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Brumbies player ratings v Reds | Super Rugby Pacific

Noah Lolesio of the Brumbies passes during the Super Rugby Pacific match between ACT Brumbies and Queensland Reds. (Photo by Mark Metcalfe/Getty Images)

The ACT Brumbies renewed their budding rivalry with the Queensland Reds, hosting them at GIO Stadium in Canberra. On a short turn-around, the Brumbies were able to hold out a valiant Reds side.

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The Brumbies started strong, with two quick tries to start the first half, but a combination of poor execution and a dogged fightback from the Reds let the came become close in the second half.

In the end, it was the Brumbies defence and composure that held the Reds at bay, as the Brumbies secured a 23-17 win to put them 3-0 for the season. Here is how the Brumbies players rated:

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1. James Slipper – 6.5

Slipper is not slowing down with age. The veteran prop has become a leader in the Brumbies forward pack, and speaks with his actions. His tireless work rate at the breakdown and his support of his fellow forwards allowed the Brumbies to set a good base to launch their attack. Left the field at halftime.

2. Lachlan Lonergan – 7

Scored his teams second try of the night through a typical rolling maul demonstration from the Brumbies brawny forward pack. Made a team-high 14 tackles.

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3. Rhys Van Nek – 6

The Young prop is looking like a good prospect in his first start for the Brumbies. A very strong scrummager, Van Nek was also very effective at the breakdown.

4. Nick Frost – 6.5

Forming a solid locking partnership with Neville. Was industrious across the park and put his size to good use with some hard carries in the inside channels. Was targeted 4 times at the lineout.

5. Cadeyrn Neville – 6 

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Was a major target at lineout time for the Brumbies, organising his forward pack to set up for their devasting maul attack. Was tareget at lineout time 3 times, all to good effect.

6. Rob Valetini – 6.5

Was his powerful best, but also contributed to the Brumbies dropped ball count.

7. Rory Scott – 6

Comparisons to Pocock are not unfounded, as Scott is a tyro at the breakdown. Disrupted the Reds on multiple occasions just as they were looking to get a roll on.

8. Pete Samu – 6.5

Samu did his best work out on the flanks, receiving the ball with a full head of steam up and linking up with his backs in the wide channels. He is a dynamic ball runner, posing a threat to the more traditional flankers on the Reds.

9. Nic White – 7.5

Skippering the side for 100th Super Rugby game, the wiley veretan halfback showed his class, controlling the game from the base of the ruck and steering his formidable forward pack around the ground. ut the Brumbies in the 26th minute scoring off a pop ball from Neville. Pre-match the discussion was all about his battle with Tate McDermott, and if this was an early Wallabies audition, White put his hand up this game.

10. Noah Lolesio – 6.5

His partnership with White is invaluable to the Brumbies. Lolesio strength lies in being able to direct play and set players into motion, creating confusion for the defence. Was all over Tom Lynagh in defence to stake his claims for a Wallabies spot.

11. Corey Toole – 6

The former Sevens player continues to impress with every game. His electric turn of pace means that he was a danger to the Reds every the ball was kicked in his direction. When he did get the ball in his with a bit of space, he was able to beat defenders.

12. Ollie Sapsford – 5.5

A quiet game in a rare start for the New Zealander. He can carry hard in tight, getting the Brumbies over the advantage line. Was solid in defence, forming a formidable partnership with Ikitau in the midfield.

13. Len Ikitau – 7 

Used his long-range boot to kick the Brumbies out of trouble when it looked like the Reds were gathering momentum. Perhaps the best defensive outside centre in Super Rugby at the moment, and made 10 tackles for the game.

14. Andy Muirhead – 6

Does a lot of unnoticed work off the ball and always seems to pop up at the right time. Uses his speed and small stature to great effect, making the Reds defence miss when he has space with the ball. Was good in the air tonight. Fell of a few tackles in defense, especially when forced to mark up against Petaia.

15. Tom Wright – 7.5

Had a remarkable game in the fullback jersey, running for over 100 metres. He ran hard and used his elusiveness to make defenders miss. Was very good a covering kicks at the back. Still had lapses in defence, allowing Petaia to score twice.

Replacements:

16. Connal McInnerny – N/A 

Got in the action late in the game.

17. Blake Schoupp – 6

Entered the action in the second half. Looks to be well-suited to Super Rugby.

18. Tom Ross – 6

Replaced Slipper and did well to maintain the advantage at set-piece time.

19. Darcy Swain – 6

Came on for Frost. Brought much-needed aggression to proceedings

20. Luke Reimer – 6.5

Always adds impact off the bench. Combining with Scott, he was very hard to move off the ball

21. Ryan Lonergan – 6

Entered the action early, sharing the scrumhalf role with White. The Brumbies didn’t miss a beat when he came on.

22. Jack Debreczeni – N/A

Didn’t get on the field.

23. Ben O’Donnell – N/A

Came on with 10 minutes to go, got limited touches.

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B
BC 1 hour ago
Black Ferns reward 18-year-old's form in team to face Wallaroos

Yes, I think that NZ have to work on their forward play if they are going to go the whole way again. I don’t know too much about your forwards but there do seem to be some familiar names still being selected that have come up short in the past. You have considerable talent in the backs but you will need the ball. There is much truth in the saying “forwards win matches and the backs decide by how many”. I would agree with your comment about Leti-I’iga and Woodman has a lot to assimilate in very few matches as a possible 13, perhaps the hardest position to play. I shall watch your match on Saturday with much interest, though not in the middle of our night.


Unfortunately two of Ireland’s top forwards have been ruled out by injury. I’m not sure they have enough depth to cope with that in the latter stages of the WC.


The performance of France at Twickenham was a surprise, you never know which French team will turn up. Having said that, for most of the match they were second best, but some slack tackling, complacency?, and their Gallic pride got them close on the scoreboard. I was there and whilst eventually grateful for the final whistle, we never felt their late flourish would prevail. When the Mexican wave starts after 25 minutes, you know the crowd thinks it’s already all over. You are right though, do not write off the French, they have strong forwards and flair in the backs. Give them an inch and they will take a mile. On their day they are a real handful for any team.

4 Go to comments
B
BigGabe 2 hours ago
'Love him or hate him, Henry Pollock has got the rugby world talking.'

Fair commentary. I am not sure it would probably work against him though, since his temmates have come out and said that they enjoy it. Similarly, Irish fans seem to enjoy Lowe’s celebrating and English fans their “plastic energy” players.


Oof, that Stormers comment..as a Stormers fan, it hurts to be a Stormers fan. We can be so good, but also we can collapse like a house of cards. I do think that there is a line, I would agree with you. But I also very much think that the rugby public blows it out of proportion when someone gets exuberant (Lowe annoys the daylights out of me, but that’s his game and he is good at it. I am sure plenty of people find Faf annoying too). I’m not sure rugby will go the way of the NFL though, I do think that on a cultural level rugby playing nations (and the cultural demographics that go into playing rugby) differ vastly from the US. The US as a nation is very much about bravado. Similarly, the argument about rugby devolving into football, it is a sport that rewards theatrics so naturally theatrics enter into the culture. I don’t see rugby going that way, there is something different about rugby and the people that it attracts. Perhaps it is the gladiatorial aspect, or the lack of insultingly large paychecks. I am not sure, it would be interesting to conduct a study on this to be honest.


Yes, my examples go back quite far and are sporadic inbetween. But this makes me wonder - does rugby not have so many showboats because it doesn’t attract showboats or because it doesn’t allow showboats?

13 Go to comments
W
Werner 2 hours ago
URC teams aren't proving Stephen Donald wrong

3 things:


1) I don't think you have an understanding of what sort of politics goes on in SA, you are assuming it's very competitive and performance focused same as NZ, I can tell you it's a lot greyer and more ambiguous but green and gold goes along way in greasing wheels. Often revenue at the state and national level are prized more by some in the SARU despite the impact of accepting it, but you will never heard them own it.


2) While we're comparing national teams performance to gauge the ‘domestic’ comps, you do realise that both Ireland and Scotland are higher in rankings and have better recent record than Fiji and Australia who are in the SRP right? And when was the last time either of them made a final in SR? 2014! But here's the thing…. I never said URC is better than SRP, imo they are about the same each with their benefits and different style. Where as you harp on about how crap URC teams are but not why SRP is better. Have SRP teams faired better against European teams? No? So how do you know and ‘demonstrate’ this inferiority? both have a range of good and bad countries competing (URC has slightly more higher ranked teams). Both are dominated historically by one country and team (Leinster/crusaders). So what is this demonstrable fact I'm missing? What's the point of difference other than subjective opinion


3) let me understand this, the only decent team in the URC is Leinster as they are good enough to make Eurochamps finals but not good enough to make the finals of the URC the last 2 years. So they despite beating Leinster (the EC finalists and good team) the other URC teams are still crap?

50 Go to comments
P
PR 2 hours ago
'Love him or hate him, Henry Pollock has got the rugby world talking.'

There are degrees of taunting. In my opinion Pollock is slightly OTT. Nothing offensive, just what Australians call “a goose”. Like James Lowe and Ben Earl. Celebrating wildly and often towards the crowd throughout the game. “Plastic energy” as Bongi calls it. It’s the kind of behaviour that turns a hostile crowd more hostile and motivates opponents even more - so probably works against your own team. Pollock is young and having the time of his life so his antics are understandable but I think most people find that kind of showboating annoying - hence the ‘love him or hate him’ tag.


The reason why the behaviour of Pollock makes headlines is because it is still quite rare in rugby. Your examples go back to 1974, 2003 and 2022. Of course there are chirps between players during a game but what Pollock is doing is more like the showboating you see after a touchdown in NFL. He’s not the only one of course. Just about every Stormers try comes with an elaborate handshake or routine. Perhaps the future of rugby is more like NFL but I reckon it will always be annoying to a lot of people.


Also, unless you are Matt Williams or Gregor Townsend, 6-2/7-1 was never against the spirit of the game. It’s an argument brought up by pundits to get attention or frustrated coaches who are trying to justify poor results. Most coaches, players and supporters get it. Even World Rugby gave it the thumbs up. It should be celebrated for its innovation.

13 Go to comments
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