'Bloody angry' Chiefs coach says he's no cheat
The Chiefs stayed top of the table after scraping to a 28-27 win, with the match going to uncontested scrums for the last five minutes - after replacement tighthead prop Siate Tokolahi was injured battling the Hurricanes dominant pack.
Hurricanes skipper Dane Coles remarked to referee Craig Joubert at the time that it was "an amazing coincidence" the injury came when the home side's scrum was on top.
Then a New Zealand radio station posted a video on Facebook, followed by a similar post from the New Zealand Herald newspaper, showing Tokolahi apparently running freely from a scrum and a line-out with no contact from any other player before going down injured.
Rennie, who has been touted as a possible future All Blacks coach, said Tokolahi was genuinely injured and denied his departure was a tactical move.
"I'm bloody angry, because they're challenging our integrity," he told Radio Sport.
"We've got two injured tighthead props and that forced us to go down to 14 players - it happens, you don't want it to happen but you have to deal with it."
Under the rules of rugby, if a member of the tight five has to leave the field and a properly trained replacement is not available, then scrums are not contested as a safety measure.
"It's such a rarity, I've had 78 games in charge of the Chiefs and it's the first time we've gone to golden oldie [uncontested] scrums," he said.
Tokolahi has been named on the bench for Friday's match against the Sharks, but Rennie said that should not cast doubt on the seriousness of the injury he suffered against the Hurricanes.
"A lot of guys go off injured and front up the next week," he said.
Agence France-Presse
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