Blues turn it on late to smash Rebels as gun young lock finally stands

By Christy Doran / Editor

Despite Josh Canham’s best performance of the year and another encouraging display from Darby Lancaster, the Rebels have suffered their second straight loss after going down heavily 38-11 to the Blues in Melbourne.

While the result showed a 27-point thrashing at the hands of the second-placed Blues, two tries in the final five minutes to replacement forward Sam Darry saw the scoreline blow out.

Before then, the Rebels played like a team that was tight and focussed despite the constant and extraordinary noise happening behind closed doors in Australian rugby.

Indeed, it was only hours before the Rebels took the field on Friday that creditors voted in favour of the besieged Super Rugby outfit continuing in the competition beyond 2024.

It was welcomed news for the Rebels and their supporter base, but there are still plenty of hoops that the Super Rugby side will have to jump through before they can pop the bubbles, including a likely battle in court.

Then, with so much still up in limbo, the Rebels had to turn their attention to tackling the biggest, most physical side in Super Rugby.

The Rebels started well enough, as they opened up an 11-7 lead at the half-hour mark, but as so often is the case the Australian side conceded before being unable to land an important blow on the stroke of half-time as the home side missed an important cleanout on their opponent’s line.

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Halfback Ryan Louwrens walked away in frustration, while Taniela Tupou vented his frustration by yelling out his disproval as Jordan Uelese was pinged for not releasing.

The missed opportunity was one of many throughout the match as the Rebels failed to turn pressure into points.

In contrast, the Blues, whose lineout was picked apart by Canham, held on in the first half before they returned to the direct route of attack that had made them so successful through the opening 10 weeks of the competition.

Harry Plummer celebrates with try scorer Mark Tele’a during the Blues’ win over the Rebels at AAMI Park on May 03, 2024 . (Photo by Asanka Ratnayake/Getty Images)

The change in tactics saw the Blues turn the screws on the Rebels, with the visitors scoring four tries to none in the second half and 31 unanswered points in total.

“Yeah, terrible start from us,” said Blues skipper Patrick Tuipulotu, who scored his side’s fourth try,

“Melbourne, they played well, especially on the short side and we just couldn’t get any dominate tackles and they got us on the back foot. We were struggling to get any go-forward, we struggled at our set-piece.

“We had a big rark-up at half-time and had a good look at ourselves. We managed to play a simple game up front, tried to go through them and it worked for us in the end.”

Rebels captain Rob Leota said he was “proud” of the way his side started, but lamented their ill-discipline in the second half.

“You can’t do that against a quality side like the Blues,” he said. “We’ve got to take these lessons and go into next week against the Reds.”

Carter Gordon put the Rebels on the scoreboard early after knocking over a simple three points in the eighth minute.

But their lead didn’t last long as one-Test All Black Matt Proctor and Andrew Kellaway fluffed their lines out wide and allowed the ball to hit the deck. The spilt ball saw Mark Telea run 50 metres to score.

The Rebels did however hit back as Ryan Louwrens made the most of some possession and territory to score. While Gordon missed the conversion he banged over a penalty in the 27th minute to give the home side an 11-7 lead.

The home side suffered a blow soon after as inside centre David Feliuai (concussion) and Proctor (shoulder) were forced off seconds apart. The visitors later lost Rieko Ioane to concussion, too.

Matt Gibbon reacts on the final siren as Corey Evans and Dalton Papali’i of the Blues (R) celebrate winning at AAMI Park on May 03, 2024, in Melbourne. (Photo by Daniel Pockett/Getty Images)

Tight-head prop PJ Sheck forced his way over from close range to give the Blues the lead in the 32nd minute.

Although the Rebels missed the chance to take back the lead at the end of the first half, Telea’s second try stretched the lead.

In and around that the Rebels threatened. Rookie winger Darby Lancaster was fantastic on both sides of the ball while Andrew Kellaway looked dangerous with every touch.

Rebels coach Kevin Foote turned to his bench soon after but Matt Gibbon and Sam Talakai couldn’t inject the impact required to help break the Blues down.

Gibbon came close to scoring twice but struggled at the scrum.

The Rebels never went away but the Blues wore the home side down and were too strong inside their opponent’s attacking 22.

“It was huge … we keep hanging in and what happened in the vote was a really good result for the club, it’s been a stressful time,” Foote said.

“First half, I think possession and territory were 65 per cent to us and then second half they just got away from us.

“We didn’t score the points when we were in their 22 and it really hurt.

“When they had the card, that was the time that we had to go.”

Despite going down badly, the Rebels remain in fifth spot on the competition standings on 24 points and ten points clear of ninth-placed Moana Pasifika, who host the eighth-placed Highlanders on Saturday afternoon in Tonga.

The Crowd Says:

2024-05-11T10:37:55+00:00

Guess

Roar Rookie


I hate decisions makers too

2024-05-08T11:58:48+00:00

Cec

Roar Rookie


Just what I’m aiming for Guess :thumbup: :laughing: So I explained to Biscuits that the Reds and Tahs need to fly the high performance flag for AUS rugby to flourish but sadly that hasn’t happened and thankfully at least one team has done so for the past 30yrs. I also explained that yeah I jibe the Tahs and in particular Biscuits but only when he winds up off the planet with some of his remarks. My jibes about the Tahs is not about the players but the NSWRU Admin and club power factions Jez briefly explained to me. They’ve let the players down with their decision making over three decades. Why on earth would anyone trust those decision makers.

2024-05-08T07:11:12+00:00

Guess

Roar Rookie


Which question? How am I supposed to find your replies to biscuits? You’re so mysterious

2024-05-07T11:07:16+00:00

Cec

Roar Rookie


100% sure Guess. Look at my recent replies to Biscuits. You are way off the mark. 100% also sure the same question can be asked of you, kinda the pot calling the kettle black.

2024-05-07T09:27:09+00:00

Guess

Roar Rookie


Really? You blame me for a joke while half the roar including you is serious about it? Funny you accuse me in something you do. You're the one wanting to get rid of a team solely because you hate them not because of competition I'm against axing anyone unlike many but if rebels are insolvent it's kinda irrelevant what I want. Why should they then also get rid of tahs? Because you don't like them? Are they really as bad as you make it sound? Do tahs also have 23m debt?

2024-05-05T12:18:17+00:00

Cec

Roar Rookie


Pretty certain Guess you’d rather drown the competition than take one for the team. Worst vs worst argument it appears “Rebs got flogged by 2 points less than tahs and have only 23m debt clearly they should be kept over the tahs” pathetic really even for a half joke.

2024-05-05T10:08:28+00:00

Guess

Roar Rookie


You sure it's based on my comment and not your hatred for the tahs?

2024-05-04T14:01:26+00:00

Short-Blind

Roar Rookie


Fat lady hasn't sung yet, Kiwi sides start playing each other again shortly and Brumbies run home not that bad. Could be close mate. Although the way the Brumbies played tonight....not holding my breath. On a positive note am very happy with my Reds win in Christchurch. They can knock off any top side on their night.

2024-05-04T12:42:27+00:00

cs

Roar Guru


I get it Cec.

2024-05-04T12:05:49+00:00

Cec

Roar Rookie


cs, the thought that the Tahs and Reds “always have been and always will be” just isn’t right within an elite high performance environment. You’re right though but still a tough concept to hear. They haven’t earned it like Brums who started as “outcast misfits” so says our big brothers.

2024-05-04T11:57:01+00:00

cs

Roar Guru


I'm trying to agree with you Cec, which I do, but it'd help if I understood your point.

2024-05-04T08:31:43+00:00

Cec

Roar Rookie


Fair enough cs. But pls remember there is no birthright selections over pro players and they have a freedom of choice on where to work and whom to learn from. Many will follow the best value propositions for them. It’s not state of origin and never has been nor ever will be.

2024-05-04T08:08:37+00:00

Train Without A Station

Roar Guru


Leota is one of the top players for post contact meters across the comp.. but sure.. for “no effect”

2024-05-04T08:07:20+00:00

Train Without A Station

Roar Guru


Aged well…

2024-05-04T00:58:41+00:00

TonyH

Roar Rookie


Too many Aussie Super Rugby teams fail to go the distance!

2024-05-04T00:48:51+00:00

Muzzo

Roar Rookie


So true about Reiko, as i've been saying that since both Foster & McDonald started playing him at centre. His awareness, running away from support, passing, if he passes, & constant dying with the ball,etc etc, when there are other options. I'm pretty sure Razor will be aware of his pitfalls, even in considering in squad selection, as he still hasn't learnt!

2024-05-04T00:07:30+00:00

El Flash

Roar Rookie


Imagine what that score could have been had the Blues turned up with a backline. The reality is this Blues side are not going to be serious contenders without their best backs on the track. The halfback / five eight combo is fine but the centre pairings are a disorganised mess & it is there the whole shebang breaks down. I like Heem, he is direct & powerful however in Reiko Ioane you have a superb right winger shoehorned into centre. He has been an unmitigated disaster at 13 both for the Blues & the AB's. He lacks that periphery vision that comes naturally to the great centres, & his passing as witnessed in last night reminds me of primary school players. The reason why the Blues had to go back to the "direct" route in the 2nd half was simply because the forward leaders lost patience with some of the amateur mistakes out wide.

2024-05-03T23:13:15+00:00

Noodles

Roar Rookie


Enjoyable game. Frustrating that Rebels didn’t take numerous scoring chances. Canham showed that he can match it with top line players. Carter Gordon really does have a go and is clever at the gain line, as well as in his longer passing.

2024-05-03T22:46:26+00:00

Mirt

Roar Rookie


6. Seeing as they’ll probably finish 1&2 that ain’t gonna happen

2024-05-03T22:44:40+00:00

Mirt

Roar Rookie


Agree with that. As an Aussie it was a disappointing result, but it was a good game. Blues took their chances, Rebels came away many times empty handed. I spose that means better attack and better defence

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