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Blues vs Brumbies takes: Blues crumble, find Akira Ioane heir apparent

By Henry Lee at Eden Park, Auckland
Josh Beehre of the Blues and Blake Schoupp of the Brumbies. Photos by Phil Walter/Getty Images

Eden Park in Auckland hosted the first match of Super Rugby Pacific round four, where the Brumbies closed out a tight contest against the Blues.

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Not only are the Blues one win from four games to start the season, their trip down to Hamilton to face the Chiefs next week might have got slightly harder with injuries to star playmaker Beauden Barrett and hooker Ricky Riccitelli.

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Blues crumble under pressure Again

It’s the story of the season so far for Vern Cotter and the Blues.

The Brumbies were behind for most of the match before a late penalty by Ryan Lonergan sealed a historic victory for the ACT Brumbies, their first in Auckland since 2013.

Discipline late in the game in their own half cost the Blues, falling to their third defeat in four games to start the 2025 campaign.

The game changed dramatically when Beauden Barrett left the field at halftime, where the Blues’ energy and attacking DNA went out the window with Harry Plummer at first five.

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Plummer settled for kicking the ball away, where the Blues struggled to win the ball back in the air. Multiple handling errors in the second half by fullback Cole Forbes put the Blues under unnecessary pressure.

Stephen Larkham’s side held strong, piling the pressure on the Blues scrum twice late in the game. The resulting scrum penalty given by referee James Doleman gifted Lonergan the chance at victory in the very last minute.

Historic Brumbies end 12-year drought

The Stephen Larkham-coached Brumbies conquered the Blues on Eden Park in Auckland, only leading for less than a minute in the game. 

The Brumbies last won in Auckland against the Blues in 2013, amplifying Vern Cotter’s headaches after four rounds of Super Rugby Pacific.

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The Brumbies never led the round four contest until the last minute, when Ryan Lonergan kicked the winning penalty off the back of a powerful Brumbies scrum. 

When the Blues brought on their first choice props, Ofa Tu’ungafasi and Marcel Renata, Cotter would have backed his scrum to do the job in the late stages. However, the spirited Brumbies pack had something to say about that, completely dominating the scrum with two minutes to go.

Larkham’s side kept the home team scoreless for the whole of the second half, edging their way back into the match by kicking easy penalties and capitalizing on the Blues’ needless handling areas from in-play kicks.

Match Summary

1
Penalty Goals
3
3
Tries
2
1
Conversions
1
0
Drop Goals
0
126
Carries
150
9
Line Breaks
3
22
Turnovers Lost
12
8
Turnovers Won
9

Blues find Akira Ioane heir apparent in Cameron Suafoa

Cameron Suafoa’s 2025 has started exactly the way he would have liked, claiming his spot in the Blues loose forward trio after breaking onto the scene as a lock, showcasing his important versatility in the opening four rounds of Super Rugby Pacific. 

The North Harbour forward stripped the ball off a Brumbies player in the ninth minute, breaking away from the Brumbies defence and running a good 40 meters before passing to Finlay Christie in support.

Suafoa then played a hand in a massive hit on Brumbies No.8 Charlie Cale in the 30th minute.

Suafoa’s bruising defence in a 69-minute performance was a bright spark in an experienced Blues pack that ultimately failed to fire in the second half. 

Not only was Suafoa’s defence important for Vern Cotter’s side, but he was also on the end of a brilliant breakaway from second-five AJ Lam, before handing it off to Tele’a, who set up Rieko Ioane’s 37th-minute try.

Suafoa’s 20 tackles, 15 carries and two line breaks topped off a stellar performance from the Blues No.8.

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All Blacks midfield race heats up

It was an improved performance at Eden Park from All Blacks midfielder Rieko Ioane, helped by a blockbusting performance from his teammate, AJ Lam.

Lam’s ball running and ability to brush off defenders have been on show for all four of the Blues games this season in Super Rugby Pacific.

Lam played a pivotal role in Ioane’s 37th-minute try, breaking through a couple of defenders and offloading the ball to Cameron Suafoa.

Despite coming off in the 60th minute with a slight niggle, Lam had a game-high two line breaks at the time of being replaced, five defenders beaten and 61 meters gained, influencing the game in more ways than just tries scored.

Lam’s performances so far this season at second five showcase what depth the All Blacks have at the No.12 position, with the likes of Timoci Tavatavanawai and Quinn Tupaea stepping up for their respective teams.

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Comments

14 Comments
A
Andrew Nichols 91 days ago

“Blues find Akira Ioane heir apparent in Cameron Suafoa” No. Suafoa played 80 min of excellent quality. AI could never manage that even if he was on the field for that time. As often as he did something good he would just look dazed and lost.

C
Cantab 92 days ago

Blues are now on the sort of downward spiral experienced by the Crusaders last season. Uneasy the head that wears a crown as your opposition week after week wears you down. High injury lists certainly don’t help but all sides need to cover these.

G
GM 92 days ago

‘The Blues experienced forward pack’???? You’ve got to be kidding. As soon as I saw the team sheets, it was pretty clear the Brumbies, with 5 or 6 Wallabies in their pack, were going to roll over the Blues’ pack. I thought the likes of Beere and Cam Christie and Segner and Suafoa did well enough given the opposition, but they’re babies compared to the men they replaced, like Papali’i, Choat, Ioane, even Darry. The Blues perennial weakness at tight-head also came back to bite them - as it did last year when the Crusaders took their scrum apart. They should try recruiting the Canes excess - Tosi or Mafileo for next year, instead of another glamour back.

d
d 92 days ago

If the Blues first win was unconvincing, this was a showpiece of all that is wrong with the side. nearly all the Brumbies box kicks were knocked on or fumbled by the Blues, and their own box kicks were too inaccurate to be anything but turnovers. Tuipolotu shambles around the field being anything but inspirational, and the Blues suffer from the same issue as the ABs, a lack of a decent #10.

A
Andrew Nichols 91 days ago

Tuipolotu is back to his lost dazed look thst he managed to overcome for parts of last year. Rather sad really.

I
IS 92 days ago

The all blacks have a decent 10 in dmac he was the best 10 in the world last year especially on the statsheet

S
Spew_81 92 days ago

Suafoa is an improvement over A Ioane.


Works hard all day. Can mix it up in tight, he also can cover at lock.

C
Chiefs Mana 92 days ago

Ioane had a very good season for the Blues last year to be fair, Suafua looks to have all the tools though and looked great last night

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SteveD 1 hour ago
Bulls book Leinster URC showdown but injury to Springbok tarnishes win

Dear heaven, what a pathetic and embarrassing game of rugby. As a Sharks supporter back in the wonderful Ian Mac days, I was even hoping, for SA rugby’s sake, that the hated Bulls would win so that they might at least give Leinster a bit of a game, but frankly, when a team almost has three players in the sinbin at the same time, then I imagine I might not be able to stand watching them get thrashed in Dublin next Saturday evening if they carry out the same Northern Transvaal stupidity of the old days. WTF did they think they were doing?


As for the Sharks, there's maybe a light at the end of the tunnel however, if they just follow my advice. I haven't watched their recent games but now I see where their problems lie. Three of them in fact. Firstly, get rid of Plumtree for - at the minimum - selecting reasons (2) and (3). Secondly and thirdly, get rid of the Hendrikse brothers. Who on earth thinks that those two are top quality rugby players needs to be in an asylum, or they'll likely send a lot of the Sharks supporters there instead, if they haven't already. They are useless - I mean, FFS, the so-called flyhalf can't even select boots that don't slip when he's taking multiple placekicks (to say stuffall about trying to put penalty kicks from 60 metres over - and failing - when a freaking lineout might have produced a try, even if he missed the conversion) - and I can now see why the team of ‘real’ Boks are doing so badly, having two idiots at scrumhalf and flyhalf. If they stay in the squad, Sharks supporters should rather cash in their season tickets and go watch the best English-speaking (and sixth all-round overall) SA rugby team, Westville Boys High, than suffer so much pain at King's Park.

1 Go to comments
J
JW 2 hours ago
Broken hand or not, Richie Mo'unga is still New Zealand's best 10

I agree that he chose to go - but when he was starting for the All Blacks and it was clear that Scott Roberston was going to be the coach in 2024

That’s not the case at all. There was huge fear that the continued delaying was going to cause Robertson to go. That threat resulted in the unpresented act of appointing a new coach, after Richie had left I made add that I recall, during a WC cycle.

Mo’unga was finally going to get the chance to prove he was the better 10 all along - then he decides to go to Japan.

Again, No. He did that without Razor (well maybe he played a part from within the Crusaders environment) needing to be the coach.

He’d probably already earned 3-4 million at that stage. The NZRU would’ve given him the best contract they could’ve, probably another million or more a year.

Do some googling and take a look at the timelines. That idea you have is a big fallacy.

I also agree to those who say that Hansen and Foster never really gave Mo’unga a fair go. They both only gave Mo’unga a real shot when it was clear their preferred 10’s weren’t achieving/available; they chucked him in the deep end at RWC 2019, and Foster only gave him a real shot in 2022 when Foster was about to be dropped mid-season.

That’s the right timeline. But I’d suggest it was just unfortunate Mo’unga (2019), they probably would have built into him more appropriately but Dmac got injured and Barrett switched to fullback. Maybe not the best decisions those, Hansen was making clangers all over the show, but yeah, there was also the fact Barrett was on millions so became ‘automatic’, but even before then I thought Richie would have been the better player.


Yep Reihana in 2026, and Love in 2025! I don’t think Richie had anything to prove, this whole number 1 thing is bogus.

129 Go to comments
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