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NSW Blues: Tahs' Super finals hopes buried at Eden Park

NSW Blues: Tahs' Super finals hopes buried at Eden Park

The Advertiser2 days ago

With a captain's frank confession that his side wasn't good enough, the NSW Waratahs' Super Rugby Pacific season of promise is officially over.
The Waratahs' faint finals hopes ended in despair with an ugly, record-breaking and entirely expected 46-6 loss to the rampant Blues in Auckland on Saturday.
The Waratahs needed to defeat the defending champions for the first time at Eden Park in 16 years to keep their spluttering campaign alive.
Instead, Dan McKellar's depleted troops, often their own worst enemies needlessly kicking possession away, copped a seven-tries-to-nil drubbing at New Zealand rugby's traditional burial ground.
"The Blues were too good, too classy for us," stand-in skipper Hugh Sinclair said.
For the opening half an hour, a famous NSW victory looked possible - until the wheels fell off in a sorry, anticlimactic conclusion to what had been the Waratahs' best start to a Super campaign since 2009.
But a disastrous, coach-killing four-minute lapse before the interval ultimately cruelled the dreamy visitors, before the Blues ran amok with four tries in a second-half clinic.
Despite being without injured stars Joseph-Aukuso Suaalii, Max Jorgensen, skipper Jake Gordon and flankers Rob Leota and Charlie Gamble, the Waratahs were right in the must-win game for both sides after rookie flyhalf Jack Bowen slotted a 34th-minute penalty goal to reduce the deficit to four points.
Playing with spirit, as they should with their season on the line, the Tahs had winger Andrew Kellaway and rookie scrumhalf Teddy Wilson to thank for desperate try-saving tackles to stay in the contest.
But a Bowen blunder, when he slipped and failed to find touch for a clearing kick, and a touch of magic from two-time world player of the player Beauden Barrett blew the game wide open for the Blues in a twinkling.
Two tries in three minutes to brilliant centre Rieko Ioane, the second after the halftime siren when Waratahs opposite Henry O'Donnell couldn't handle a probing kick from Barrett near halfway, suddenly extended the Blues' tenuous lead from 10-6 to 24-6.
There was no coming back for the Waratahs when fullback Corey Evans strolled over untouched shortly after the break to extend the Blues' lead to 31-6.
The Blues' sixth try, to hooker Ricky Riccitelli, was more than academic.
It virtually secured a precious bonus point to pile the pressure on Moana Pasifika to produce a similar victory later on Saturday against the Hurricanes in Wellington to deny Vern Cotter's side a place in the finals.
The hosts' seventh five-pointer was more significant to Ioane, who equalled All Blacks great Doug Howlett's Blues try-scoring record with 55 after beating three Waratahs defenders to another menacing Barrett kick.
The Blues' biggest-ever victory margin over the Waratahs did not look likely when Bowen's two first-half penalties almost wiped out Mark Tele'a's 11th-minute try, then Ioane's first strike off a deft AJ Lam grubber.
But an hour later and the clinical Blues were anxiously awaiting their finals fate.
"They had a couple of opportunities in that first half, a couple of those kicks just went to hand and they're good enough to finish them and they're ruthless enough to put us away in that second half, and we just couldn't get a sniff," Sinclair said.
"Their defence was great and, yeah, back to the drawing board for us, I guess."
The Blues were left sweating on the fourth-placed Hurricanes denying Moana an unlikely bonus-point triumph away in the NZ capital that would push the title-holders through to a sudden-death final against the table-topping Chiefs in Hamilton.
"A lot of us will be keeping a close eye on it," said Blues captain Patrick Tuipulotu.
"But it's out of our hands.
"But if we get the chance, we'll be ready."
With a captain's frank confession that his side wasn't good enough, the NSW Waratahs' Super Rugby Pacific season of promise is officially over.
The Waratahs' faint finals hopes ended in despair with an ugly, record-breaking and entirely expected 46-6 loss to the rampant Blues in Auckland on Saturday.
The Waratahs needed to defeat the defending champions for the first time at Eden Park in 16 years to keep their spluttering campaign alive.
Instead, Dan McKellar's depleted troops, often their own worst enemies needlessly kicking possession away, copped a seven-tries-to-nil drubbing at New Zealand rugby's traditional burial ground.
"The Blues were too good, too classy for us," stand-in skipper Hugh Sinclair said.
For the opening half an hour, a famous NSW victory looked possible - until the wheels fell off in a sorry, anticlimactic conclusion to what had been the Waratahs' best start to a Super campaign since 2009.
But a disastrous, coach-killing four-minute lapse before the interval ultimately cruelled the dreamy visitors, before the Blues ran amok with four tries in a second-half clinic.
Despite being without injured stars Joseph-Aukuso Suaalii, Max Jorgensen, skipper Jake Gordon and flankers Rob Leota and Charlie Gamble, the Waratahs were right in the must-win game for both sides after rookie flyhalf Jack Bowen slotted a 34th-minute penalty goal to reduce the deficit to four points.
Playing with spirit, as they should with their season on the line, the Tahs had winger Andrew Kellaway and rookie scrumhalf Teddy Wilson to thank for desperate try-saving tackles to stay in the contest.
But a Bowen blunder, when he slipped and failed to find touch for a clearing kick, and a touch of magic from two-time world player of the player Beauden Barrett blew the game wide open for the Blues in a twinkling.
Two tries in three minutes to brilliant centre Rieko Ioane, the second after the halftime siren when Waratahs opposite Henry O'Donnell couldn't handle a probing kick from Barrett near halfway, suddenly extended the Blues' tenuous lead from 10-6 to 24-6.
There was no coming back for the Waratahs when fullback Corey Evans strolled over untouched shortly after the break to extend the Blues' lead to 31-6.
The Blues' sixth try, to hooker Ricky Riccitelli, was more than academic.
It virtually secured a precious bonus point to pile the pressure on Moana Pasifika to produce a similar victory later on Saturday against the Hurricanes in Wellington to deny Vern Cotter's side a place in the finals.
The hosts' seventh five-pointer was more significant to Ioane, who equalled All Blacks great Doug Howlett's Blues try-scoring record with 55 after beating three Waratahs defenders to another menacing Barrett kick.
The Blues' biggest-ever victory margin over the Waratahs did not look likely when Bowen's two first-half penalties almost wiped out Mark Tele'a's 11th-minute try, then Ioane's first strike off a deft AJ Lam grubber.
But an hour later and the clinical Blues were anxiously awaiting their finals fate.
"They had a couple of opportunities in that first half, a couple of those kicks just went to hand and they're good enough to finish them and they're ruthless enough to put us away in that second half, and we just couldn't get a sniff," Sinclair said.
"Their defence was great and, yeah, back to the drawing board for us, I guess."
The Blues were left sweating on the fourth-placed Hurricanes denying Moana an unlikely bonus-point triumph away in the NZ capital that would push the title-holders through to a sudden-death final against the table-topping Chiefs in Hamilton.
"A lot of us will be keeping a close eye on it," said Blues captain Patrick Tuipulotu.
"But it's out of our hands.
"But if we get the chance, we'll be ready."
With a captain's frank confession that his side wasn't good enough, the NSW Waratahs' Super Rugby Pacific season of promise is officially over.
The Waratahs' faint finals hopes ended in despair with an ugly, record-breaking and entirely expected 46-6 loss to the rampant Blues in Auckland on Saturday.
The Waratahs needed to defeat the defending champions for the first time at Eden Park in 16 years to keep their spluttering campaign alive.
Instead, Dan McKellar's depleted troops, often their own worst enemies needlessly kicking possession away, copped a seven-tries-to-nil drubbing at New Zealand rugby's traditional burial ground.
"The Blues were too good, too classy for us," stand-in skipper Hugh Sinclair said.
For the opening half an hour, a famous NSW victory looked possible - until the wheels fell off in a sorry, anticlimactic conclusion to what had been the Waratahs' best start to a Super campaign since 2009.
But a disastrous, coach-killing four-minute lapse before the interval ultimately cruelled the dreamy visitors, before the Blues ran amok with four tries in a second-half clinic.
Despite being without injured stars Joseph-Aukuso Suaalii, Max Jorgensen, skipper Jake Gordon and flankers Rob Leota and Charlie Gamble, the Waratahs were right in the must-win game for both sides after rookie flyhalf Jack Bowen slotted a 34th-minute penalty goal to reduce the deficit to four points.
Playing with spirit, as they should with their season on the line, the Tahs had winger Andrew Kellaway and rookie scrumhalf Teddy Wilson to thank for desperate try-saving tackles to stay in the contest.
But a Bowen blunder, when he slipped and failed to find touch for a clearing kick, and a touch of magic from two-time world player of the player Beauden Barrett blew the game wide open for the Blues in a twinkling.
Two tries in three minutes to brilliant centre Rieko Ioane, the second after the halftime siren when Waratahs opposite Henry O'Donnell couldn't handle a probing kick from Barrett near halfway, suddenly extended the Blues' tenuous lead from 10-6 to 24-6.
There was no coming back for the Waratahs when fullback Corey Evans strolled over untouched shortly after the break to extend the Blues' lead to 31-6.
The Blues' sixth try, to hooker Ricky Riccitelli, was more than academic.
It virtually secured a precious bonus point to pile the pressure on Moana Pasifika to produce a similar victory later on Saturday against the Hurricanes in Wellington to deny Vern Cotter's side a place in the finals.
The hosts' seventh five-pointer was more significant to Ioane, who equalled All Blacks great Doug Howlett's Blues try-scoring record with 55 after beating three Waratahs defenders to another menacing Barrett kick.
The Blues' biggest-ever victory margin over the Waratahs did not look likely when Bowen's two first-half penalties almost wiped out Mark Tele'a's 11th-minute try, then Ioane's first strike off a deft AJ Lam grubber.
But an hour later and the clinical Blues were anxiously awaiting their finals fate.
"They had a couple of opportunities in that first half, a couple of those kicks just went to hand and they're good enough to finish them and they're ruthless enough to put us away in that second half, and we just couldn't get a sniff," Sinclair said.
"Their defence was great and, yeah, back to the drawing board for us, I guess."
The Blues were left sweating on the fourth-placed Hurricanes denying Moana an unlikely bonus-point triumph away in the NZ capital that would push the title-holders through to a sudden-death final against the table-topping Chiefs in Hamilton.
"A lot of us will be keeping a close eye on it," said Blues captain Patrick Tuipulotu.
"But it's out of our hands.
"But if we get the chance, we'll be ready."

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'Working our arses off' - Blues re-set for Bombers test
'Working our arses off' - Blues re-set for Bombers test

The Advertiser

time2 hours ago

  • The Advertiser

'Working our arses off' - Blues re-set for Bombers test

Carlton have taken a collective deep breath in their mid-season AFL break as their straightforward problem proves diabolically hard to fix. "For us it's pretty simple - it's just our connection, we think," says defender Mitch McGovern. "We've been doing a lot of work - and it started over the pre-season. "Unfortunately it hasn't come to fruition out on the oval, but we've been working our arses off trying to get that right." That inability to make the most of their defence and contested-ball work as they head into attack has been a big reason Carlton's season is on the precipice with a 4-7 record. Rather than have a mid-season camp, as they famously did two years ago, the Blues went their separate ways. McGovern, being the father of three children, visited Werribee Zoo. They will return to action in the King's Birthday eve clash on Sunday night against arch-rivals Essendon, who similarly are outside the top eight and badly in need of a win. Asked who are underdogs for the game, McGovern replied: "great question - ask the bookies." Standing next to Essendon key forward Peter Wright at an MCG media call on Monday, McGovern said the Blues must be more selfless as they try to solve their connection issues going into attack. Charlie Curnow and Harry McKay are obvious forward targets, but Carlton must be more selective. "We're doing a lot right. We're defending really well ... we just need to finish, our players are getting opportunities," McGovern said. "The competition is too even to not have a consistent four-quarter effort, which we've shown over the last six weeks, where we've let teams back into it. "It's a hard one, like having Peter up in the forward line for Essendon. When you have a tall target like Charlie and Harry, it's hard to not kick to them when you know how good they are and what they can produce. "It's more for us being selfless teammates and bringing other people into the game more, how to score better as a collective rather than individuals." Equally, the Blues know they must not throw the baby out with the bath water, as their defence and contest work is giving them opportunities. "We can't just focus in on what's not working, we have to focus in on what we're good at," he said. Carlton have taken a collective deep breath in their mid-season AFL break as their straightforward problem proves diabolically hard to fix. "For us it's pretty simple - it's just our connection, we think," says defender Mitch McGovern. "We've been doing a lot of work - and it started over the pre-season. "Unfortunately it hasn't come to fruition out on the oval, but we've been working our arses off trying to get that right." That inability to make the most of their defence and contested-ball work as they head into attack has been a big reason Carlton's season is on the precipice with a 4-7 record. Rather than have a mid-season camp, as they famously did two years ago, the Blues went their separate ways. McGovern, being the father of three children, visited Werribee Zoo. They will return to action in the King's Birthday eve clash on Sunday night against arch-rivals Essendon, who similarly are outside the top eight and badly in need of a win. Asked who are underdogs for the game, McGovern replied: "great question - ask the bookies." Standing next to Essendon key forward Peter Wright at an MCG media call on Monday, McGovern said the Blues must be more selfless as they try to solve their connection issues going into attack. Charlie Curnow and Harry McKay are obvious forward targets, but Carlton must be more selective. "We're doing a lot right. We're defending really well ... we just need to finish, our players are getting opportunities," McGovern said. "The competition is too even to not have a consistent four-quarter effort, which we've shown over the last six weeks, where we've let teams back into it. "It's a hard one, like having Peter up in the forward line for Essendon. When you have a tall target like Charlie and Harry, it's hard to not kick to them when you know how good they are and what they can produce. "It's more for us being selfless teammates and bringing other people into the game more, how to score better as a collective rather than individuals." Equally, the Blues know they must not throw the baby out with the bath water, as their defence and contest work is giving them opportunities. "We can't just focus in on what's not working, we have to focus in on what we're good at," he said. Carlton have taken a collective deep breath in their mid-season AFL break as their straightforward problem proves diabolically hard to fix. "For us it's pretty simple - it's just our connection, we think," says defender Mitch McGovern. "We've been doing a lot of work - and it started over the pre-season. "Unfortunately it hasn't come to fruition out on the oval, but we've been working our arses off trying to get that right." That inability to make the most of their defence and contested-ball work as they head into attack has been a big reason Carlton's season is on the precipice with a 4-7 record. Rather than have a mid-season camp, as they famously did two years ago, the Blues went their separate ways. McGovern, being the father of three children, visited Werribee Zoo. They will return to action in the King's Birthday eve clash on Sunday night against arch-rivals Essendon, who similarly are outside the top eight and badly in need of a win. Asked who are underdogs for the game, McGovern replied: "great question - ask the bookies." Standing next to Essendon key forward Peter Wright at an MCG media call on Monday, McGovern said the Blues must be more selfless as they try to solve their connection issues going into attack. Charlie Curnow and Harry McKay are obvious forward targets, but Carlton must be more selective. "We're doing a lot right. We're defending really well ... we just need to finish, our players are getting opportunities," McGovern said. "The competition is too even to not have a consistent four-quarter effort, which we've shown over the last six weeks, where we've let teams back into it. "It's a hard one, like having Peter up in the forward line for Essendon. When you have a tall target like Charlie and Harry, it's hard to not kick to them when you know how good they are and what they can produce. "It's more for us being selfless teammates and bringing other people into the game more, how to score better as a collective rather than individuals." Equally, the Blues know they must not throw the baby out with the bath water, as their defence and contest work is giving them opportunities. "We can't just focus in on what's not working, we have to focus in on what we're good at," he said.

Brumbies want Lions share of Wallabies selection
Brumbies want Lions share of Wallabies selection

The Advertiser

time2 hours ago

  • The Advertiser

Brumbies want Lions share of Wallabies selection

While his own position in the Wallabies isn't assured, Brumbies playmaker Noah Lolesio is plumping for his Canberra teammates to dominate Test selection to face the British and Irish Lions. Lolesio is Australia's incumbent flyhalf, wearing the 10 jersey on all four Tests of last year's UK spring tour, but announced through the Super Rugby Pacific season he would departing the Brumbies to play club rugby in Japan. Wallabies coach Joe Schmidt has been coy on his selection thoughts, only saying players who have committed their future off-shore remain "in the mix". Making a successful return from a back injury last round, Lolesio told AAP he hadn't spoken recently to Schmidt, but would be "super stoked" to be named. The Brumbies are preparing to host the Hurricanes on Saturday night in a Super Rugby Pacific qualifying final after finishing third on a congested ladder. The Reds placed fifth and will take on the second-ranked Crusaders while NSW Waratahs (eighth) and Western Force (ninth) missed the finals. Before the Lions toured in 2001 the Brumbies won the then Super 12 competition, and had 13 players selected in the 31-man Wallabies squad, which went on to win the series 2-1. Given the ACT outfit are again Australia's top team, Lolesio would like to see his teammates recognised. "Super Rugby is basically a trial for higher honours and I believe whoever is the best team in their country, whoever finishes on top in the country should have the majority of the players earn higher honours," Lolesio said. "We've got a lot of talent all over Australia and each team has been very competitive compared to previous years ... but I'd love to see heaps of Brumbies boys make it." The Wallabies only play one Test - on July 6 against Fiji - before taking on the might of the northern hemisphere so Lolesio felt using team combinations would be smart. His sentiments were backed Brumbies teammate and incumbent Wallabies fullback Tom Wright. "In a team sport, that cohesion, it's definitely something that would go a long way," Wright told AAP. "I feel like naturally, the team that's able to progress through the year as far as we can, hopefully we're represented well in the gold jersey and that's a great indication of guys how hard they've worked in our Brumbies jersey all year." Ten-Test Tom Hooper is one of the form forwards in the competition, but like Lolesio, is also leaving Canberra, headed to the UK to play for Exeter. While they suffered a late loss against the Crusaders in the final round, Hooper said the Brumbies were unquestionably Australia's "winningest" side and hoped that counted for himself and his teammates. "I think that a winning culture is really important and it's something that we've worked really hard to develop here for a long time," the 24-year-old told AAP. "Whether it's myself or it's another 15 of my teammates, I'd just be so stoked to see some Brumbies boys in the squad because we do understand how to win games and we're a great team down here." While his own position in the Wallabies isn't assured, Brumbies playmaker Noah Lolesio is plumping for his Canberra teammates to dominate Test selection to face the British and Irish Lions. Lolesio is Australia's incumbent flyhalf, wearing the 10 jersey on all four Tests of last year's UK spring tour, but announced through the Super Rugby Pacific season he would departing the Brumbies to play club rugby in Japan. Wallabies coach Joe Schmidt has been coy on his selection thoughts, only saying players who have committed their future off-shore remain "in the mix". Making a successful return from a back injury last round, Lolesio told AAP he hadn't spoken recently to Schmidt, but would be "super stoked" to be named. The Brumbies are preparing to host the Hurricanes on Saturday night in a Super Rugby Pacific qualifying final after finishing third on a congested ladder. The Reds placed fifth and will take on the second-ranked Crusaders while NSW Waratahs (eighth) and Western Force (ninth) missed the finals. Before the Lions toured in 2001 the Brumbies won the then Super 12 competition, and had 13 players selected in the 31-man Wallabies squad, which went on to win the series 2-1. Given the ACT outfit are again Australia's top team, Lolesio would like to see his teammates recognised. "Super Rugby is basically a trial for higher honours and I believe whoever is the best team in their country, whoever finishes on top in the country should have the majority of the players earn higher honours," Lolesio said. "We've got a lot of talent all over Australia and each team has been very competitive compared to previous years ... but I'd love to see heaps of Brumbies boys make it." The Wallabies only play one Test - on July 6 against Fiji - before taking on the might of the northern hemisphere so Lolesio felt using team combinations would be smart. His sentiments were backed Brumbies teammate and incumbent Wallabies fullback Tom Wright. "In a team sport, that cohesion, it's definitely something that would go a long way," Wright told AAP. "I feel like naturally, the team that's able to progress through the year as far as we can, hopefully we're represented well in the gold jersey and that's a great indication of guys how hard they've worked in our Brumbies jersey all year." Ten-Test Tom Hooper is one of the form forwards in the competition, but like Lolesio, is also leaving Canberra, headed to the UK to play for Exeter. While they suffered a late loss against the Crusaders in the final round, Hooper said the Brumbies were unquestionably Australia's "winningest" side and hoped that counted for himself and his teammates. "I think that a winning culture is really important and it's something that we've worked really hard to develop here for a long time," the 24-year-old told AAP. "Whether it's myself or it's another 15 of my teammates, I'd just be so stoked to see some Brumbies boys in the squad because we do understand how to win games and we're a great team down here." While his own position in the Wallabies isn't assured, Brumbies playmaker Noah Lolesio is plumping for his Canberra teammates to dominate Test selection to face the British and Irish Lions. Lolesio is Australia's incumbent flyhalf, wearing the 10 jersey on all four Tests of last year's UK spring tour, but announced through the Super Rugby Pacific season he would departing the Brumbies to play club rugby in Japan. Wallabies coach Joe Schmidt has been coy on his selection thoughts, only saying players who have committed their future off-shore remain "in the mix". Making a successful return from a back injury last round, Lolesio told AAP he hadn't spoken recently to Schmidt, but would be "super stoked" to be named. The Brumbies are preparing to host the Hurricanes on Saturday night in a Super Rugby Pacific qualifying final after finishing third on a congested ladder. The Reds placed fifth and will take on the second-ranked Crusaders while NSW Waratahs (eighth) and Western Force (ninth) missed the finals. Before the Lions toured in 2001 the Brumbies won the then Super 12 competition, and had 13 players selected in the 31-man Wallabies squad, which went on to win the series 2-1. Given the ACT outfit are again Australia's top team, Lolesio would like to see his teammates recognised. "Super Rugby is basically a trial for higher honours and I believe whoever is the best team in their country, whoever finishes on top in the country should have the majority of the players earn higher honours," Lolesio said. "We've got a lot of talent all over Australia and each team has been very competitive compared to previous years ... but I'd love to see heaps of Brumbies boys make it." The Wallabies only play one Test - on July 6 against Fiji - before taking on the might of the northern hemisphere so Lolesio felt using team combinations would be smart. His sentiments were backed Brumbies teammate and incumbent Wallabies fullback Tom Wright. "In a team sport, that cohesion, it's definitely something that would go a long way," Wright told AAP. "I feel like naturally, the team that's able to progress through the year as far as we can, hopefully we're represented well in the gold jersey and that's a great indication of guys how hard they've worked in our Brumbies jersey all year." Ten-Test Tom Hooper is one of the form forwards in the competition, but like Lolesio, is also leaving Canberra, headed to the UK to play for Exeter. While they suffered a late loss against the Crusaders in the final round, Hooper said the Brumbies were unquestionably Australia's "winningest" side and hoped that counted for himself and his teammates. "I think that a winning culture is really important and it's something that we've worked really hard to develop here for a long time," the 24-year-old told AAP. "Whether it's myself or it's another 15 of my teammates, I'd just be so stoked to see some Brumbies boys in the squad because we do understand how to win games and we're a great team down here."

Brumbies want Lions share of Wallabies selection
Brumbies want Lions share of Wallabies selection

West Australian

time3 hours ago

  • West Australian

Brumbies want Lions share of Wallabies selection

While his own position in the Wallabies isn't assured, Brumbies playmaker Noah Lolesio is plumping for his Canberra teammates to dominate Test selection to face the British and Irish Lions. Lolesio is Australia's incumbent flyhalf, wearing the 10 jersey on all four Tests of last year's UK spring tour, but announced through the Super Rugby Pacific season he would departing the Brumbies to play club rugby in Japan. Wallabies coach Joe Schmidt has been coy on his selection thoughts, only saying players who have committed their future off-shore remain "in the mix". Making a successful return from a back injury last round, Lolesio told AAP he hadn't spoken recently to Schmidt, but would be "super stoked" to be named. The Brumbies are preparing to host the Hurricanes on Saturday night in a Super Rugby Pacific qualifying final after finishing third on a congested ladder. The Reds placed fifth and will take on the second-ranked Crusaders while NSW Waratahs (eighth) and Western Force (ninth) missed the finals. Before the Lions toured in 2001 the Brumbies won the then Super 12 competition, and had 13 players selected in the 31-man Wallabies squad, which went on to win the series 2-1. Given the ACT outfit are again Australia's top team, Lolesio would like to see his teammates recognised. "Super Rugby is basically a trial for higher honours and I believe whoever is the best team in their country, whoever finishes on top in the country should have the majority of the players earn higher honours," Lolesio said. "We've got a lot of talent all over Australia and each team has been very competitive compared to previous years ... but I'd love to see heaps of Brumbies boys make it." The Wallabies only play one Test - on July 6 against Fiji - before taking on the might of the northern hemisphere so Lolesio felt using team combinations would be smart. His sentiments were backed Brumbies teammate and incumbent Wallabies fullback Tom Wright. "In a team sport, that cohesion, it's definitely something that would go a long way," Wright told AAP. "I feel like naturally, the team that's able to progress through the year as far as we can, hopefully we're represented well in the gold jersey and that's a great indication of guys how hard they've worked in our Brumbies jersey all year." Ten-Test Tom Hooper is one of the form forwards in the competition, but like Lolesio, is also leaving Canberra, headed to the UK to play for Exeter. While they suffered a late loss against the Crusaders in the final round, Hooper said the Brumbies were unquestionably Australia's "winningest" side and hoped that counted for himself and his teammates. "I think that a winning culture is really important and it's something that we've worked really hard to develop here for a long time," the 24-year-old told AAP. "Whether it's myself or it's another 15 of my teammates, I'd just be so stoked to see some Brumbies boys in the squad because we do understand how to win games and we're a great team down here."

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