Three talking points from Super Rugby AU Round 10

By The Roar / Editor

Five teams became three after ten weeks of what has been a high-quality Super Rugby AU campaign. The final round had been set up as a thrilling conclusion, and that is exactly what it delivered.

The Melbourne Rebels only needed to beat the Western Force by four points, but that looked anything but certain through the second half. A persistent Rebels pick and drive at the posts and some TMO drama ruled that replacement prop Cabous Eloff and not replacement hooker Efi Ma’afu had scored the winning try.

Western Force types and NSW Waratahs types couldn’t believe what they were seeing. The former deserved a better return to top-flight rugby than an 0-8 record, and the latter were left to lament any number of bombed tries and missed kicks at goal, after being knocked out of third place by a single differential point.

This may or may not be the last standalone Super Rugby AU season, and it’s been entertaining either way. Here’s what got us talking from the weekend.

More remedial sessions for Kuridrani

Tevita Kuridrani wasn’t named for the Brumbies’ Round 8 match against the Waratahs and no-one was shocked. Coming off the bye, most saw the move as the Brumbies being smart managing the workload of their players, something you can do with healthy squad depth.

Joe Powell and Folau Fainga’a were rested from the same game, and Murray Douglas had sat out games before the bye as well.

Kuridrani then didn’t play the Round 9 game against the Force, and that didn’t seem to matter either. The idea that he’d been dropped was discussed tongue-in-cheek, and envied by opposition supporters that the Brumbies had such a luxury.

Then Kuridrani was named for Round 10 against the Reds, and nothing was thought of it until Brumbies coach Dan McKellar explained how his outside centre hadn’t been dropped.

“I don’t like that term, he’s not like an old girlfriend or anything like that,” McKellar said after naming the side last week to take on the Reds.

“He’s an exceptional rugby player and I gave him some things to work on and he’s applied himself really well to those areas.”

Players that haven’t been dropped don’t have to work on things. Players that haven’t been dropped don’t have to worry about how well they apply themselves. Players that haven’t been dropped don’t have to handle the disappointment of not being selected, as McKellar went on to say Kuridrani had done well for two weeks.

Regardless of the reasoning, it became clear that whatever Kuridrani had been working on for two weeks needs to be reiterated, after the Brumbies’ number 13 had a forgettable showing against the Reds.

The numbers for carries and run metres showed that there wasn’t a lot between Kuridrani and his opposite, Jordan Petaia. Kuridrani made more clean breaks, but Petaia beat more defenders. Kuridrani’s seven passes and an offload showed the Brumbies intent to go wide, even if they could not go forward.

The real concern for the Brumbies will be Kuridrani’s defence. Five missed tackles from 13 attempts is not what they would want to see, and is well short of how a world-class outside centre known for his defensive ability is expected to defend.

The Brumbies will back their man and put Saturday down as a rough night at the office. But it was clear on that showing that they have as much work to do with their outside centre as their outside centre has to do himself.

(Tracey Nearmy/Getty Images)

Second vs Third playoff pits Reds’ attack against whatever the Rebels can manage on the night

The Reds’ two first-half tries against the Brumbies showed the big difference in attacking ability between them and the Rebels heading into Saturday night’s playoff game in Brisbane.

Chris Feauai-Sautia finished off a wonderful set piece try with its origins in a midfield scrum. Before that, Liam Wright opened things up thanks largely to a Jock Campbell flick pass from heaven. Both came down the right-hand side tram tracks.

The Rebels scored a couple of counter-attacking tries, but when they desperately needed a try to win the game, the best hope they had was to continue picking and driving until finally finding a crack in the Force line defence.

As far as attacking threats go, this method of attack from the Rebels plays into the hands of any side willing to defend as long as they need to. There’s no deception, just brute force. It might allow the Rebels to catch up to teams, but is it a way to build a lead and win through to a Super Rugby final?

Sports opinion delivered daily 

   

All the numbers point to the Reds

The team stats after ten rounds of Super Rugby AU tend to favour the suggestions that the Reds and not the Brumbies have finished the regular season as the form team.

While the Brumbies scored the most tries, the Reds dominated most other attack stats.

The Reds, Brumbies and Rebels all carried around the same mark, but the Reds made nearly four hundred metres more than the Brumbies, and over five hundred more than the Rebels.

They also made the most clean breaks, defenders beaten, and offloads.

Defensively, the Reds made the most tackles and comfortably won the most turnovers. They finished with the second-highest number of missed tackles, but an overall efficiency of 87 per cent indicates this isn’t a huge problem.

The only negative is that they earned the most yellow cards (six), despite conceding the fewest penalties.

(AAP Image/Darren England)

Interestingly, the turnovers conceded tally mirrors the competition table: Brumbies, Reds, Rebels, Waratahs, Force.

Individually, two things stand out. Filipo Daugunu topped all the major attack charts – metres made, carries, defenders beaten, and offloads, and was second to Brumbies winger Tom Wright for clean breaks.

And only two players broke double figures for turnovers won: Fraser McReight (17), and Liam Wright (11).

Imagine if McReight started every game.

The Crowd Says:

2020-09-09T00:45:03+00:00

jcmasher

Roar Rookie


I'm happy to differ mate. The great thing about sites like this is that we don't have to agree. I would rather see others there but seeing as neither of us has any say in who is picked it's really a mot point anyway

2020-09-08T23:10:35+00:00

Short Arm

Roar Rookie


Yes, good to see Ready running around again improving as he gets fittter. He played well when he was at the Reds a few years ago ( not sure way he lost favour there?). As you said a good lineout thrower & was always looking for a pilfer. He strikes me as a player with some smarts.

2020-09-08T21:20:39+00:00

Waxhead

Roar Rookie


@Double Agent hahahaha..... what because I just give you a dose of reality and ...... then I gave the good news which is Aust appear to now have 2 teams that might be able to consistently compete with NZ opposition. Last few seasons we had only 1. I've got 5 aussie mates who stopped watching any SR AU this season cos they reckon it's poor quality. I've got 3 more mates who won't watch any game involving the Force....... they reckon the Force are too boring to waste their time with. And too be fair to the Force that's exactly what hapenned during the last 5 yrs of their previous entry in SR. They might have kept a few 1000 fans in Perth but they turned off x5 or x10 more outside of WA.

2020-09-08T21:08:58+00:00

Waxhead

Roar Rookie


@numpty I thought Force v Rebels was a depressing poor quality and error ridden game. Rebels were inept in not flogging the Force by 20-30 points. They had multiple tries disallowed due to poor execution. All the Force did all season is battle on and somehow just hang in most games. Force have got nothing in attack and any good provincial team should easily put them to the sword. For these reasons they continue to be the kings of boredom in every game they play. Unless Twiggy buys them a whole new squad I'm hoping they won't be in any Super Rugby comp new year. This current squad is simply not good enough to deserve it imo :silly:

2020-09-08T18:27:42+00:00

Bobby

Roar Rookie


Sometime ago, plenty on here had Markie Mark as a Wallaby winger. Bit if egg methinks. Is the guy still playing rugby?

2020-09-08T12:36:43+00:00

numpty

Roar Rookie


White created a try within 60secs of being on the field in his first two starts for Brumbies and noticeably increased the tempo when on. Koro is one of the busiest backs in Aus rugby, won the John Eales medal and is still racking up good numbers in a team that doesn't use its backs well. And isi was one of Aus best forwards last year almost always topping runs and metres made, and his form has been similar since back. You're Perception of all three of these players does not meet reality. I would be pretty comfortable in saying they will all make the first 23 named by rennie.

2020-09-08T12:30:52+00:00

Rhys

Roar Rookie


Let's hope so, would be a good get for the game after all the PR rubbish.

2020-09-08T12:28:06+00:00

Rhys

Roar Rookie


As much as would be allowed under current rules anyway! I’m just happy we’re talking about rugby more positively again, focussing on the on field rather than off it. If we take care of that, as the Reds have lately, the rest takes care of itself.

2020-09-08T12:26:00+00:00

Rhys

Roar Rookie


I actually agree with you pm, that's a spelling mistake, should say Kuridrani in form retains it. Certainly, if he doesn't show anything in the final, Petaia gets it hands down.

2020-09-08T12:04:29+00:00

pm

Roar Rookie


Can't agree on Tevita's form. I think he's pretty off. Would have agreed still, maybe a month ago. Not much depth there behind Petaia, who looks great in what little we've seen.

2020-09-08T12:02:07+00:00

pm

Roar Rookie


Yeah. Like that the comparison does make a lot of sense.

2020-09-08T11:35:03+00:00

Broken Shoulder

Roar Rookie


Sorry, didn't explain that very well! I meant he's like Hodge in that he's a bit of a jack of all trades, master of none. Hodge does a good job of covering several positions but there's nothing that really stands out. Samu, on the other hand, is very good across 6, 7 & 8 so would be an excellent backrow utility. A very handy guy to have on your bench.

2020-09-08T10:06:02+00:00

Double Agent

Guest


If there was a World XV for Misery-Guts then Waxy would be the Captain/Coach!!

2020-09-08T09:41:52+00:00

elysiusrugby

Roar Rookie


I think McDermott is great but his most positive traits come from running and defence not passing, which worries me for international rugby, especially with an inexperience 10. Tj Perenara is one of the best club 9's in the world because of his D and running, but it never really converted as well internationally, because momentum is harder to get.

2020-09-08T09:15:18+00:00

Train Without A Station

Roar Guru


Uelese actually has the highest success rate on his throws of all Aus hookers apparently

2020-09-08T09:13:53+00:00

Train Without A Station

Roar Guru


That’s RA that have said 5 sides are non negotiable?

2020-09-08T09:12:06+00:00

Train Without A Station

Roar Guru


They were supposed to have home games but the WA gov holding the borders prevented it. But different to going in with alternatives to consider, and choosing the option with no home games.

2020-09-08T09:07:38+00:00

Ex force fan

Guest


It doesn’t matter what RA say or do you will not believe them. The people that call the shots are pretty aligned with the view that RA needs to make changes to their constitution and governance to ensure we are not getting into the same position as in 2017. Until the Force gets our vote back and is in the tent, it is appropriate to keep our options open. RA would not be surprised that Forrest doesn’t take their word. If you shat on your own porch....don’t complain about the smell

2020-09-08T09:04:20+00:00

pm

Roar Rookie


The 'better version of Hodge' is an odd comment. You mean you could see him as a utility back? He does play pretty wide, and effectively so, on attack but it is still surprising comparison.

2020-09-08T08:40:34+00:00

jcmasher

Roar Rookie


I’m not sure I grew that they have been best. I think McDermott outplayed White last week And is the form 9. I haven’t seen White do anything this year, or last that says “pick me”. I think he demonstrated in Japan why he was originally dropped for Genia and Phipps as he loses the plot easily and gets rattled when pressured. Koroibete still goes missing at times although I admit he’s getting better and probably deserves a spot but I think Naisarani is over rated and his actions have never met the expectations

More Comments on The Roar

Read more at The Roar