
Bring on NZ: Wallaroos aim to bust 0-27 record
Wallaroos captain Siokapesi Palu has called for Australia to play more women's rugby games against top-tier nations as they attempt to close the gap on New Zealand.
Women's international rugby is separated into three tiers, with Australia currently in tier two.
NZ are among the powerhouses in tier one, having been crowned champions in six of the past seven World Cups.
The Black Ferns hold an astounding 27-0 record against Australia in women's rugby, with the most recent meeting resulting in a whopping 62-0 win in Brisbane last year.
Australia will get a fresh look at where they sit in the pecking order when they face NZ in their Pacific Four series opener at McDonald Jones Stadium in Newcastle on Saturday.
Although Australia are a force when it comes to women's Sevens rugby, there's still much work to be done in the XV game.
Palu would like Australia to play more games against the likes of top-tier nations NZ, England, Canada and France.
"It's always special (facing NZ) because we know they're a quality side," Palu said.
"But as we continue to grow the game, we need to make sure we play top-tier teams like them, so the more exposure and opportunities we have against them, the more likely of a chance we have of closing that gap."
Australia warmed up for their Pacific Four campaign with a 43-7 win over Fijiana in Suva.
But the victory came at a cost, with outside backs Maya Stewart (knee) and Bienne Terita (hamstring) ruled out.
Stewart underwent knee surgery on Wednesday and could return in July, while Terita has also been ruled out of the Pacific Four series.Fellow back Caitlyn Halse will be sidelined for at least a week after injuring her hamstring at training in Newcastle.
Wallaroos centre Georgina Friedrichs returns from a broken finger and will line up in the centres, while Sevens star Charlotte Caslick will start on the wing in Stewart's place.
Caslick made her international XV debut off the bench against Fiji, and she's hoping to play a key role in Australia's World Cup campaign in England, which starts in August.
Other Sevens stars who have been dabbling in the XV game - Tegan and Maddison Levi, Bella Nasser, Kahli Henwood and Sariah Paki - won't be available for the Pacific Four series following their recent participation in the LA Sevens.
Demi Hayes is also out after sustaining a knee injury.
NZ have named rising teenage star Braxton Sorensen-McGee at fullback for her international debut.
Prop Awhina Tangen-Wainohu, who underwent serious neck surgery last year, makes a return off the bench in her first Test since the Rugby World Cup in 2022.

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The Advertiser
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- The Advertiser
Aussie rugby coach who put the roar back into Tigers
Michael Cheika's legacy will have a lasting impact on the club, no matter what the result in his final game as head coach against Bath in the Premiership final. That's the view of England lock Ollie Chessum, who has hailed the former Wallabies coach for his impact at the Midlands club. It is set to be a summer of change at Welford Road, with former Leicester player Geoff Parling, the ex-Wallabies assistant, to take charge after Cheika departs at the end of his one-year contract. Just a couple of seasons on from their last Premiership final triumph, the Tigers finished eighth in a disappointing 2023-24 campaign. The arrival of Cheika - who took the Wallabies to the 2015 World Cup final and then guided Argentina into the last four two years ago - saw Leicester's fortunes transformed. On the back of a new-found mental resilience, Cheika's men were driven on to second place in the table behind Bath. Chessum, who fought his way back to fitness following a knee injury suffered in an England training camp in October, feels 58-year-old Cheika deserves plenty of plaudits for helping turn the club around. "We were in a real good spot a few years ago as a group, and we probably lost our way a little bit and that is how you find yourself down in eighth and out of the play-offs," said Chessum. "There is no denying that something needed to change in quite a few aspects of our game. "Cheiks will say we have probably not changed too much technically, but it is just around that mental side and the emotional side of the game is what has really changed everything this year and has put us in this spot." Chessum, 24, added: "He just finds a way to galvanise the group, get them to find a real meaning in what they are doing and use that to to drive them on. Our mental approach for the team has changed massively towards games. "He will say that goes a huge way towards winning, it is just believing you can do it and sort of shocking yourself really with what you are able to do as an individual. "The way he has changed how the team approaches the game mentally has been a huge part of what he will leave as a legacy." Cheika has named an unchanged side from the semi-final win over Sale for Saturday's final at the Allianz Stadium, which will see several Leicester players make their last appearance in a Tigers shirt. Club stalwarts Dan Cole and Ben Youngs will retire while captain Julian Montoya, South Africa fly-half Handre Pollard, James Cronin and Matt Rogerson are all set to depart. Leicester lost home and away to Bath during the regular campaign, beaten 43-15 at The Recreation Ground in May. Chessum knows the Tigers will have to step up to the challenge as Bath seek to complete a trophy treble with what would be the Somerset club's first league title since 1996. Michael Cheika's legacy will have a lasting impact on the club, no matter what the result in his final game as head coach against Bath in the Premiership final. That's the view of England lock Ollie Chessum, who has hailed the former Wallabies coach for his impact at the Midlands club. It is set to be a summer of change at Welford Road, with former Leicester player Geoff Parling, the ex-Wallabies assistant, to take charge after Cheika departs at the end of his one-year contract. Just a couple of seasons on from their last Premiership final triumph, the Tigers finished eighth in a disappointing 2023-24 campaign. The arrival of Cheika - who took the Wallabies to the 2015 World Cup final and then guided Argentina into the last four two years ago - saw Leicester's fortunes transformed. On the back of a new-found mental resilience, Cheika's men were driven on to second place in the table behind Bath. Chessum, who fought his way back to fitness following a knee injury suffered in an England training camp in October, feels 58-year-old Cheika deserves plenty of plaudits for helping turn the club around. "We were in a real good spot a few years ago as a group, and we probably lost our way a little bit and that is how you find yourself down in eighth and out of the play-offs," said Chessum. "There is no denying that something needed to change in quite a few aspects of our game. "Cheiks will say we have probably not changed too much technically, but it is just around that mental side and the emotional side of the game is what has really changed everything this year and has put us in this spot." Chessum, 24, added: "He just finds a way to galvanise the group, get them to find a real meaning in what they are doing and use that to to drive them on. Our mental approach for the team has changed massively towards games. "He will say that goes a huge way towards winning, it is just believing you can do it and sort of shocking yourself really with what you are able to do as an individual. "The way he has changed how the team approaches the game mentally has been a huge part of what he will leave as a legacy." Cheika has named an unchanged side from the semi-final win over Sale for Saturday's final at the Allianz Stadium, which will see several Leicester players make their last appearance in a Tigers shirt. Club stalwarts Dan Cole and Ben Youngs will retire while captain Julian Montoya, South Africa fly-half Handre Pollard, James Cronin and Matt Rogerson are all set to depart. Leicester lost home and away to Bath during the regular campaign, beaten 43-15 at The Recreation Ground in May. Chessum knows the Tigers will have to step up to the challenge as Bath seek to complete a trophy treble with what would be the Somerset club's first league title since 1996. Michael Cheika's legacy will have a lasting impact on the club, no matter what the result in his final game as head coach against Bath in the Premiership final. That's the view of England lock Ollie Chessum, who has hailed the former Wallabies coach for his impact at the Midlands club. It is set to be a summer of change at Welford Road, with former Leicester player Geoff Parling, the ex-Wallabies assistant, to take charge after Cheika departs at the end of his one-year contract. Just a couple of seasons on from their last Premiership final triumph, the Tigers finished eighth in a disappointing 2023-24 campaign. The arrival of Cheika - who took the Wallabies to the 2015 World Cup final and then guided Argentina into the last four two years ago - saw Leicester's fortunes transformed. On the back of a new-found mental resilience, Cheika's men were driven on to second place in the table behind Bath. Chessum, who fought his way back to fitness following a knee injury suffered in an England training camp in October, feels 58-year-old Cheika deserves plenty of plaudits for helping turn the club around. "We were in a real good spot a few years ago as a group, and we probably lost our way a little bit and that is how you find yourself down in eighth and out of the play-offs," said Chessum. "There is no denying that something needed to change in quite a few aspects of our game. "Cheiks will say we have probably not changed too much technically, but it is just around that mental side and the emotional side of the game is what has really changed everything this year and has put us in this spot." Chessum, 24, added: "He just finds a way to galvanise the group, get them to find a real meaning in what they are doing and use that to to drive them on. Our mental approach for the team has changed massively towards games. "He will say that goes a huge way towards winning, it is just believing you can do it and sort of shocking yourself really with what you are able to do as an individual. "The way he has changed how the team approaches the game mentally has been a huge part of what he will leave as a legacy." Cheika has named an unchanged side from the semi-final win over Sale for Saturday's final at the Allianz Stadium, which will see several Leicester players make their last appearance in a Tigers shirt. Club stalwarts Dan Cole and Ben Youngs will retire while captain Julian Montoya, South Africa fly-half Handre Pollard, James Cronin and Matt Rogerson are all set to depart. Leicester lost home and away to Bath during the regular campaign, beaten 43-15 at The Recreation Ground in May. Chessum knows the Tigers will have to step up to the challenge as Bath seek to complete a trophy treble with what would be the Somerset club's first league title since 1996.


Perth Now
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Aussie rugby coach who put the roar back into Tigers
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