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Super Rugby AU – Round 2 Preview

Rebels shrug off travel blues to face Reds

Rebels stand-in skipper Matt Toomua admits news of the latest scheduling switch which keeps them out of Melbourne for an extra two weeks initially hit his Super Rugby AU team hard.

While they will wear the big V and the iconic Melbourne logo on their new away jerseys in a partnership with the Victorian government announced on Wednesday, it’s ironic their home state is the one place they can’t go.

The rugby nomads haven’t played at home for more than a year after they were forced out of Victoria because of COVID-19, and now their round-three match on March 6 against the Brumbies has been switched from Melbourne to Canberra.

This will allow them to travel to Perth a week later, which they couldn’t have done from Victoria due to a Western Australia travel ban.

After making a sudden exit on February 12 to avoid being locked out of Queensland for their season-opener against the Reds, Toomua said it was blow to the team who spent three months on the road last year and were set on returning from Brisbane on Saturday.

“I think initially being told to get out of Melbourne, that was a little bit hard to take for some guys after spending plenty of time away from family last year and memories of that came back straight away.

“But as the dust settles we realised we’re in a different space now and Melbourne’s actually got some good measures in place to hopefully allow us to be back in very soon.

“We’re very grateful to Rugby Australia and in particular to the Brumbies for swapping that match.”

As vice-captain, Toomua has again taken over the captaincy with no timeline for the return of regular skipper Dane Haylett-Petty, who is worryingly still battling concussion symptoms from the Tri-Nations late last year.

Haylett-Petty also missed six weeks of last year’s Super Rugby AU with a knee injury.

Toomua’s Wallabies campaign was also cut short with a serious groin injury but he says he’s good to go on Friday night against the rampant Reds, who crushed the Waratahs in their season-opener while the Rebels had the bye.

But Melbourne will be without a key man in hard-running No.8 Isi Naisarani, who has a hip injury.

The Rebels also announced their leadership group for 2021 on Wednesday with some new faces, including flanker Brad Wilkin, prop Cameron Orr and Wallabies Marika Koroibete, Jordan Uelese and Reece Hodge.

The Rebels take on the Reds on Friday February 26 at Suncorp Stadium, kicking off at 7:45pm AEDT

Friday

Reds v Rebels
Suncorp Stadium, Brisbane

Reds: 15 James O’Connor (c), 14 Filipo Daugunu, 13 Hamish Stewart, 12 Hunter Paisami, 11 Jordan Petaia, 10 Jock Campbell, 9 Tate McDermott, 8 Harry Wilson, 7 Fraser McReight, 6 Angus Scott-Young, 5 Seru Uru, 4 Angus Blyth, 3 Taniela Tupou, 2 Alex Mafi, 1 Dane Zander
Replacements: 
16 Josh Nasser, 17 Harry Hoopert, 18 Feao Fotuaika, 19 Ryan Smith, 20 Sam Wallis, 21 Moses Sorovi, 22 Bryce Hegarty, 23 Suliasi Vunivalu

Rebels: 15 Tom Pincus, 14 Lachlan Anderson, 13 Stacey Ili, 12 Reece Hodge, 11 Marika Koroibete, 10 Matt To’omua (c), 9 Joe Powell, 8 Michael Wells, 7 Richard Hardwick, 6 Brad Wilkin, 5 Trevor Hosea, 4 Steve Cummins, 3 Pone Faamausili, 2 Jordan Uelese, 1 Cabous Eloff
Replacements: 
16 Ed Craig, 17 Isaac Aedo Kailea, 18 Rhys van Nek, 19 Rob Leota, 20 Josh Kemeny, 21 James Tuttle, 22 Glen Vaihu, 23 Frank Lomani


Brumbies v Waratahs: Where a Classic Rivalry Began

Noah Lolesio and Will Harrison weren’t even born when the fuse was lit on the fractious rivalry between the Brumbies and NSW Waratahs.

Even devoted rugby fans who search through all the feisty on-field clashes, epic matches and off-field niggle won’t find the exact moment anywhere in the 25-year history of professional rugby.

That’s because it pre-dates the birth of Super Rugby but we’ll get to that in a minute. Saturday night’s latest edition at GIO Stadium in Canberra will remind us again that rivalries of deep feeling can sprout and flourish quickly even in the modern era. Brumbies v Waratahs.

The rivalry is intense, it’s real and it can drag out underdog upsets. The ledger…20 wins to the Brumbies and 17 to the Waratahs….says it all about how tight it is.

For that very reason there is no way that five-eighth Lolesio and the Brumbies will be underestimating the wounded Waratahs without sidelined skipper Jake Gordon.

For those diehards of Canberra rugby, this rivalry has percolating away since all the little insults of the early 1990s, those days of disregard in Wallaby selections, being treated as poor cousins and the born-to-rule utterings they hated about NSW rugby.

The history-changing moment arrived on July 3, 1994.

The then-Canberra Kookaburras, with a young, hirsute George Gregan on board, thrashed NSW 44-28 at Sydney’s Concord Oval. A teenaged Joe Roff scored two tries. Ten NSW Wallabies were left red-faced.

Prop and talisman Geoff “Duke” Didier, a young 34 at the time, boomed: “People will say NSW were flat. But we belted ‘em. One-off be buggered.”

It was a first but far from the last because the boys from Canberra were going places.

When the Brumbies were born in 1996, only half the 33-man squad were locals. The rest took on the feisty persona of misfits and rejects from the heartland rugby states.

Players like foundation lock David Giffin wore that tag like a badge of honour. There’s still wonderment from Giffin about how it’s all panned out.

He was an unwanted lock in Queensland in the mid-’90s when the Reds had the world class trio of John Eales, Garrick Morgan and Rod McCall.

‘‘Yep, I was one of the discards and misfits who headed to Canberra,’’ said Giffin of his springboard to 51 Tests and the 1999 Rugby World Cup triumph.

‘‘I signed with the Brumbies for one year with the idea of heading back to Queensland with some experience.” He stayed for nine seasons and won two Super 12 titles that Queensland peers could only dream about.

‘‘Being bagged as misfits was definitely a motivating factor behind the early success of the Brumbies,” Giffin said.

‘‘We had something to prove. It also said something about the confident attitude with the player group that we’d all taken a risk to move to Canberra.’’

The annual clash against the Waratahs embodied everything the Brumbies were fighting for.

It was recognition, it was earning a square deal in selections and it was shaking up the established order.

“The Canberra boys felt the selectors just picked Waratahs for the Wallabies, signings from Queensland like Pat Howard, Troy Coker and ‘Giff’ didn’t like NSW anyway and a former NSW forward like Owen Finegan had a distaste for his treatment,” foundation Brumby Rod Kafer once said.

“Thrown together, we had a passionate dislike for the Waratahs. There’s the genesis right there.

“After I stopped playing, I got a better understanding of the rugby economics that spruik a successful NSW means big support, big commercial backing and big profile for the code.

“As a player, you hate the Sydney-centric thing.”

Take 1996 when the boys from Canberra discovered that one NSW player, who would never play a Test, was signed on better money by the Australian Rugby Union than Brumbies who already had.

After the first-year Brumbies were belted 44-10 in 1996, the tables were turned with a 56-9 stampede over the Waratahs in Canberra in 1997.

Hired guns like Queenslander Troy Coker helped put chest-beating Waratahs like lock John Welborn in their place as the edge between the sides grew in that game when they scuffled over the sideline.

“He was poncing around with his chest out and I might have given it to him about being a ‘two-Test veteran’,” Coker recalled.

“There was this entitlement thing around NSW rugby that the Canberra boys had a real distaste for.”

It’s easy to forget that the Brumbies were born from nothing in 1996, might have been called the ACT Dingoes or Canberra Chargers and could have bombed like any number of other sporting teams created in that era.

The Brumbies are team-sport success story in Australia in a landscape littered with far more failed ventures. Just take a look at four franchises established in the mid-1990s…rugby league’s South Queensland Crushers, basketball’s West Sydney Razorbacks, AFL’s Fremantle Dockers and the Brumbies.

The Crushers and Razorbacks died long ago and the Dockers are still chasing their first flag. By comparison, the Brumbies’ rich history now includes the 2001 and 2004 Super 12 titles, four further grand final appearances and last year’s inaugural Super Rugby AU title.

The adventurous spirit was so evident in the way the team played in their first decade as a club that ‘‘Brumbies-style’’ became a catchcry for flair and innovation.

Many have tried to distil the secret of the Brumbies, highlighting the team’s player driven code, eye for recruits and the business plan of initial coach Rod Macqueen.

Giffin nods approval at all those factors, yet offers an even simpler reason: ‘‘Any team with George Gregan and Steve Larkham at halfback and flyhalf was going to be successful if you just put reasonable players around them.

‘‘Couple them with some really good players for a number of years and you had a fair reason for the sustained success of the Brumbies in the early years.’’

If you press Giffin he’ll chuckle at any notion that rugby’s talent scouts in NSW and Queensland have become any shrewder than they were in the mid-’90s.

‘‘I remember saying that one day that flow of top-line prospects from other states would dry up but, guess what, it doesn’t,” Giffin said.

“Someone surprising always slips through the net. George Smith, Mark Gerrard and Mark Chisholm were three.”

You could say the same about today’s Brumbies Tom Banks, Irae Simone, Andrew Muirhead, Darcy Swain, Issak Fines-Leleiwasa and others.

There are always intriguing personal rivalries in Brumbies-Waratahs games. Brumbies centre Simone always wants to excel against his former club and the match-up at No.10 is another of those “mate v mate” proving grounds.

Lolesio and Waratahs five-eighth Will Harrison, both just 21, have been competing or playing together since Australian Schoolboys and Under-20s days.

“’Harro’ is a good mate of mine. We’ve grown up playing together so it’s awesome to see him do well at the ‘Tahs,” Lolesio said.

“I’m looking forward to playing against him.

“It’s always exciting to play against the ‘Tahs and it’s our first home game for our fans.

“We definitely expect them to be hurting and a better team than they showed us in Round One.”

Waratahs winger James Ramm definitely expects his team to improve markedly and the underdog tag sits comfortably with him.

“We like it. We’re a young team, there’s a bit about us, it’s a growing year, we’ve lost a captain, we enjoy playing an exciting brand of footy…all those remarks flow in and build us,” Ramm said.

The return of an incendiary figure like flanker Lachie Swinton for a match like this is perfect to spice things up. Brumbies-Waratahs clashes are rarely dull.

A match with unexpected twists on Saturday night will just add to the history of one of the classic rivalries in World Rugby.

The Waratahs take on the Brumbies on Saturday February 27 at GIO Stadium kicking off at 7:45pm AEDT

Saturday

Brumbies v Waratahs
GIO Stadium, Canberra

Brumbies: 15 Tom Banks, 14 Andy Muirhead, 13 Len Ikitau, 12 Irae Simone, 11 Mack Hansen, 10 Noah Lolesio, 9 Nic White, 8 Pete Samu, 7 Jahrome Brown, 6 Rob Valetini, 5 Cadeyrn Neville, 4 Darcy Swain, 3 Allan Alaalatoa (c), 2 Connal McInerney, 1 James Slipper
Replacements: 16 Lachlan Lonergan, 17 Harry Lloyd, 18 Tom Ross, 19 Nick Frost, 20 Tom Cusack, 21 Ryan Lonergan, 22 Reesjan Pasitoa, 23 Issak Fines-Leleiwasa

Waratahs: 15 Jack Maddocks, 14 Mark Nawaqanitawase, 13 Alex Newsome (c), 12 Tepai Moeroa, 11 James Ramm, 10 Will Harrison, 9 Jack Grant, 8 Jack Dempsey, 7 Carlo Tizzano, 6 Lachlan Swinton, 5 Jack Whetton, 4 Sam Caird, 3 Harry Johnson-Holmes, 2 Tom Horton, 1 Angus Bell
Replacements: 16 David Porecki, 17 Te Tera Faulkner, 18 Sio Tatola, 19 Jeremy Williams, 20 Hugh Sinclair, 21 Henry Robertson, 22 Tane Edmed, 23 Triston Reilly

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