'Gutted': Thorn's Reds fall at home again as brilliant Brumbies march on by ending Brisbane hoodoo

By Christy Doran / Editor

The ACT Brumbies ventured up north intent on breaking a frustrating hoodoo in Brisbane. They left like drowned rats but it was all worth it for Stephen Larkham’s men, as they kept pace with the Super Rugby leaders by defeating the Reds 52-24.

The defeat heaped more pressure on Brad Thorn, who was visibly frustrated throughout the match and said he was “gutted” at full-time.

All week the Brumbies had spoken about ending their drought in Brisbane, where they hadn’t won since 2015.

But even though they conceded an early try, the moment Angus Blyth hit Corey Toole flush in the jaw with a reckless, needless hit after the Brumbies flyer belted the ball into the air in the eighth minute, the visitors never quite looked like they would be troubled. Pressure generally wins in rugby, especially with class sitting on the bench.

Blyth, who made his long-awaited return to the starting side after missing the opening five weeks of the competition, ultimately had his yellow card upgraded to red but the home side was fortunate it wasn’t a straight red card. But on a wet night in Brisbane, the toll of playing with 14 men for 20 minutes was always likely to be felt at some point.

You could see and hear the frustration oozing from under-siege coach Brad Thorn, who cut a frustrated figure at half-time after seeing his side lose their lead by conceding a rolling maul try in the second minute of injury time.

“Tell me about it mate, tell me about it. Far out,” he responded to Leicester-bound coach Dan McKellar, who asked him how he could fix those “coach-killing penalties” at half time.

“That was a tough one that red card to watch. You move forward. We’ve had that chat at half time,” Thorn added.

Brad Thorn once again lamented his side’s poor discipline against the Brumbies. Photo: Albert Perez/Getty Images

Unfortunately for Thorn the penalties added up and so did the Brumbies’ pressure, as the visitors pulled ahead by scoring 17 unanswered points to start the second half off the back of 15 penalties.

While Fraser McReight got one back for the Reds, another two tries to the Brumbies saw the visitors leave Brisbane with five vital competition points to temporarily move them into second spot.

“What we spoke about throughout the week, we knew that we had to be better than last week,” Brumbies captain Allan Alaalatoa said.

“We hadn’t won here since 2015, so we knew it was a hard place to play. We had to be at our best tonight, and I thought that we delivered.”

Tamati Tua scored a crucial second half try to seal the Brumbies win over the Reds at Suncorp Stadium, on April 07, 2023. Photo: Bradley Kanaris/Getty Images

Tate McDermott, who was one of the Reds’ best and scored a super try midway through the first half when the home side were playing with 14 men, cut a forlorn figure.

“We all know what I’m thinking. But I’m not going to berate my team right now, we’ll leave that for Monday,” he said.

“It’s obviously disappointing, but we’ve got to keep on the grind. That first half I’m really proud of the effort. Like I said in the sheds, we’ve got to back that up if we want to be respected – and we didn’t do that.”

Jordan Petaia was once again one of the Reds’ best, as the winger showed confidence and class with every touch in the first half.

His brilliant solo run late in the first half, where he stepped back off his right-foot, toed ahead and barged over Andy Muirhead, was further evidence that the boy wonder was finally growing up.

Petaia’s run led to Tom Wright being shown a yellow card for hands in the ruck, with Ben O’Keeffe quite rightly sending the Brumbies fullback to the sin-bin for slowing the ball down.

But despite Lawson Creighton’s three points to give the home side a 17-14 lead after 38 minutes, the Reds’ inability to win the little moments led to the Brumbies getting a final crack before half time. They took it as Lachie Lonergan scored and the momentum was lost.

Creighton was reasonable in his first start of the year, but the No.10, who struggled last year after filling in for the injured James O’Connor, was thrown a short ball by starting against the powerful Brumbies.

Nic White was excellent during his 50-minute appearance while his halves partner Noah Lolesio, who was left out of Eddie Jones’ first Test squad, was also strong, particularly from the kicking tee.

The pair’s strong effort came despite a lineout that struggled at times, with Lonergan’s throw twice being pinged for not straight and another being picked off.

“If you look at the past games, they always come out hard and we knew that our game controllers had to be smart with the way we played tonight, especially with the weather,” Alaalatoa said. “I thought we were smart in those areas.

“We started a bit slow, which is something we will talk on for next week, but we came home strong and I thought our finishers were great.”

Reds hooker Matt Faessler opened the scoring in the fifth minute for the home side, but Blyth’s upgraded red card was a huge blow.

Tom Wright hit back soon after by scoring in the 14th minute.

Some brilliance from McDermott from a lineout saw the home side retake the lead, but some good hands from the Brumbies’ backline saw Ben O’Donnell score out wide after 31 minutes.

While the Reds clawed ahead following Wright’s yellow, three straight tries to the visitors, including a lovely chip from White that sat up beautifully for Len Ikitau, saw them charge ahead.

From that point, they were never going to be run down despite McReight’s best efforts.

The Reds now face a season-defining match against Moana Pasifika in Samoa, with Aaron Mauger’s side leading the Crusaders at half time before being run down.

“I mean it’s going to be an interesting fixture,” McDermott said. “I didn’t see the result today but at half time they were looking pretty good.

“We can’t afford to worry about other sides, we’ve got to fix up what’s going on in our own backyard and we’ll do that.”

It’s make or break time for Thorn’s Reds.

“Tonight hurts because it (a heavy loss at home) can’t happen,” Thorn said.

“End of the day it’s on me. I’m a fighter by nature, I like challenges, but it’s a disappointing one tonight.

“I like to contribute. When it’s not going so well, it’s tough.”

The Crowd Says:

2023-04-10T03:51:52+00:00

The Ferret

Roar Rookie


Hi scrum. Big difference from this incident and charging at someone with shoulder cocked. One is a bloke trying to put a big hit on and the other is a bad timed collision. Both are bad but one has intent and the other does not.

2023-04-09T23:45:03+00:00

Seth

Roar Rookie


Thorn has had way more test players leave or he has not wanted them than any other franchise. Off the top of my head BPA Lukhan QC K Hunt Rodda Slipper Kerevi Tupou No other franchises come close to the quality leaving.

2023-04-09T23:35:53+00:00

Seth

Roar Rookie


White has never outplayed any opposite scrumhalf .That's just fake news. The Wallabies are ranked 7th with White.

2023-04-09T23:33:40+00:00

Seth

Roar Rookie


Jorgensen is the new fan favourite.He will wear gold in 2023.

2023-04-09T06:02:49+00:00

Cec

Roar Rookie


Reds should be a powerful forward pack & reserves if they held onto most of these players. Reds youngsters need some mentors playing alongside them right now. You can’t have Slips back though as he’s well and truly a Brum’s man and turned his life & career around in Canberra. Both he and Stephen Moore have been blessings for the Brums forward pack over the years.

2023-04-09T03:22:03+00:00

Wizz

Roar Rookie


Yes of Course Bobby plays 6 Brums not 8...yes that makes Scott a very different 7.

2023-04-09T01:26:43+00:00

Brumby Jack's acquaintance

Roar Rookie


Reimer replaced Scott at 7. Bobby V at 6 and Samu at 8

2023-04-08T18:29:27+00:00

Ken Catchpole's Other Leg

Roar Guru


Sorry Ferret. Prizes are not retractable. Just like dud Tah selection jokes. But you get points for putting your hand up. But whatever mistake you think you made, no one can ever take away your Made a Leg Laugh at his Phone trophy. Few achieve that goal. Fewer still care :silly: .

2023-04-08T14:23:37+00:00

Wizz

Roar Rookie


Guilty as well had 1000 on them at 26 to 1 betting firm England .Think that draw and France and Ireland not that great and the best 4 teams play each other before final..Still happy and our team will be okay it's the swap of coach that concerns me ..

2023-04-08T13:58:07+00:00

The Ferret

Roar Rookie


Hi Ken… no need to send that prize to me as that joke I attempted failed miserably.

2023-04-08T13:52:06+00:00

Ankle-tapped Waterboy

Roar Rookie


The trick is to remember it. Onfield pressure being not the same thing as exam-room pressure. Good idea.

2023-04-08T13:24:31+00:00

QED

Roar Rookie


At least you didn't tip the WB's to win the RWC two years out from the comp starting, like someone I know very well.

2023-04-08T13:17:42+00:00

Wizz

Roar Rookie


Plays 6 doesn't he thought Reimer was 7.

2023-04-08T13:11:06+00:00

QED

Roar Rookie


Phil, >>>"They were in the game up until half-time"<<< Granted the half time scored relected as much. But take away the indivual try by McDermot and flashes from Petaia - were they really ever in the game?

2023-04-08T13:07:06+00:00

Wizz

Roar Rookie


Yeah not a great season but think finally some pieces for Coleman will fall into place .

2023-04-08T13:03:52+00:00

QED

Roar Rookie


Wizz your post only makes me think of Sir Humprey's, " a very courageous decision Prime Minister"

2023-04-08T12:07:24+00:00

ScottD

Roar Guru


Just need them to start before half time

2023-04-08T09:37:58+00:00

TJ-Go Force!

Roar Rookie


Are they tho? Rebels have more than half a dozen local boys in their starting 15 tonight and more on the bench. Perth are producing more super players each year.

2023-04-08T09:20:22+00:00

PeterK

Roar Guru


White has outplayed both A Smith and Dupont head to head. Mark N is also a game changer. So is Kerevi, QC, Koroibete.

2023-04-08T09:17:59+00:00

PeterK

Roar Guru


White passes quicker and longer and more accurately. Not only that he ofte makes his decision approaching the ruck, McDermott gets there then looks around before deciding , this loses a lot of valuable time. Nver said Tate didn't make any smart decisions or never improved someone's position or give some good passes but no where close to what white does in any of these areas.

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