Yellow card hurts Force as Brumbies seal come from behind win to get season back on track

By Christy Doran / Editor

They did it the hard way, but the Brumbies have come from behind to beat the Western Force in Canberra 22-19 on Saturday afternoon.

After yet another sleepy start, the Brumbies trailed 14-0 after 20 minutes but managed to get to the half-time sheds trailing by just four points.

The game, however, turned right from the outset of the second half as winger Harry Potter made contact with Darcy Swain in the air and was shown a yellow card.

Watch every match of Super Rugby Pacific ad-free, live & on demand on the Home of Rugby, Stan Sport

Darcy Swain was put in a dangerous position against the Western Force as Harry Potter made contact with him in the air on March 09, 2024, in Canberra. (Photo by Mark Metcalfe/Getty Images)

Initially, the Brumbies made a meal of the numerical advantage, as their lineout struggled, but two tries in seven minutes to forwards Rob Valetini and Billy Pollard swung the game to the home side.

The Brumbies had the chance to put some gloss on the scoreboard, but another overthrown lineout hurt them.

With time running out, the Force finally returned to what worked in the opening half as Wallabies incumbent playmaker Ben Donaldson took the ball to the line and slipped a lovely offload to Max Burey, who sent Potter in to score.

But Donaldson’s second missed shot of the half meant the Force only closed to within a penalty.

A late linebreak to Potter threatened to turn the game on its head, but the prolific tryscorer, who won a premiership with the Leicester Tigers only two years ago, dropped the ball on the deck after copping a stray leg as he was tackled to the ground by Corey Toole from behind.

Donaldson lamented his side’s star to the second half that invited the Brumbies back into the contest.

“We had a great first half,” he said. “Our message was to come out, get first points, and get on top of them, but we gave away a yellow card and the penalties kept piling up.

“They went to their rolling maul and it’s tough to get back momentum at GIO [Stadium]  when you’re giving them that many penalties and that’s where we fell behind.”

Ryan Lonergan scored the Brumbies’ opening points against the Force on March 09, 2024, in Canberra, Australia. (Photo by Mark Metcalfe/Getty Images)

After being blown away by the Chiefs last week in Super Round, halfback Ryan Lonergan said the Brumbies’ ability to withstand adversity showed some progress.

“The Force was quality that whole time,” he said.

“They put us under so much pressure, particularly at the lineout, and for us to be able to grind that out sort of shows a lot of growth in the group since last week.”

Asked whether coach Stephen Larkham had laid down the law in the dressing sheds after a sloppy first half, Lonergan said Wallabies great turned coach was calm and measured compared to his predecessor.

“Not really,” Lonergan chuckled. “He doesn’t really have that. I’m used to Dan McKellar, I don’t think anything will ever top that.

“It was more around our carry and recycling the ball. We were making a lot of inroads, but just our recycle was poor. On top of that, with our lineout being under a lot of pressure, it put us under a lot of stress.”

After coming off the bench twice to start the season, recalled inside centre Tamati Tua’s strong carry through the midfield was telling for the Brumbies.

Along with Rob Valetini, the duo helped the Brumbies get some quick ball after being demolished in the contact zone last week during their heavy loss to the Chiefs.

As well as the Force’s poor second-half discipline, the Brumbies’ bench made the difference as hooker Billy Pollard and front-row teammate Blake Schoupp helped the home side to some scrum dominance. It was yet another painful reminder of the depth Force coach Simon Cron is missing up front.

Pollard scored the Brumbies’ third try and was particularly threatening in the five-metre channels out wide.

Early on, however, it was all the Force.

With Nic White returning to his old stomping ground, the halfback got plenty of quick ball to work with in the opening 20 minutes.

It allowed Donaldson to show what he is capable of, as he sent in Hamish Stewart to score the opening try after eight minutes.

Ten minutes later the Force had another, as Michael Wells, who was one of the best for the Force, stretched out to score inconspicuously. Indeed, it was left to the TMO to interject to inform Dan Waenga that the back-rower had scored rather than knocked on.

A fine hit back from Lonergan, who pounced onto a Tua offload, saw the Brumbies get on the scoreboard in the 29th minute.

The Force looked like they had once again extended the lead out even further when Potter got on the end of a lovely Donaldson offload, but the try was rubbed out when the TMO found that loose-head prop Ryan Coxon had prevented Swain from making a tackle.

The blown chance was another huge turning point in the game, as the Brumbies closed the gap shortly after via the boot of Noah Lolesio.

It was all the Brumbies in the 20 minutes after half-time, as the home side punished the Force for Potter’s clumsy mid-air challenge.

The Brumbies’ forward pack took it upon themselves to get the side back on track, as they held on to secure an important win.

The Crowd Says:

2024-03-11T22:53:15+00:00

Perthstayer

Roar Rookie


They weren't off. The Force's good execution of a well thought through strategy simply made them look off. The same as England's rush defence made Ireland look off. Or when they blitzed NZ in that SF.

2024-03-11T04:42:19+00:00

GusTee

Roar Pro


Bliksem & Piru - I understand and fully agree with what you guys are saying about NW. He, particularly last Saturday, has been awesome. Coming to the Force has also been good for him as it has given him new energy and his play has been very sharp. It was for that reason I did not mention him by name in my Post. All I want to see, on scrum put-ins, is quick injection of the ball and even quicker extraction. We don't have the manpower, or importantly a positive reputation about dominance with the match officials, to take risks on decisions going against us. And, as RTL said earlier, we have a hungry and well equipped line to feed.

2024-03-11T01:39:31+00:00

Bliksem

Roar Rookie


GusTree, pretty harsh to blame White - when your scrum is under pressure the ball often gets stuck under the feet of the 8 as cannot move his feet or break away with the scrum going backwards. What would be better is if Harris break way early before the pressure comes on. The key would be to ensure that there is enough support from Tia or Stewart to clean out to win the ball after the tackle as our #7 will be committed to the scrum. A little bit of variation in the scrum will make it much harder for the opponents to earn penalties on our ball. If you are not stronger you need to be clever.

2024-03-11T00:00:22+00:00

piru

Roar Rookie


It only reached 31 according to BOM, what's Canberra like humidity wise?

2024-03-10T23:17:58+00:00

piru

Roar Rookie


I thought that's what we'd been doing to be honest

2024-03-10T23:12:47+00:00

Rugbytrylover

Roar Rookie


Gustee… EXACTLY! Put ball in channel 1 and get it out asap to the great backline!

2024-03-10T11:54:04+00:00

Bliksem

Roar Rookie


I am surprised that if you don’t need to ball in straight why they don’t play the ball quickly from the scrums.

2024-03-10T10:17:14+00:00

piru

Roar Rookie


Yeah I think this is in similar vein to a kickoff having to go ten metres, rather than a "zones of the field" type rule (like touch, in goal etc). Agreed, more complicated than it needs to be.

2024-03-10T10:15:41+00:00

piru

Roar Rookie


Hmmmm I'm not sure I agree, I think White has been pretty sharp

2024-03-10T09:48:22+00:00

GusTee

Roar Pro


I agree - This week the Force scrum improved greatly in comparison to its run against the Rebels. The 2 cardinal issues we face with scrums that go our way are the stuffing around by our 9 in putting the ball in and similarly the attempts of our 9 to induce a penalty by not extracting the ball once won, forthwith. Why make our scrum work harder than it needs to if it has inherent issues.

2024-03-10T07:11:29+00:00

Jezdexter

Roar Rookie


Fair, I always thought the rule, like basically every other rule in Rugby involving a line was that if the player was on/over the line when he touched the ball then the line came into effect, like step on the line and you're out. Except a try, for obvious reasons. We really do follow an over complicated sport hey.

2024-03-10T05:38:32+00:00

Messy Jog

Roar Rookie


And the ref never even warned the Force for those repeated infringements. Most refs would be reaching for the cheese well before blowing the 16th penalty.

2024-03-10T03:44:20+00:00

piru

Roar Rookie


I don't think the Force first choice scrum is weak, we just don't have any depth beyond it

2024-03-10T03:22:31+00:00

GusTee

Roar Pro


Watch it frame by frame, mate, just like the TMO could, were he minded to. I guess that in the end only 2 people know precisely what happened - Toole and Potter.

2024-03-10T03:14:24+00:00

piru

Roar Rookie


Yeah he looked sharp, maybe the new environment has invigorated him a bit

2024-03-10T03:13:42+00:00

piru

Roar Rookie


Just to clarify on the lineout call (and I had to look it up), the ball has to reach the 5m line before it's played, you can't reach in while keeping a foot on the line.

2024-03-10T00:07:33+00:00

Tez

Roar Rookie


Hmmmm Brumbies lineout still Struggling and with the jumpers they have it shouldn.t. Brums scrum only so so against a weak scrum, more to work on there. I would be interested to see the Brumbies defence stats, see if they improved at all. Loloesio seems to have slipped back into old habits. Just my thoughts.

2024-03-10T00:05:57+00:00

moondoggie

Roar Rookie


Yeah they need afternoon games in May not March.

2024-03-10T00:05:13+00:00

moondoggie

Roar Rookie


Yeah they have been pretty average so far this year, don't seem to have much cohesion. Hope just building into the season haha.

2024-03-09T23:50:49+00:00

Bliksem

Roar Rookie


I think Donaldson place kicking is good and can get better with test exposure. Lonergran did not look like a test nine so far this season so will not be an option. Noah had a lot of opportunities to secure the test 10, so unless he lifts his game significantly what he offers as place kicker is not enough.

More Comments on The Roar

Read more at The Roar