Bernie bungs it on as Brumbies bundled out

By Matt Porter / Roar Guru

The dominant lineout beat the dominant scrum as the Highlanders sent the Brumbies packing in a wet and windy Canberra.

A bitterly disappointed Brumbies coach Stephen Larkham had a good old whinge post-match, about virtually everything: the ref not awarding replacement outside back Lausi’i Taliauli a try on full time; not being better rewarded for his team’s scrum dominance – even the six-day turnaround.


“It’s really difficult to not comment on some of those referring decision… we did everything right to win that game,” Larkham lamented.

Not quite Stephen.

For a start your boys were out-scored two tries to none (the replays definitely showed Taliauli was short of the line).

You barely won your own lineout ball with the hair trigger reactions of the Highlander jumpers pinching six Brumby throws – including Elliot Dixon’s doozy five metres out from his own line. You aimlessly kicked away far too much pill and your defence was too passive for all of the first half against a mob who rushed up to gang tackle for the full 80.

Including the last ten when you lived in the Highlanders’ 22m for scrum after scrum and wave after wave of attack.

And you were awarded a bagful of penalties for having the superior scrum throughout the match.


Oh, and your opponents also had a six-day turnaround, and a much tougher one at that, backing up from having to subdue the Chiefs in an epic tussle last Saturday while your boys only had to deal with the lowly Force at home.

Not to mention the ‘Landers having flown around the world with games in Argentina and South Africa on consecutive weekends prior. 


Aussie fans have no one left to cheer for in Super season 2016. A five-nation comp has been whittled down to two.

Will it be whittled further down to just the one before the weekend’s end, when the result of the Lions v Crusaders clash in Jo’Burg reveals itself.

Back to the game in Canberra, although the result was tight, with less than a converted try the difference in the end. The visitors got there by playing smarter as well as better. 



They negated the severe wind shear by throwing short, flat balls mostly to the front of their lineout. Working out that the Brumbies probably wanted to do the same, their two pods of lifters and jumpers worked overtime in defence at the front and the near front of Brumby lineouts, to either cut off their throw or force it long; never a great option in the treacherous conditions.


Putting backrower Luke Whitelock into the utterly unfamiliar position of lock proved a masterstroke as he was able to use his fleet of foot to quickly get into position and his relatively lighter frame for easier hoisting to win his own ball and pinch the opposition’s, which he did on a few occasions.

Near the end of the game, with his team under all sorts of pressure, Highlanders’ blindside Elliot Dixon epitomised his side’s street smarts when he went into contact a bit isolated but milked a penalty by slyly holding down his tackler Scott Fardy to confuse the ref into thinking it was he who was getting interfered with on the ground.

And are there two players that sum up situations quicker and almost always come up with the right answer better than the two All Black Smiths in the Highlanders’ backline? 

Ben especially was operating on another plane last night with his positional play, kicking, running, passing, tackling, backing up and friendly yet searching, chats to the ref. 

In between them, Lima Sopoaga’s not bad either with a largely controlled display in demanding conditions.

For all that, the Brumbies went within a few millimetres advancing to the semi-finals.

Larkham called for “crazy line speed” from his troops at the break and he largely got that in a much improved second half performance, right up until the 83rd minute when they were hot on attack.

But it wasn’t to be their night, so no fitting finale for their departing champions Stephen Moore and Matt Toomua.



Once the bitter pills of frustration and disappointment wash through his system, Larkham will see the silver lining from his perspective of assistant Wallabies coach. He, Michael Cheka and co now have the best part of a month to put their plan of beating the All Blacks into action with their full cohort of players available and surely desperate to put things right.

Meanwhile, the Kiwis could well be belting seven shades out of each other for two more weekends. It’s not all bad.

The Crowd Says:

2016-07-25T14:34:33+00:00

Stag

Roar Rookie


Probably still got the shackles on

2016-07-25T14:33:50+00:00

Stag

Roar Rookie


You'd had better start at the top with Cheika. He has the manners of a house brick.

2016-07-25T12:30:15+00:00

mudskipper

Guest


I agree poor communications and no evidence there wasn't a try scored. however he was clearly over the line with the ball when the play stopped

2016-07-25T12:28:17+00:00

mudskipper

Guest


In that plain question the brumbies were clearly dominate pushing forward. The ball wasn't lost half then player was well over the line. It wasn't possible to see if the ball was held up as the defending player was on his side.

2016-07-25T09:35:15+00:00

Jacko

Guest


Load of rubbish, it is lost and never makes the line. Very clear

2016-07-25T00:57:57+00:00

Lindsay Amner

Roar Guru


Perhaps the crowd should vote on who is the dominant team and that should decide the winner? How do you come to the conclusion that the Brumbies were the dominant team? You'd be in the small group that thought Australia were the dominant team in the 2015 RWC final. There is no such thing as the benefit of the doubt in a TMO's decision. Coaches are not there to complain about refereeing, they are there to ensure that their team is better than the opposition and therefore not reliant on a referee's decision. Poor form by Larkham, first he didn't make his team better and then he tried to blame someone else for what was partly his own failing. The only thing the Brumbies were dominant in was the scrum. Hardly an unfair result.

2016-07-25T00:50:58+00:00

Lindsay Amner

Roar Guru


Taulili did lose it backwards as he slid forward. This was quite clearly evident in the footage. This is the problem. His upper body went over the line but at no point could you see the ball go over the line. Sure he didn't lose it forward, but he also didn't clearly take it over the line, therefore a try cannot be awarded. The decision was correct.

2016-07-24T21:25:30+00:00

Ryanno

Guest


He couldn't determine where the ball was but in all likelihood it was still under his torso and was a try otherwise we would have been able to see the ball.

2016-07-24T21:23:04+00:00

Ryanno

Guest


Which team does Ricky Ponting play for? Way to hang onto a grudge.

2016-07-24T11:15:46+00:00

RubberLegs

Guest


The TMO could not see the ball grounded because the Taliauli was lying on top of it. The TMO could have said that there was no evidence that the ball stopped short of the line. Some skeptics say Taliauli lost it as he slid over the line with the ball under him. If the TOM saw a knock on he didn't mention it. The words used by the TMO were unhelpful and the ref had slipped over on the wet grass and saw very little so he wanted the TMO to give him the all clear. That's the way it goes these days. Inadequate communication skills by the officials may well have cost the donkeys the game; whinging will not change the result.

2016-07-24T10:09:38+00:00

mudskipper

Guest


Matt Porter I can't agree with your articles assessment. A game of rugby is won by points scored not line outs. In fact points aren't awarded for line outs YET... Perhaps in 2017 The Brumbies should have been given the benefit of the doubt and awarded the late try by Lausi’i Taliauli and then kick for goal to win the match and play in the semis. Nonetheless this was poor refereeing without a fair result for the dominate team in the play. And not because the Highlanders won a few line outs. as for larkham I expect him to complain about such negative refereeing against the dominate player.

2016-07-24T09:02:12+00:00

MH01

Guest


I stopped reading after I got to "replays definitely showed Taliauli was short of the line" suggest you actually watch the replays, the TMO could not see clear geounding of the ball, there was nothing clear about it, it's why they try was not awarded, cause the TMO could not determine where the ball was after the player went over the line.

2016-07-24T07:32:06+00:00

alex

Roar Pro


Typical whinging aussies... the mantle has well and truly been taken from the english

2016-07-24T07:04:36+00:00

Realist

Guest


Typicial graceless Kiwis.

2016-07-24T06:34:40+00:00

Rebellion

Guest


He's done himself no favours with such an outburst. I think the Australian provincial captains have handled themselves relatively graceful this season. Worst examples from Aus were both George Gregan and Ricky Ponting. Gregan coming off the field in 2003 after being dusted by 40 points and saying "We just didn't take our chances" wa sone I'll never forget.

2016-07-24T02:22:58+00:00

The Sheriff

Guest


Maybe it is time to start fining coaches who break the ARU Code of Conduct as Larkham did the other night. If he was in lowly district club rugby he would have been cited and admonished.

2016-07-24T01:36:40+00:00

Jerome

Guest


Stephen Larkham's poor post-match outburst was an embarrassment to Australian rugby, the Brumbies AND HIMSELF. Shameful...

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