'Astonishingly good' teen making waves for Tahs as they aim to reclaim throne from Drua in Super Rugby Women's finale

By Hugh_96 / Roar Pro

The Super Rugby Women’s competition is a sprint and the finish line, as it does each year, has come up fast.

The results of the Super Rugby W semi-finals were not unexpected, so the two teams fighting out this weekend’s Grand Final are no real surprise. At the beginning of the competition most would have considered the grand finalists to come from the Waratahs, Fijian Drua and Queensland Reds. The Reds have had a shocker, so we have the Tahs and Drua. However in saying that, the competition was closer than any previous season and more competitive than most probably expected.

So what did we learn from the semi-finals?

Fiji again provided a loud and raucous crowd. On the flip side there was not a big crowd at Allianz but being realistic no one outside of the rugby fraternity knew it was on. In Sydney the media did not cover it in the lead up to the game. But that is a story for another day.

The Western Force coach Dylan Parsons said earlier in the week that they needed to play to their strengths. That entailed slowing the game down, keep it in the forwards, focus on the set piece and do not fall into a fast and flowing Fijian game.

As always, it is easy to plan, harder to execute.

The Force put in a good effort and even had a lead at half time. Eventually they went down to the Fijian Drua 25-14. But realistically the Drua always looked the most dangerous. When it comes to danger, the Drua fullback Atelaite Buna was outstanding scoring three tries.

The Force put pressure on the Drua in the forwards but were not able to convert the opportunities when they got into the opposition 22. The bottom line, the Drua scored four tries to one and forgot their kicking boots, kicking only one of four conversions and one of three penalties.

So the Fijian Drua women are into their third consecutive Super Rugby W Grand Final.

Next up was the Waratahs vs Brumbies.

The Tahs’s 47-27 win did not really reflect the match. It was a lot tougher and closer. The score line was not too dissimilar to their first-round match which the Tahs took out 45-10. However in round one the Brumbies were never in that game.

In this semi-final the Brumbies forwards put it to the Waratahs. They were not able to keep the pressure on and convert to points. They have some quality backs in Faitala Moleka, Ashlea Bishop and winger Biola Dawa is developing, but the Tahs backline defence is very good.

This was the second week in a row where the opposition forwards put the Waratahs under pressure and really tested their defence. It is a tough call to make after winning 47-27 but in some ways you could say the Tahs defence fell a bit short. The 27 points the Brumbies scored is the most points scored against the Tahs all season. It did feel as though the Waratahs knew no matter what the opposition does, they can out score them.

Again the Tahs had stars across the park. So who to make mention of? Fullback Caitlyn Halse. Fans and media alike always get excited and talk up the next new shiny thing as we saw recently with Darby Lancaster. I’m not one to normally follow that trope but Halse is very good, astonishingly good for 17 and in her second year with the Tahs.

Caitlyn Halse . (Photo by Quinn Rooney/Getty Images)

Often we get excited because a new player has some outstanding natural talent like speed or physical size. Halse is different, she is more a playmaking fullback, both a smart and skilled player. She more often than not makes the right decision, can pass long, off load, toss in a flick pass, kick a grubber, kick long and split the defence. So let us not get too excited – but maybe just a little.

A couple of honourable mentions are hooker Brittany Merlo, backrowers Skye Churchill and Leilani Nathan – all three have played well in every game. They are not flashy players, they just do their job and do it well.

Next Sunday’s Grand Final at Ballymore could be a beauty. The Waratahs have been overwhelmingly the form team of the competition. They have been ruthless averaging 45 points per game and conceding 21. While many will say it is theirs to lose that underestimates the Fijian Drua women. The last time these two teams met the Waratahs blitzed them in Lautoka 62-21 so you can be assured the Drua will want some serious payback for that.

Just like when the Aussie Sevens women play Fiji it is vital to keep the ball away from them. All the Drua players backs and forwards are physical, like to run and offload, it is in their DNA. A Fijian team with possession, playing up tempo and offloading rugby is near impossible to rein in.

The Waratahs have a formidable back line that can score tries with wingers Maya Stewart and Desiree Miller having scored nineteen tries between them. But at the end of the day, it is, as it always is in rugby, the forwards who need to dominate physically. The Tahs forwards will have to have their set piece on point. One gets the feeling the Tahs forwards in defence will have to woman up and dominate their opposition for the Tahs to get the win.

Which ever way it goes it should be a cracking game, it could be close, or it could be a big win to either side.

Grand Final

Broadcast on Stan
Waratahs v Fijian Drua
Sun, April 28, 2024, 2:00 PM
Ballymore, Brisbane

The Crowd Says:

2024-04-27T10:40:17+00:00

Muglair

Roar Rookie


There is a lot you can do without any money. Nearly all effective promotion and recruitment must occur on the ground at rugby clubs. Let’s say 80% of clubs are just so busy and narrow focussed that they will do not much at all, if anything. Of the remaining 20%, 16% will see it as an opportunity but will have insufficient resources, cannot agree on what to do, come up short of execution etc. I am not even sure 4% of clubs will get much done in the middle of the season. What value is there is some serious resources being devoted at RA and SR franchises developing templates for marketing, letters to schools, registration resources, insurance solutions for new kids undertaking the introductory programs, designing the programs etc etc. We can divert staff from things like event planning and marketing for games which is certainly hopeless in NSW. Stan/9 could be leaned on to develop some rugby flavoured Olympic advertising, they also benefit from the expansion of rugby. All of these activities would probably provide RA/Stan with some better insight into rugby marketing, an activity which we do not seem to excel. Sadly NZRU did most of the heavy lifting in getting the Drua up and running although it was supposedly RA’s job. Australian Govt funding and support was critical but it was reported the Drua would not have been ready if left to RA to organise it. Typical of the insular focus at the time, hopefully never to be seen again.

AUTHOR

2024-04-26T23:12:54+00:00

Hugh_96

Roar Pro


Can’t disagree. So much opportunity that RA have missed out on. Not sure they have the $$ to do more, think if they did they would. Yes they should leverage off the 7s women & Olympics but they missed that boat after Rio. Brittany Mitchell from ESPN did a good article about the need for RA to get it together, as you say nothing has been done in the last 5 years. In reality the addition of Fiji was a result of government input & funding.

2024-04-25T00:17:28+00:00

Muglair

Roar Rookie


Watching the Tahs backline this year has provided some of the best rugby on show. I expect the Drua to improve again and the Tahs will need to step up a gear in the tight five. I think they are well capable of that. Rugby Australia can no longer afford to be just incurring expenses because they do not know what else to do apart from what they did last year, working or not. The smartest place to invest in the last five years has been in the elite women XV game and they have done as little as possible at the slowest possible pace. The women cannot progress much further and faster while on only playing five games. Next year it must increase to a full home and away competition with ten rounds. The current status quo is based on the position five years ago when it might have been difficult for many players to play ten to twelve games. For at least two seasons they are strangling player development. It is a world cup year so Wallaroo preparation demands more games, which could be possibly spread over the full men SRP competition rounds. The likely good performance of the 7s at the Olympics provides some great promotional opportunity which cannot be wasted as in previous Olympic years. Investment is required now to start promoting the 7s games at the Olympics and develop a mid-season recruitment and participation plan to run straight off the back of the Olympics. Administrations across the country will complain they don't have the resources during the playing season and they will do something at the season end, then delay until the summer school holidays and then we are in next year pre-season and it is too late. At some point we have to stop talking and start doing. Following on from the Olympic 7s several of the players have put their enthusiasm on public record for playing XV at the 2025 world cup. The home 2029 RWC will be a huge draw for them as well. Great promotion of the 7s will drag hearts and minds on to the 2025 SARW competition. A full Super W with NZ teams needs to be on the cards as well. This will have to be delayed as long as we impose such severe limitations on our women getting sufficient match experience and the stamina for a long season in place.

AUTHOR

2024-04-23T21:36:37+00:00

Hugh_96

Roar Pro


It will be an interesting final. I always fear the Fijian women in 15s & 7s.

AUTHOR

2024-04-23T21:34:39+00:00

Hugh_96

Roar Pro


Reckon they are in with a good shot of winning. Getting their former captain Bitila Tawake back after her stint in Aupiki a big plus too.

2024-04-23T19:16:03+00:00

Engineroom Lubricator

Roar Rookie


Drua put the Tahs to the sword twice. Three times would be nice ???? History in the making. Go Drua!

2024-04-23T12:31:56+00:00

Nivlek

Roar Rookie


Yes it occurred to me watching the Tahs last week that they could be in trouble if the Drua start kicking the front door down. Halse has the makings of a very good #10 in the future. Looking forward to the match. Go tahs!

2024-04-23T04:26:19+00:00

Andrew

Roar Rookie


Happy to oblige.

AUTHOR

2024-04-23T04:20:21+00:00

Hugh_96

Roar Pro


Thanks, you read to the end

2024-04-23T03:33:00+00:00

Andrew

Roar Rookie


I'm sick of manning up, can I womaning up instead.

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