Hadn't realised it was a permanent switch. From the Telegraph;Puja wrote: ↑Mon Nov 06, 2023 3:49 pmAgreed. I really want to like Tuima - there's a lot there to like in terms of the physical base - but he's not yet good at imposing that frame on contests. It could come, with time. I think the move to the second row is a good one for him.Epaminondas Pules wrote: ↑Mon Nov 06, 2023 3:11 pmTuima did lots of very good stuff, but his carrying reminded me a lot of Borthwick, except a much bigger bloke. For his size he carries really quite poorly. He doesn't fight through contact the way you'd expect someone of his size to.fivepointer wrote: ↑Sun Nov 05, 2023 5:02 pm Even as LANE hat trick cant get Bristol a point. Dogged effort from them but they were under the cosh pretty much throughout.
Tuima a deserved MotM.
Puja
Rusi Tuima, the Suva-born 23-year-old who might just be on the verge of a breakthrough campaign, is among the heftiest and most promising. The nephew of Akapusi Qera, the feted Fiji international, and the cousin of Joe Cokanasiga, not to mention the brother of Lagi, the talented Red Roses centre, Tuima possesses serious pedigree. He has had to be patient, biding his time on loan with Plymouth Albion, but, in the absence of a departed club legend in Dave Ewers, Chiefs have required another gain-line enforcer to step up.
Tuima, a former England age-group back-rower, looks at home as a lock. Beginning his game with a shunted try in the third minute, he ended it by plucking a clean turnover from the clutches of Harry Thacker. In between, Tuima complemented muscular involvement with skilful touches, particularly around the line-out, and deft footwork. Standing 6ft 5in and tipping the scales at over 20st, he has other, obvious assets that are rather valuable for their rarity in this country.
Baxter revealed that a pre-season chat with Rob Hunter, his forwards coach, had inspired Tuima’s move to the engine room, primarily because Chiefs prefer their back-rowers to string together “repeat actions”. Too polite to divulge an exact weight, Baxter saluted Tuima as “a big boy” with a big future. “A permanent shift has allowed him to focus on his strengths – his size and physicality,” explained Exeter’s director of rugby. “He’s obviously working very hard in the scrum. But then his aerial work has improved fantastically as well. I’m not going to say he’s a complete second-row forward, but he’s certainly looking like one guy who’ll make up a good pairing of locks. “I’ve got to be very careful because I don’t want to be sitting here telling people that these players are amazing, because Rusi is four games into a Premiership career as a second-row forward.”