Pone up! Giant Rebels prop Fa’amausili impresses with pulsating power

By JamesDuncan / Roar Guru

There were some tasty snippets in the Rebels vs Reds clash last Friday but a pair of moments – in terms of sheer excitement – stood above the rest.

I am referring here to the two eye-popping interventions by Rebels tighthead prop Pone Fa’amausili.

His dual feats of pulsating power had the folks in the Brookvale crowd – including myself – shifting in their seats, bellowing a spontaneous, “Ooooh!”

First was his teeth-rattling tackle in the 41st minute on Reds fullback Bryce Hegarty.

“I don’t think that Hegarty saw me,” recalls Fa’amausili.

“I was in Marika’s (Koroibete) shadow, then Hegarty stepped off his right foot and I popped up out of nowhere.

“I just saw a good opportunity to get into him and put on a shot.”

Did he ever. Hegarty was sent back in the direction he came about as quick as humanly possible.

It was reminiscent of Wycliff Palu’s massive hit on Rob Kearney in Dublin 11 years ago. Bizarrely, the Wallaby No.8 was then yellow-carded for not using an arm-wrap. But completing tackles like these is seemingly impossible when the collision is so forceful.

“I was going to wrap but it was too late,” says Fa’amausili. “Because he bounced off me, he was far from me and I couldn’t get my arms around him.”

To his credit, Hegarty was straight up and at ‘em after having his bell rung. But perhaps picking out the biggest man on the field to run into is a habit worth changing.

“I was told by a few Rebels players after the game – who have trained and played with Hegarty – that he’s run straight into big props in the past like (former All Black) Tony Woodcock,” says Fa’amausili.

Pone Fa’amausili of the Melbourne Rebels (Image: Supplied)

Six minutes later there was another epic collision. Queensland was forced to make a line drop-out after grounding the ball in goal. Fa’amausili was ready to rampage should the pill fly his way.

“I had Dane Haylett-Petty telling me to come behind the 50-metre mark to do a massive run up,” he says. “The kick ended up going on Dane’s side and I just ran off him.

“When I had the ball I didn’t actually see who I was running at. I just ran straight. I didn’t actually pick anyone out.”

The man in front of him was 21-Test Wallaby Lukhan Salakaia-Loto. Fa’amausili pinned his ears back and launched all of his six-foot-five, 133-kilogram frame into the gun Queensland forward.

Salakaia-Loto took down his man but not before Fa’amausili chewed off 25-odd metres. It was good, simple footy but thoroughly captivating.

If you thought Fa’amausili’s straight-and-hard burst was redolent of the 13-a-side stuff, you’d be right on the money.

“I had a rugby league background before I became a professional union player,” he says. “Those hit ups were my favourite thing to do back in league and I enjoy now being able to do it in union.

“Some people would probably say it was ruthless and not very smart. For me, it’s the contact that I love the most and I would do it any day of the week.”

If that’s what it’s called, bring on more ruthless.

It has been a long rise to top-level rugby for Melbourne born-and-raised Fa’amausili. After his dabble in league as a teenager, including training and trials with St George Illawarra and Penrith juniors, he returned to 15s when encouraged by a friend to try out for the Rebels’ U20 team.

“I went straight into tighthead prop,” he says. “It was Nic Henderson who put me in there.

“I didn’t know it was such a tough position until I played my first game against the Reds. A couple of the boys that I played against in that first U20s game were Wrongers (Liam Wright), and Blythy (Angus Blyth).

“I then made the U20s camp for Australia and I played in the Oceania Cup, but didn’t quite make it the World Cup in Georgia.

“The Rebels have looked after me from there. They’ve kept their eye on me and here I am today getting my chance.”

It’s taken plenty of graft from Fa’amausili in the intervening years. He has had to adapt to a new code, learn his position, and compete with the other props for precious moments on the pitch.

Fa’amausili’s seventh appearance for the Rebels last Friday came more than two years after his debut, against the Sunwolves in 2018. His start in Round 1 of Super Rugby AU was the big man’s first time in Melbourne’s run-on team.

Pone Fa’amausili training with the Melbourne Rebels (Image: Supplied)

“It’s taken me a lot to get to this point,” he says. “Three years to be exact. I’ve always been the third-string prop and it’s taken a long time to learn the points of being a good tighthead.

“I’m very grateful to be able to start these two games over Jermaine Ainsley who is a Wallaby prop.”

Fa’amausili’s efforts helped the Rebels get into a competitive position in last Friday’s clash. When subbed off after 47 minutes, his side held a 6-5 advantage which they extended to 18-8 deep into the second half. Alas, they could not hold on, as the Reds scored ten points in the final five minutes to ultimately force a draw.

“It’s unfortunate that we couldn’t close out the game, but it’s just another learning curve for us,” he says.

“We haven’t come away with a win yet in our first two games, but I can say that we have been improving each day and that’s our goal – to get better at training each week.”

As for his personal aims, Fa’amausili is looking to nail down the No.3 jersey and keep building his early-season momentum.

“My main goal is to start every game for the rest of the competition,” he says. “I’ve had some tough injuries over the last couple of years. To be able to put some games together would be really good for myself.

”Also, I really want to put my name out there. I’m off contract this year and I’d like to get attention from everyone and see where I go from here.”

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Getting some attention should not be too difficult. It’s only a step up from being sighted, which Fa’amausili will have no problem achieving with his floppy mullet hairstyle and broken goatee sitting atop that enormous rig.

Fox Sports commentator Rod Kafer summed up his presence well: “It’s not often Taniela Tupou looks small. He does next to Pone Fa’amausili!”

The Rebels’ tighthead offers something that last Friday’s match lacked at times – watch-ability. I for one cannot wait to see Fa’amausili clatter into some bodies again soon. I doubt I’m the only one whose attention he’s caught.

The Crowd Says:

2020-07-17T04:53:08+00:00

Busted Fullback

Roar Rookie


Thanks jez. Nice to have it all down on paper and succinct. I know my 4ths are going to benefit.

2020-07-17T04:15:17+00:00

MitchO

Guest


I appreciate that Jez. Heck I reckon 6f4 is too tall for loosehead. Buy it's not. Spherical tightheads are painful to deal with.

2020-07-17T03:38:34+00:00

MitchO

Guest


Thanks Jez. I think you should be coaching juniors not seniors in Hong Kong. I would hesitate to do the thumb position on any rugby tour. A few curries and pints, game next day.. you'd want to be lifting at the front. Before lifting was legal a teammate (lock with Oxford Blue) showed how they were lifting. Basically the prop brushes the locks bum with his arm as the lock is on the way up and that nudge and stablisation made a huge difference to height and hang time. It gets disguised as part of the block. Nowadays you don't need to bother but I found it insightful back in the day coz noone had shown me that before but it was clearly common knowledge at the higher levels.

2020-07-17T03:36:54+00:00

jeznez

Roar Guru


I agree with you, was just calling out the exception in Hayman so leaving it in the range of possibilities. If we can hang on to them we’ll have Ala’alatoa and Tupou for a good long while. Slipper and Sio will need replacing sooner. Bell looks super promising, Pone being in that LH mix could be very handy as well. Have only caught his two matches at TH in Super AU. Hasn’t looked bad in either for mine. Not sure how he goes on the other side.

2020-07-17T03:29:17+00:00

MitchO

Guest


Hayman is a pretty high watermark. But if the scrums can set some distance apart it is not so bad. You know that if the ref brings tall guy and the short guy up close to pack the tall guy has a problem. Being the size of a house helps but there's plenty of looseheads who are only 5to 10 kgs lighter than him so could handle his power. I wish him well I just think its easier to be a tall loosehead. Still being a decent super level tighthead would be a great achievement. Being good test tighthead is an extraordinary achievement and there are some very impressive ones waddling around. At least two Saffers, AAA, Tupou, the Irish guy, WP Nel, Italian Ferrari, the current kiwi (forgot his name but scrums well - not Lomax) must be at least one eastern european.

2020-07-17T03:16:56+00:00

MitchO

Guest


HJH is a loosehead not a tighthead. He may develop into a super level tighthead but probably not a test tighthead. Tom Robertson may yet prove to be a test loosehead. He can afford to be smaller due to being able to position underneath the tighthead and coz he's so short and compact. For all the talk about moving props to hooker, how'd Uelese go at prop? He's friggin huge.

2020-07-17T03:13:56+00:00

MitchO

Guest


Ollie is one of those guys whose probably stronger than he looks. I think he held some gym records at the Force. Ollie will either be best mates with Coleman or they'll hate each other. I suspect that they are pretty good mates. Be nice to have the pair back and throwing their weight around.

2020-07-17T03:13:30+00:00

jeznez

Roar Guru


Doesn’t get a lot of chat because it’s such simple skill to teach. . As long as you have the requisite strength, which all professional forwards do. . Yes height helps, as of course, does having more rather than less strength. . Once you have the basics handled it’s really just about having lifters able to move and time with their jumpers. And to disguise your plans. . Key for lifters is to be close to each other so that the lift/arm motion is straight up. The lifters will be face to face between the jumpers legs at the top of the jump. . The further apart the lifters are the more you are holding a heavy weight above head height and away from your body – the less stability and power you have. . At the start of the lift you want to be deep in a seated position, bum low, thighs near parallel to the ground. Chest and head held high. Arms with elbows tucked down and hands in lifting position and near the chest. It means bending the knees to get down there and core strength to support it. . At lower levels a shorts grip may be necessary but at any decent level the lifter should have the grip strength to lift on the thighs. . Drive from the legs, tight core and fully extend the arms. It shouldn’t be a huge power move (unless you are lifting a Will Skelton), the jumper will get themselves off the ground and the leg drive and follow through builds off the motion. . If you have seriously mismatched heights among your lifters then try to have the taller one at the back. . The shorter lifter can grab the jumper’s thighs, while the taller rear lifter can lift under the cheeks. Open palms, thumbs to the centre – it is quite an intimate position but it works. I’ve always suspected it gave the jumper added incentive to get off the ground as well!

2020-07-17T03:11:01+00:00

MitchO

Guest


there's a couple of old men in super rugby named Greg Holmes and Keiran Longbottom and if you needed an emergency tighthead this year either could slot in and at least hold the scrum up.

2020-07-17T02:57:06+00:00

jeznez

Roar Guru


I tend to prefer a short TH like Tupou but have to call out that Carl Hayman made it work as a tall one. Fa’amausili is 3cm taller than Carl but he’s also 10kg heavier If Uelese can stay on the pitch and get his throwing up to standard at 189 cm he is a very tall hooker, he’ll benefit from guys like Bell and Pone being taller than him. Long way to go and keen to see how he develops

2020-07-17T02:44:47+00:00

MitchO

Guest


He's probably too tall for tighthead but may be a good loosehead. Start a game with Gus Bell (in a couple of years) and then sub on Pone. That'd be a rude shock for someone.

2020-07-17T02:41:57+00:00

MitchO

Guest


Ainsley's a big unit but never managed to sort out his scrumaging to the next level. Hopefully he can do at in NZ. Didn't Lomax improve his scrumaging by going back to NZ. Ainsley being capped means if he learns to scrum well we may get him back. for some reason he hit an improvement wall in Oz so a good move on his part. As a young prop he was rated by Joe Barakat and people who should know talent when they see it.

AUTHOR

2020-07-16T11:35:41+00:00

JamesDuncan

Roar Guru


LOL! Good signs.

2020-07-16T11:28:07+00:00

jeznez

Roar Guru


I’m not suggesting a move to 5/8! But I saw a catch and pass in there.

2020-07-16T11:13:43+00:00

Chufortah

Guest


Partially agreed Gav but Larry JH does some really good things and doesn’t make an error. He’s consistent and not a bad scrummager. Angus Bell will be amazing after a few more years, and very promising.

AUTHOR

2020-07-16T11:06:07+00:00

JamesDuncan

Roar Guru


Hi Gav, another good Aussie THP is Ollie Hoskins who is from Perth and plays for London Irish. Obviously he's ineligible at the moment but somebody who may be enticed into coming back. He's big and can play.

AUTHOR

2020-07-16T11:02:57+00:00

JamesDuncan

Roar Guru


Good call, Busted. It is seldom talked about. I do remember discussions about Carl Hayman being a great all-round prop with mention of his lifting prowess. PF is about as tall as CH. When you consider the difference between the height and wingspan of a 6'5" prop vs. a 6'0" prop that's pretty significant. It can offset having a shorter jumper.

AUTHOR

2020-07-16T10:58:30+00:00

JamesDuncan

Roar Guru


They play on the same side of the scrum so that's unlikely, but one replacing the other could be a formidable 1-2 punch.

AUTHOR

2020-07-16T10:57:03+00:00

JamesDuncan

Roar Guru


A big side, indeed. Well put!

AUTHOR

2020-07-16T10:55:54+00:00

JamesDuncan

Roar Guru


I see where you're coming from, B. We all want Aussie teams to be more skilful and clinical. NZ have us covered easily at the moment.

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