is unacceptable, and I鈥檇 hate for it to filter down even further to the grassroots where volunteers give up their time so people can play the game we love.鈥
While Cane took part in the televised Sky presentations he didn鈥檛 front media at Waikato Stadium after the Chiefs defeat, as is customary for the coach and captain from both teams.
When Chiefs coach McMillan arrived for his post-match duties he explained Cane鈥檚 absence by saying: 鈥淚t鈥檚 just me boys as you can understand there鈥檚 a few upset boys.鈥
Cane has since been widely criticised for seemingly opting out of fronting in the wake of the devastating defeat but he moved to explain his version of events.
鈥淭he basic facts are it鈥檚 been misreported that I made a decision not to go to the post match press conference which is entirely incorrect. Clayton made a decision on his own. He knew a lot of the boys, myself included, were hurting so he decided to take it on the chin and do it himself. That鈥檚 the type of bloke he is. I wasn鈥檛 aware or involved in that decision until later.
鈥淚t鈥檚 pretty clear from the past I鈥檝e always fronted up to media post games. It was only five minutes after the final whistle I was on the stand addressing fans, acknowledging how well the Crusaders had played on live TV.鈥
Referee Ben O'Keeffe during the Super Rugby Pacific final between the Chiefs and the Crusaders. Photo / Photosport
Five days on from the final, the hurt of being unable to send off departing veterans Brad Weber and Brodie Retallick with the Chiefs鈥 first championship in a decade lingers.
With the All Blacks staging their first training as a full squad in Auckland on Tuesday, as they prepare to depart for their opening Rugby Championship test in Argentina next week, there is little time to dwell on the result.
鈥淪aturday was tough particularly being at home in front of your fans and the season we had and not being able to send a couple of Chiefs legends out on a high really stung,鈥 Cane said. 鈥淎t the time it鈥檚 hard to see any good. As the days wear on you look through a different lens and see we still had an awesome season, there鈥檚 plenty to be proud of and plenty to build on.
鈥淚t鈥檚 been a quick switch coming up here to join the All Blacks and put all the focus on that. It鈥檚 a good way to move on.鈥
Launching the World Cup jersey offered another timely reminder that the All Blacks have five tests to nail preparations for the pinnacle event.
鈥淚t鈥檚 going to creep up pretty quickly and it makes you release we鈥檝e got a lot of work to do but that鈥檚 exciting.鈥
Liam Napier has been a sports journalist since 2010, and his work has taken him to World Cups in rugby, netball and cricket, boxing world title fights and Commonwealth Games.
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