
Wallabies upset Springboks at Ellis Park from 22-0 down in Rugby Championship
The Wallabies scored a remarkable six straight tries against the double world champion and Rugby Championship titleholder to earn the signature win of Joe Schmidt's 18-month coaching reign.
Australia came to the highveld battle-hardened from the narrow home series loss to the British and Irish Lions, but its record in South Africa made it an obvious underdog. It hadn't won in South Africa since 2011 or at Ellis Park since 1963.
The Springboks underlined their credentials by sprinting to 22-0 in 17 minutes with three well-made tries.
But they never scored again.
Australia didn't panic, absorbed the blows, tightened its defense and watched a Springboks side packed with 18 World Cup winners surprisingly wobble as the pressure was returned.
The Wallabies were 22-5 down at halftime, and went ahead for the first time in the 64th minute through captain Harry Wilson's second try and last act of the match. They added two more tries to finish the stronger team at an altitude in which they have traditionally struggled for decades. This was only their second ever win over the Boks at their spiritual home in 92 years.
Wilson opened the second half scoring a soft try from replacement prop Angus Bell's pass into a gap 25 meters out.
Len Ikitau limped off and Australia patched the midfield with Andrew Kellaway, and put flyhalf backup Tane Edmed on the wing for the injured Dylan Pietsch.
Australia blew two consecutive attacking lineouts to narrow the 22-12 gap, and managed it only when rugby league convert Joseph-Aukuso Sua'ali'i intercepted scrumhalf Grant Williams from 55 meters out for his first test try.
They finally hit the front when fullback Tom Wright stepped Canan Moodie and set up Wilson, who appeared to be cramping as he crossed the try-line for a second time. Wilson left.
Two minutes later, a giant double miss-out pass by James O'Connor released right wing Max Jorgensen to score another long-range try. The fourth goalkick by O'Connor, the fourth-choice flyhalf playing his first test in three years at age 35, sent Australia 33-22 ahead with 14 minutes left.
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24 minutes ago
Wallabies stun Springboks at Ellis Park from 22-0 down in Rugby Championship
JOHANNESBURG -- Australia toppled South Africa at Ellis Park for the first time in 62 years with a sensational 38-22 comeback win from 22-0 down in the Rugby Championship opener on Saturday. The Wallabies scored a remarkable six straight tries against the double world champion and Rugby Championship titleholder to earn one of their greatest wins in the professional era. Australia came to the highveld battle-hardened from the narrow home series loss to the British and Irish Lions, but its record in South Africa made it an obvious underdog. It hadn't won in South Africa since 2011 or at Ellis Park since 1963. The Springboks underlined their credentials by sprinting to 22-0 in 17 minutes with three well-made tries. But they never scored again. Australia didn't panic, absorbed the blows, tightened its defense and watched a Springboks side packed with 18 World Cup winners surprisingly wobble as the pressure was returned. The Wallabies, down 22-5 at halftime, didn't go ahead until the 64th minute through captain Harry Wilson's second try and last act of the match. They added two more tries to finish the stronger team at an altitude in which they have traditionally struggled for decades. This was only their second ever win over the Boks at their spiritual home in 92 years. 'At 22-0 down, there was real courage again from the players,' Wallabies coach Joe Schmidt told broadcaster SuperSport. "We were forced to take a few risks and there were a few lucky bounces for us, so we are not going to get too carried away. 'At the same time I am incredibly proud of the group. I am realistic about getting a little bit of luck, but delighted we came back. Nineteen-sixty-three was a long time ago so the players are delighted.' Following the heaviest defeat by the Springboks since Rassie Erasmus took charge in 2018, the coach admitted he was embarrassed to go to the press conference. "We were really awful,' he said. "They beat us in most departments. We didn't scrum them, they beat us in the lineouts, and they bullied us at the breakdown after Siya Kolisi went off and Marco van Staden had to go off for an HIA. "Tactically, we totally overplayed every time we thought something was on. I don't think they tactically outsmarted us but they physically dominated us, and the interesting thing is that the longer the game went on they were supposed to struggle but it just shows what Joe Schmidt is building there.' Wilson opened the second half scoring a soft try from replacement prop Angus Bell's pass into a gap 25 meters out. Len Ikitau limped off and Australia patched the midfield with Andrew Kellaway, and put flyhalf backup Tane Edmed on the wing for the injured Dylan Pietsch. Australia blew two consecutive attacking lineouts to narrow the 22-12 gap, and managed it only when rugby league convert Joseph-Aukuso Sua'ali'i intercepted flyhalf Manie Libbok from 55 meters out for his first test try. They finally hit the front when fullback Tom Wright set up Wilson, who appeared to be cramping as he crossed the try-line for a second time. Wilson left. Two minutes later, a giant double miss-out pass by James O'Connor released right wing Max Jorgensen to score another long-range try. The fourth goalkick by O'Connor, the fourth-choice flyhalf playing his first test in three years at age 35, sent Australia 33-22 ahead with 14 minutes left. South Africa and its renowned 'bomb squad' of replacements couldn't break the inspired Wallabies. The coup was completed with five to go. Just outside the Australia 22, Jesse Kriel's overhead inside pass to Andre Esterhuizen was knocked on straight to Wright, who cantered to the other end. The Springboks feasted on Italy and Georgia last month but Erasmus gathered them for the Australia game a week earlier than scheduled, a compliment to the Wallabies' resurgent effort against the Lions. The decision paid off early. Wing Kurt-Lee Arendse jogged in for the opening try inside two minutes. Libbok converted, added a penalty, then hit the post when he tried to convert a long-range try finished by center Esterhuizen. Five minutes later, captain Kolisi was over. At 22-0 after 17 minutes, the lack of tension prompted the crowd of 51,300 to do a Mexican wave. Ruck penalties against South Africa gave Australia momentum, and Ikitau looped around O'Connor to free left wing Pietsch for Australia's first points after a half-hour. But Pietsch walked off soon after, clutching his jaw after tackling Kolisi's shoulder. ___
Yahoo
37 minutes ago
- Yahoo
'Turned the game': NRL fans single out Reece Walsh act in epic Broncos comeback
Reece Walsh responded to the recent criticism about his erratic displays in a standout performance against the Dolphins that has all but locked up an NRL finals spot for Brisbane. The Broncos fullback was electric in Saturday night's 38-28 comeback win that dented the Dolphins' own top-eight hopes and gave Walsh's men bragging rights in the Battle of Brisbane. Brisbane coach Michael Maguire has praised the way his influential No.1 has responded to some of the backlash around his game, after praising Walsh's work ethic and willingness to continually improve his game. The Broncos fullback is often described as a 'rocks or diamonds' player and was guilty of a litany of errors in Brisbane's big loss to the Storm last week. But with first-choice halves Adam Reynolds and Ezra Mma and Selwyn Cobbo all missing with hamstring injuries for the Dolphins clash, Walsh provided the spark to reignite his side's finals push. A sea-sawing first half saw the scores locked at 14-all at the break as Walsh and Kotoni Staggs traded tries with Dolphins pair Hamiso Tabuai-Fidow and Jake Averillo. However, when the impressive Trai Fuller scored a stunning solo try in his NRL return and Jeremy Marshall-King also crossed for the Dolphins after the break, the Broncos were in trouble. It gave Kristian Woolf's side a 28-14 lead with 40 minutes to play, with Brisbane staring at the prospect of a loss that would have sen them tumble out of the finals spots into ninth on the ladder. Reece Walsh turns match on its head with crucial 40-20 kick A moment of magic from Walsh ultimately shifted the momentum in Brisbane's favour and proved the catalyst for a game-winning second half onslaught. The Broncos No.1 kicked a superb 40-20 that shifted the balance of play and gave Brisbane crucial field position, which they used with ruthless efficiency to punish the Dolphins. Deine Mariner crossed for a try off the resulting set and Brisbane rode the wave of momentum to score three more times in less than 15 minutes to turn the game on its head. Ben Hunt was also outstanding after taking on the No.7 jersey from injured skipper Reynolds, with the Brisbane halfback setting up three tries in a display that answered plenty of questions around the resolve of this Broncos outfit. RELATED: Second Storm star under fire over unseen act in Panthers controversy Huge call made on Tedesco as Walters drops major Kangaroos hint NRL world erupts over Dragons call as Panthers drama singled out But it was Walsh's display that had the NRL world talking after he finished the superb comeback victory with a whopping 249 run metres, a try and try assist and 12 tackle busts. Walsh was also on song with the boot, kicking seven goals from eight attempts in a man-of-the-match display described by many as one of his finest in a Brisbane jersey. "Tonight, he really got the balance right," Broncos captain Pat Carrigan said about his superstar fullback. "He's done some really special things but at the end of the day, we just need Reece Walsh to be Reece Walsh. He was massive for us." Dolphins captain Isaiya Katoa admitted afterwards that Walsh's '40-20 changed the game' and fans echoed those sentiments across social media. Walsh also sparked a last-tackle a short time later that resulted in a try of the year contender to Josiah Karapani, who caught a cross-field kick from Billy Walters to finish off a slick Brisbane move. Ben Talty put the gloss on the Broncos' stirring comeback with the final try off Hunt's clever grubber kick. The win cemented the sixth-placed Broncos' spot in the top-eight, with the Dolphins dropping behind the Roosters into ninth spot on the ladder. "THAT IS STUNNING... SENSATIONAL!"One of the tries of the season by the Broncos 🤯🤯📺 Watch #NRLBroncosDolphins LIVE on ch.502 or stream on Kayo: BLOG MATCH CENTRE — Fox League (@FOXNRL) August 16, 2025 That was an unreal last 30 minutes from the Broncos they were dead and buried Looked lost until that Walsh 40-20 turned the gameWas close to a career best outing for Reece. Hunt superb especially in the 2nd half — Bryce Parker (@bryce_parker26) August 16, 2025 Five Star ⭐️ performance from Reece Walsh! Broncs came back off the back of his 40/20 — Zane Bojack (@zanofc) August 16, 2025 Walsh became a different man tonight. 1 error on that kick off was costly but his 40-20 got us Mariners try and he was playing percentage, high effect after that. Quality turn around — Brian de Groot (@BriandeGroot7) August 16, 2025 40/20 by Walsh absolutely flipped this match. #NRLBroncosDolphins — Pete Jeffery (@petejohnjeffery) August 16, 2025 This performance by Walsh is one of the all time great clinics this is 11/10 #NRLBroncosDolphins — 257Mat (@257Mat) August 16, 2025


San Francisco Chronicle
2 hours ago
- San Francisco Chronicle
Reece, Taukei'aho doubles see the All Blacks win 41-24 over Argentina in the Rugby Championship
CORDOBA, Argentina (AP) — Winger Sevu Reece scored two first half tries and hooker Samisoni Taukei'aho added two in the second to propel New Zealand to a 41-24 win over Argentina Saturday in its opening match in the Rugby Championship. Reece's tries in the ninth and 43rd minutes book-ended a first half in which the All Blacks scored four tries to lead 31-10 by halftime. Scrumhalf Cortez Ratima scored off a break by fullback Will Jordan and backrower Ardie Savea touched down for his 30th test try, adding to his record for an All Blacks forward. Argentina came back into the match strongly in the second half with a superb solo try from a scrum by flyhalf Tomas Albornoz, who scored 14 points and another to backrower Joaquin Oviedo when the All Blacks were down to 14 men. Oviedo is a native of Cordoba where the Pumas were playing for the first time in 11 years. The All Blacks have tended to fade out of matches in the second spell but managed to halt Argentina's momentum and rebuild their lead with a quick double to to replacement hooker Samisoni Taukeiaho. Argentina was mostly starved of possession in the first spell, though it managed a try to winger Rodrigo Isgro. With a more direct approach in the second half, Argentina pressured the All Blacks and forced them into errors which conceded penalties. The All Blacks backline lacked timing a cohesion for most of the match. 'We talked about starting well. I think we did that and we finished the second half quite strong, with a bit of a statement there,' All Blacks captain Scott Barrett said. 'In the second half we were a little bit slow and a little bit of indiscipline fed their game and allowed the crowd to get in behind them. I'm glad that the guys who finished the game were able to win a few arm wrestles, get some territory and come away with the win.' Beauden Barrett opened the scoring in the fourth minute with a penalty from 40 meters after he was the victim of a late tackle by Santiago Chocobares. Albornoz had a chance to reply from similar distance for Argentina but his penalty kick hit the upright and bounced back into play. Reece's opening try came in the ninth minute when the All Blacks took a lineout from a penalty. Hooker Codie Taylor peeled from the maul and Fletcher Newell and Savea went close before a long pass found Reece unmarked on the right wing. Argentina replied with a try to Isgro in similar circumstances. Chocobares retrieved Gonzalo Garcia's chip kick and the Pumas forwards went to work, setting up the platform from which Isgro scored. Argentina short-handed Prop Mayco Vivas was shown a yellow card in the 18th minute for cynical offending when he reached over a ruck and knocked the ball out of Ratima's hands. Argentina chose to bring on a prop and send winger Bautista Delguy to the sideline for 10 minutes. The All Blacks were slow to exploit their one man advantage but in the 24th minute, Will Jordan stepped out of a tackle and into the backfield where Argentina was short-handed, linking with Ratima who scored. Albornoz kicked a penalty in the 29th minute, keeping Argentina in the match at 17-10. But the All Blacks finished the half strongly with tries to Savea from a lineout and to Reece who scored in first half stoppage time. Albornoz made a clean break from a scrum to start the second half with a try, then Oviedo scored after the All Blacks had conceded several penalties close to their line. Center Billy Proctor was sent to the sin-bin. Taukei'aho dived over for the decisive try after a lineout from penalty gave the All Blacks a critical set piece close to the Pumas goalline. He scored again soon afterwards to expand the margin for the All Blacks who finished with center Anton Lienert-Brown in the sin-bin. ___