The Super XV: Australian team of the week, Round 4

By Connor Bennett / Editor

Each week we’ll be looking at the best of the best in Australian rugby and piecing together the top 15 players out of the Aussie Super Rugby sides from the round gone by.

For the second week in a row, the only win from an Australian side came in an all-Aussie affair as the Brumbies ground their way past the Waratahs in Sydney in a wet and scrappy affair.

The Rebels put in one hell of a fight against the Chiefs in Melbourne, leading by four coming into the final ten minutes before conceding two late tries in the dying stages to give up the points.

Over on the other side of the world, the Reds were embarrassed in Johannesburg by last year’s grand finalists, letting in seven tries to two against the Lions.

The Force had the bye this week as the Aussie sides continue to make this list a difficult task to put together with a string of poor performances. On that note, here’s the top 15 for Round 4.

1. Tom Robertson (Waratahs)
Now I know a lot of you will hate this list starting off with a Tahs player after some pretty negative feedback on anyone from the Waratahs making the team of the week in the early rounds.

There wasn’t a lot to work with in terms of the loosehead this week but Robertson was the best of an average bunch. A pair of tackle busts, strong mauling off the lineout when the Waratahs had the Brumbies backpedalling on their own line, and not to mention a try in the first half, has him ahead of the pack this week.

2. James Hanson (Rebels)
Hanson had a ripper game against the Chiefs this week and could even be the best Aussie player of the round.

Against a much more fancied pack, Hanson was a machine with the ball in hand and in the scrum, keeping the Chiefs big men at bay for nearly 70 minutes on the way to what looked like a massive win for the club. He was a habitual advantage line breaker and carried the front row through much of the contest.

3. Laurie Weeks (Rebels)
Ala’alatoa had a solid outing for the Brumbies, but a lack of consistency in a messy fixture against the Tahs hurt his chance this week.

Weeks worked wonders with the aforementioned Hanson, as well as loosehead Sa’aga, up against the Chiefs in the scrum in particular, but his running game caused bulk damage around the edges of the ruck as well, drawing the defence into the centre to create space out wide.

4. Dean Mumm (Waratahs)
Mumm makes his first appearance in the team of the week this season for a gritty, if not unspectacular, effort in wet conditions against the Brumbies.

While certainly not the internet’s favourite player, Mumm made lemonade out of what he was given in a tough second half for the home side as the Brumbies ran away with the game. That and he was better than some sluggish efforts from the rest of the Australian sides.

5. Sam Carter (Brumbies)
It was Carter’s defence that earns him his spot in the side this week, keeping the Waratahs contained under pressure on their own line in the first half.

Carters fringe defence and protection of the inside halves was an underrated factor of the Brumbies winning performance, keeping the damage minimal in the first 40 minutes when they were behind in the contest.

6. Hendrick Tui (Reds)
Jordy Reid had a strong outing for the Rebels, however, Tui was really one of very few standouts for the Reds in their dodgy effort against the Lions in South Africa, so he gets the nod.

The Japanese international was really the only one of a struggling forward pack to threaten the Lions in attack, breaking the advantage line regularly and dominating the lineout for the Queensland side in an otherwise forgettable match-up.

7. Colby Fainga’a (Rebels)
Brother of Wallabies Anthony and Saia, Colby gets his spot in the limelight this week with a strong outing against the Chiefs as a part of one of the Rebels better forward pack performances in the clubs short history.

Fainga’a was a presence in both offence and defence, breaking the line more on more than one occasion, making more metres than any other Rebels forward, bar one…

8. Amanaki Mafi (Rebels)
And that was Number 8 Amanaki Mafi who has made a big impact in his first season with the Rebels.

He racked up 83 metres from 14 carries, including two offloads and a pair of tackle busts, using his pure size and strength to muscle his way through the Chiefs defence, especially firing in the opening half when the match was in a real grinding contest.

9. Joe Powell (Brumbies)
Despite just one start from 11 games across two years prior to this season, Powell has slotted in without a hitch at the Brumbies No. 9 position, showing a lot of promise for a young player on the rise.

While less than perfect, the 22-year-olds guidance and ball movement around the paddock against the Waratahs was a key factor in their second half resurgence on Saturday night, not to mentioned a very handy kicking game off the back of the ruck, with one in particular setting up a peach of a try for Henry Speight.

10. Jackson Garden-Bachop (Rebels)
The young man impressed in his early showing with the Rebels, showing off his skills as a running flyhalf not afraid to take on the line.

His kicking game was stern but his ball movement and affliction to drawing in the defence and putting his body on the line proved to be a beneficial tactic against the Chiefs, even setting up Marika Koroibete to take the lead early in the second half.

11. Marika Koroibete (Rebels)
Speaking of, the former Melbourne Storm flyer scored his first try in Super Rugby over the weekend, crossing in the left-hand corner thanks to a cutout ball from Garden-Bachop.

Koroibete was dangerous down that left flank for much of the first half and while still far from perfect, he’s taking baby steps towards becoming the player he was hyped up to be when prematurely selected for the Wallabies squad last year.

12. Duncan Paia’aua (Reds)
Paia’aua was an offensive powerhouse for the Reds backline in a tough match-up for them this week, a bright spark among a litany of errors and a Quade Cooper red card that had the backs struggling.

Pairing up with Samu Kerevi in the centres, Paia’aua racked up the third most running metres of anyone from either side, snagging 83 metres from just 10 runs, including the finishing touches of a very nice opening try for the Reds late in the game thanks to the lead up work of Jake McIntyre and Karmichael Hunt.

13. Tom English (Rebels)
The 26-year-old was destructive when taking on the line against the Chiefs, often being the centrepiece of their set piece off the lineout. He made five tackle busts from 10 carries, including a few offloads just for good measure.

He was key in opening up the defence for his outside runners as well as prying on tired legs late in the game to keep the Melbourne side in the contest. His running metres were bested by only one man in the game, All Black Anton Lienert-Brown.

14. Henry Speight (Brumbies)
In his seventh season with the Brumbies now, Speight nearly single-handedly won the game for his side in the second half with two blistering tries to snag the lead late in the game.

The 28-year-old pulled out a magical solo effort from inside his own half, latching onto a deft box kick from Powell, before beating two defenders and kicking through again past the fullback to cross the line.

His second was another solo effort, this time using speed and strength to break through a line full of tired defenders to get in under the posts. He also made a ridiculous seven tackle busts from only eight runs.

15. Jack Debreczeni (Rebels)
Rounding out the Rebels dominance of this weeks side is fullback Jack Debreczeni.

Averaging nearly ten metres per run, his kicking and return game from the back was key in keeping the Chiefs under pressure for three-quarters of the game, as well as his power in drawing in key defenders on the set piece.

The New Zealand-born Debreczeni showed consistency, something other fullbacks from Round 4 struggled with.

Do you agree with the XV? You’re sporting fans, of course you don’t, so let us know who you think should or shouldn’t be in the side for this week.

The Crowd Says:

2017-03-22T01:29:03+00:00

DaveR

Guest


I think Higgers will come into his own this year barring injury or suspension, and again become the 8 of choice, he just has so much attack. That leaves Hooper at 7 and Fardy at 6 being the best combination at the moment, with McMahon (either 6 or 7) Timani (8) and Reid (6) (all rebels) to fill in.

2017-03-21T07:50:16+00:00

chasbie

Guest


If dean Mumm is the best SR in Australia we are in deep S...T, just shows why australian rugby is going backwards to much rugby royalty at the top

2017-03-21T00:14:04+00:00

kevino

Guest


Great to see so many Rebels in the side even though we lost, was a massive improvement and hopefully a step in the right direction for the rest of the season. We just needTimani, McMahon and Smith back on the field as quickly as possible.

2017-03-20T21:24:10+00:00

Browny

Roar Rookie


Did you watch any of the other games? As Sheikh alluded to, I'd probably have Force players ahead of them. Flyhalf performances last week probably rate like 1. Hawera 2. Garden-Bachop/Harold Bishop 3. Bryce Hegarty 4. Jono Lance 5. Foley 6. Cooper In all seriousness, I haven't got many complaints about most of the Rebels selections there. Hanson was huge, Weeks had a great game, Colby was everywhere, English made metres every time he touched the ball and Debreczeni played better than I've seen him in a long time. Really impressed by English and Debreczeni who seems to really have found his home at 15, or at least his confidence is back now he's spent some time away from the front line. I probably don't need to mention it (I'm about to mention it...) but I think Mafi was probably best performing player of any of the Australian teams this week. Absolutely immense. I think JGB/HB wasn't as good as Hawera but he had one or two great passes and a pretty solid evening with the boot that made him look better than what he is and Koroibete had a mixed game, can certainly finish but still needs a lot of work. I do think he's improving a with each outing and by season's end when the Rebels have a stronger team on the park (Smith, Day, Jeffries, McMahon, Timani and Shipperley to return to the fray) he should have a better platform to work around which will help too.

2017-03-20T09:00:49+00:00

Sheikh

Roar Rookie


Judging by how poor some of the games were, I half expected to see a Force player or two on the team of the week, as at least they hadn't done anything wrong!

2017-03-20T05:42:58+00:00

Timbo (L)

Guest


How to play well rounded rugby... A 13 should be able to defend, a 15 should be able to kick and have a full field vision of the game. A player should always know where to be and what side of a tackle or ruck to be in. Isolated in attack with 2 defenders taking you down is never going to end well.

2017-03-20T05:23:18+00:00

Apelu

Guest


What are you smoking Connor? You have 8 out of 15 Rebels in your team, and they lost

2017-03-20T04:45:10+00:00

Markus

Guest


Definitely an eyebrow raiser to see the only team to not only win on the weekend, but win comprehensively away from home, manage only 3 players in the team of the week. Sure it is good to see the Rebels show some attacking threat, but realistically they still lost by 13 at home.

2017-03-20T03:08:47+00:00

The Sheriff

Guest


I actually like Paul Cullen's team better. But I think all those mentioned did play well. The surprise for me was Debreceni who had a great game. He was not worth his place in the team hitherto. Godwin is going well at I/centre and he has a fairly astute fly half beside him. May be we should force him to stay the requisite number of years to become eligible.

2017-03-20T02:29:30+00:00

Stronger Together

Guest


While the Rebels deserve praise for itheir performance against the Chiefs (who had to overcome two yellow card episodes during game) do they really deserve 8 of 15 spots in the TOTW??? Agree with other correspondents that Scott Fardy was superb against Tahs - non-stop, gutsy, hard work in tight.

2017-03-20T02:23:25+00:00

Selector

Guest


I would see Higgers over Fardy at the moment. Shame about Dempsey as well, he was starting to come along nicely.

2017-03-20T02:02:11+00:00

Hoy

Roar Guru


Beale is a terrible 10, though slightly better than Foley, and I wouldn't be sure that Cheika sees him that way anyway... I think Cheika loves him outside Foley... though if 10 isn't Foley, then I am not sure what Cheika will do...

2017-03-20T01:59:45+00:00

Hoy

Roar Guru


Poor coaching is our problem indeed.

2017-03-20T01:58:40+00:00

BluesMan

Guest


Figured what out?

2017-03-20T01:45:30+00:00

Harry

Guest


Grim days after another bad weekend where we are all excited about the rebels playing well for 70 minutes ... but still losing by more than 2 converted tries. The two best flyhalves in the Aussie teams are kiwi rejects. Says it all. Only Speight, Kuridrani and Fardy lived up to their billing as quality test players. Faingaa and English were OK at the Rebels. Korobeti showed he can finish. Powell is a genuine test prospect and Latu is playing well. Nothing to see elsewhere

2017-03-20T01:41:53+00:00

Timbo (L)

Guest


Always a controversial topic, opinions are always slanted with home team prejudices. It is good to see the Rebels get recognition, I felt like they put up a respectable fight against a superior side. Happy to see big Jack Dcz getting recognition, albeit at fullback, I like him at 10. I feel like Koribete got an encouragement award, "well done for scoring a try", keep up the good work. He still has a long way to go, I saw his halfback gesturing to him on multiple occasions to get into position. He, like all NRL players need time and coaching. Izzy still hasn't figured it out, Marika seems to have a better grasp on it from the get-go and I believe will become a powerful asset for the Melbourne based team.

2017-03-20T01:38:29+00:00

Selector

Guest


It doesn't sound too bad, but It's sad though that I would take Japan's 6 (Tui) & 8 (Mafi) over any options we have in this country any day of the week. Hopefully it is more a sign of the strength of Japan Rugby, than any inadequacies within Australia.........

2017-03-20T01:07:34+00:00

Rt

Guest


Robertson and Mumm? Nup. Tahs were woeful.

2017-03-20T00:42:45+00:00

Oblonsky‘s Other Pun

Roar Guru


I dunno, Celtic. Foley hasn't played at all and (I know this is a contentious topic) I don't rate him as an international quality flyhalf due to his lack of boot and his defence being as bad as Cooper'. The other two are young and untested, but I wouldn't be averse to giving one of them a shot if Foley doesn't play well when he comes back from his concussion. Getting them to develop in June would be a good way to see where they are at. That said, I sort of expect Cheika to play Beale at 10 anyway.

2017-03-20T00:41:38+00:00

Browny

Roar Rookie


Deb has been playing fullback this year anyway and it appears that's where he's more comfortable. I'm not sure if this is right, I was at the game (Koroibete went over right in front of me), but it appeared as the match went on and Deb got more comfortable and more involved he also was stepping into first receiver quite often. Could be a good sign for moving forward.

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