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‘Just so disappointed’: Heartbreaking defeats starting to ‘hurt’ Waratahs

Jake Gordon of the Waratahs looks dejected during the round four Super Rugby Pacific match between NSW Waratahs and Blues at Allianz Stadium, on March 16, 2024, in Sydney, Australia. (Photo by Brett Hemmings/Getty Images)

After speaking with a few Waratahs players, Wallaroo Sera Naiqama has explained how the team’s series of heartbreaking defeats are starting to “hurt” them in Super Rugby Pacific.

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The Waratahs shocked defending champions the Crusaders 37-24 in the second round of the season in what appeared to be a statement victory for the men from New South Wales.

But another win has proved hard to come by with the Waratahs falling in quite heartbreaking circumstances in consecutive matches against the Highlanders, Blues and Fijian Drua.

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They had a chance to win their last match in golden point but fly-half Tane Edmed failed to convert a drop goal opportunity. But the Drua’s Kemu Valetini wouldn’t make the same mistake.

Valetini was the hero for the Drua as they recorded their first-ever win over the Waratahs, while the New South Welshman now sit 10th on the ladder with four defeats from five starts.

“There were scenes directly right after the game when the boys looked so deflated,” Waratahs women’s lock Sera Naiqama said on Stan Sports’ Rugby Heaven.

“Having conversations with a couple of them, they were just so disappointed that they were in the fight, they were doing all the right things but there are moments in the game… that they haven’t been able to ice it.

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“Yesterday I know that the Waratahs took the men out to Maroubra Beach, a bit of a change of scenery, just to get around the boys.

“They’re a competitive side, they’re doing all the right things but these narrow losses are really starting to hurt them.”

Match Summary

1
Penalty Goals
1
5
Tries
5
4
Conversions
4
1
Drop Goals
0
101
Carries
125
8
Line Breaks
7
14
Turnovers Lost
10
3
Turnovers Won
5

The Waratahs shot out to an early lead with hooker Mahe Vailanu scoring the opener in just the third minute and playmaker Edmed adding two shots at goal shortly after.

The first-half was literally all the Fijian Drua from there, though, as centre Iosefo Masi ran in a headline-grabbing hat-trick to help give the hosts a strong 26-10 lead at the break.

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With their backs up against the ropes, the Waratah scored four tries to the Drua’s one in the second 40 to ultimately send the match to extra time.

But this fixture will go down in history as another loss for the Tahs as pressure continues to mount on coach Darren Coleman. But Wallabies legend Tim Horan has insisted that Coleman is “too good of a coach” for Rugby Australia to lose.

“The comeback against Fiji was superb,” Horan explained.

“They’ve lost a couple of really close matches. The one against the Highlanders at home a couple of weeks back, they should’ve won that one.

“We all looked at the start of the year and we thought those first five rounds for the Waratahs were going to be really tough. A lot of people were saying they might not win a game in those first five rounds.

“Of course, they upset the Crusaders and now we look at the Crusaders and where they sit on the table, it probably wasn’t really an upset.

“I feel for the Waratahs. I think they’re a side that’s trying to build some sort of momentum in the team.

“I think it’s good if something happens to Darren Coleman that they still keep him in camp in somewhere around Australian rugby.”

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NH 52 minutes ago
Harness Skelton's might and move Sua'ali'i: How the Wallabies can fix things for Test two

Nice one Nick. I was a fan of Joe’s appointment and think in general he has done well, and I even think the game plan last week was ok, but I am not sold he has gotten his selections right for this series. As everyone has detailed, the pack was too small last week. This week, he has brought in skelton and valetini which is an improvement physicality-wise but now the back 5 is out of balance with only one legitimate lineout option in Frost. The wallabies were poor in the lineout and it meant they couldn’t get into the lions 22 in the 1st half. Its also where most WBs tries originate from. Are they going to opt for a scrum every penalty they get? 3 man lineouts? And as you show, Suaalii is simply too hesitant in D. I guess drifting is better than biting in and taking yourself out of play, but he doesn’t do much more in that last clip. Maxy has 2 involvements in that play, suaalii none. At this rate, Chieka was quicker and better at integrating marika who had more to do to learn the game, than Joe with suaalii.


Do you think that Joe is hesitant to put Suaalii on the wing because he would be exposed in the backfield in terms of kicking, positioning etc? This is the only justification I can think of and also maybe why he has picked the likes of max, potter and kellaway over the likes of daugunu, pietsch and toole. The difference in selection philosophy between schmidt and rennie has come into clear focus to me recently in terms of brain vs braun, power vs graft, workrate vs impact. In my opinion, Schmidt needed to make a hard decision on starting skelton vs a backrow that had bobby and wilson in it and he hasn’t done that. I also feel like he is almost picking a team to minimise the loss rather than win. I think starting a tate, or a pietsch, or bell could’ve signalled some more intent.

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