
Brumbies fend off Reds again to hit top Super spot
The ACT Brumbies have shot to the top of the Super Rugby Pacific ladder, but it may have come at a cost in their 24-14 defeat of rivals Queensland Reds.
The hosts defied a lack of possession and territory in the first half in Canberra on Saturday, Rob Valetini leading their defence as they forced 12 turnovers.
A fifth straight loss to the Brumbies now has the Reds in danger of slipping out of the top four with two home games remaining.
A lower-leg injury to Brumbies captain and Wallabies warhorse Allan Alaalatoa dampened the mood though, the Test veteran likely sweating on scans, with the British and Irish Lions tour on the horizon.
The Brumbies have a bye next week, then finish their regular season against the Crusaders, who are two points behind and level with the Chiefs in second.
"We were half asleep, the Reds bombed us and we were on the back foot," fullback and try-scorer Tom Wright said.
"Went in, gave ourselves a good look in the mirror and were able to come out with a little bit of what we wanted to do."
Les Kiss's Reds are now just two points ahead of the Hurricanes, who they host next week in Brisbane.
The Reds started clinically, Tate McDermott beating two men at the ruck and setting up Tim Ryan, who picked a pass off his laces to score under the posts.
Alaalatoa had the reply though, his seventh try of the season a typical close-range effort.
Despite entering the Brumbies' 22 seven times in the half, the Reds left with nothing more.
And they were quickly behind 21-7 when Andy Muirhead and Wright found space in a defensive line exposed by a yellow card for Hunter Paisami's high shot on Corey Toole.
Kiss's substitutions had an impact, hooker Josh Nasser scoring from a rolling maul after some go-forward from their fresh forwards.
They had three more chances in open play to find the equaliser but spilt possession each time, and the Brumbies continued to punish every loose Reds pass or poor decision.
A Ryan Lonergan penalty goal pushed the Brumbies out beyond a converted try.
The match finished in bizarre scenes, Wright opting not to find touch and instead dart towards the line.
He was turned over, Kalani Thomas triggering an 80-metre break, before Connor Vest spilt possession with the line in sight.
"We had them right where we wanted them, but we coughed up the ball, and against a team like the Brumbies that'll hurt you," McDermott said.
"Two huge home games for us ... those games decide where we finish, so really important for us."

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Perth Now
2 hours ago
- Perth Now
Brumbies have earned belief for Super semi: Larkham
Consistency is the buzz word for the ACT Brumbies with coach Stephen Larkham saying both stable selection and form have his team primed for their Super Rugby Pacific semi-final clash with the Chiefs. The Brumbies have been able to retain the same match-day 23 from their qualifying win over the Hurricanes as they attempt to become the first Australian side to win a Super knock-out match in New Zealand. The ACT outfit have now made the semis the last four seasons, since the competition added the Pacific element, but haven't been able to make the final to bid for their first title since 2004. "I believe it's the first time (to have the same 23) this year," Larkham said ahead of his team's flight to Auckland for the match in Hamilton on Saturday. "The selection is based on performance but the boys are peaking at the right time and I thought they played really well on the weekend. "We certainly want continuity going into the finals and it's nice to have it at this stage of the season." Finishing third on the ladder, the Brumbies dropped five games through the season but all of those losses, bar their round-three loss to the Chiefs, were by six points or less. In that away loss an undermanned Brumbies side matched the Chiefs' six-try haul but without regular No.10 Noah Lolesio were let down by wayward goal-kicking, falling 49-34. Larkham said their consistency through the season meant the players could approach the do-or-die match with confidence, rather than draw on emotion, which had affected past finals performances. "We'll try not to get too emotional about the game - maybe last year and the year before, sort of that build-up to the game was a little bit too emotional so we'll make sure that we keep that in check this week," said the former Test flyhalf. "The boys can just get a lot of confidence out of the way that we're playing. "One, there's a lot of stats that show that we're actually playing very good footy and then two, just the consistency that we've had throughout the season." He said that after their third straight semi-final exit he had adjusted their pre-season and also mid-week training to ensure they were finals-ready. "We've tweaked a few things that has hopefully put us in a really good position to be more consistent through the finals now." The Crusaders will host the defending champion Blues in the other semi-final on Friday night, with the latter upsetting the Chiefs in a qualifying final to reach the last four. Larkham was impressed with the Auckland side's ferocity at the breakdown and line-speed in defence which put the Chiefs on the back foot. But he backed the Brumbies' own game plan to get the job done. With four of their five tries in their 35-28 win over the Hurricanes scored by the front-row, the rolling maul is expected to again be a big weapon. "It's not something that we're going to copy, we're not copying the Blues," Larkham said. "We've got a plan this week in terms of some of the stuff that we've been building on through the year and then some specific stuff for the Chiefs."


West Australian
2 hours ago
- West Australian
Brumbies have earned belief for Super semi: Larkham
Consistency is the buzz word for the ACT Brumbies with coach Stephen Larkham saying both stable selection and form have his team primed for their Super Rugby Pacific semi-final clash with the Chiefs. The Brumbies have been able to retain the same match-day 23 from their qualifying win over the Hurricanes as they attempt to become the first Australian side to win a Super knock-out match in New Zealand. The ACT outfit have now made the semis the last four seasons, since the competition added the Pacific element, but haven't been able to make the final to bid for their first title since 2004. "I believe it's the first time (to have the same 23) this year," Larkham said ahead of his team's flight to Auckland for the match in Hamilton on Saturday. "The selection is based on performance but the boys are peaking at the right time and I thought they played really well on the weekend. "We certainly want continuity going into the finals and it's nice to have it at this stage of the season." Finishing third on the ladder, the Brumbies dropped five games through the season but all of those losses, bar their round-three loss to the Chiefs, were by six points or less. In that away loss an undermanned Brumbies side matched the Chiefs' six-try haul but without regular No.10 Noah Lolesio were let down by wayward goal-kicking, falling 49-34. Larkham said their consistency through the season meant the players could approach the do-or-die match with confidence, rather than draw on emotion, which had affected past finals performances. "We'll try not to get too emotional about the game - maybe last year and the year before, sort of that build-up to the game was a little bit too emotional so we'll make sure that we keep that in check this week," said the former Test flyhalf. "The boys can just get a lot of confidence out of the way that we're playing. "One, there's a lot of stats that show that we're actually playing very good footy and then two, just the consistency that we've had throughout the season." He said that after their third straight semi-final exit he had adjusted their pre-season and also mid-week training to ensure they were finals-ready. "We've tweaked a few things that has hopefully put us in a really good position to be more consistent through the finals now." The Crusaders will host the defending champion Blues in the other semi-final on Friday night, with the latter upsetting the Chiefs in a qualifying final to reach the last four. Larkham was impressed with the Auckland side's ferocity at the breakdown and line-speed in defence which put the Chiefs on the back foot. But he backed the Brumbies' own game plan to get the job done. With four of their five tries in their 35-28 win over the Hurricanes scored by the front-row, the rolling maul is expected to again be a big weapon. "It's not something that we're going to copy, we're not copying the Blues," Larkham said. "We've got a plan this week in terms of some of the stuff that we've been building on through the year and then some specific stuff for the Chiefs."


Perth Now
2 hours ago
- Perth Now
'I'll be 100 per cent': Suaalii's huge Wallabies boost
In a mighty boost, Wallabies superstar Joseph-Aukuso Suaalii has declared himself "fully fit" to face the touring British and Irish Lions next month. Suaalii on Wednesday claimed he was "97 per cent" right after losing, then regaining, 5kg following surgery three weeks ago to repair a fractured jaw. Having the code-hopping game-breaker back at his brilliant best will be critical to the Wallabies' chances of conquering the Lions in the showpiece three-Test series kicking off in Brisbane on July 19. And Suaalii believes his recovery is firmly on track, the outside back revealing he'd even returned to full-contact training on Monday in the hope of making a comeback in Australia's season-opening Test against Fiji in Newcastle on July 6. "It's really good. The face was really big for a while, so I was wearing a face mask everywhere, but it's slowly coming down," Suaalii said at a Lions promotion at Sydney's Taronga Zoo. "I've still got a bit of baby fat around, but it's really good. I'm like 97 per cent, but I'll be fully fit." The one-time NSW State of Origin star suffered the break in an accidental collision with NSW Waratahs and Wallabies teammate Andrew Kellaway, who felt horrible when his knee ploughed into Suaalii's jaw. "Yeah, nobody wants to crash the Ferrari. That's definitely not what anybody wants," Kellaway said on Wednesday. "I was worried I was going to go viral as the guy who damaged Joseph before the Lions series." Suaalii, though, insists all has been forgiven and that friendly fire is merely an occupational hazard. "It's all part of my growth as a human and then as a rugby player too, so it's all part of the game," he said. But he did concede to initially fearing he may miss the start of the series. "Because obviously it's such an important time for myself and straight rugby and I want to be playing so, yeah, obviously there's a little bit of nerves," Suaalii said. "But they (doctors) came back straight away and then I had surgery maybe three weeks ago now and, yeah, I lost around 5kg, but I've put it all back on now. "I've been eating heaps, thanks to my Mum and my family around me with the support to help me stay on track. "Just going back home and there's always food there, so Mum and Dad always try to feed me as much as possible when I'm back home, so that's good." Now that he's declared his availability, Wallabies coach Joe Schmidt must decide where to play his attacking trump. He finished last year's spring tour at outside centre, but Waratahs coach Dan McKellar mostly used Suaalii at fullback during his stop-start Super Rugby Pacific season. Suaalii doesn't care where he plays, as long as he's in Australia's starting XV. "Playing at 15, playing at 13, even training on the wing, I feel like I've been learning so much," he said. "I'm a big believer in playing wing,13, 15, just make sure you're a better rugby player, and seeing it from a different perspective always helps you."