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'Ideally, you see our 5 Super Rugby teams consistently beating NZ teams'

Waratahs captain Phil Waugh leads the team song in their changeroom after winning the round five Super 14 match between the Waratahs and the Lions the at Sydney Football Stadium on March 12, 2010 in Sydney, Australia. (Photo by Cameron Spencer/Getty Images)

Phil Waugh is challenging Australia’s under-performing Super Rugby sides to finally stand up to their New Zealand rivals for the sake of the Wallabies and the ailing code in general.

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The All Blacks have enjoyed a mortgage-like hold on the Bledisloe Cup since 2003, way back when Waugh was still playing.

Now the champion flanker turned Rugby Australia chief executive is offering advice on how the Wallabies can break the embarrassing 21-year series-winning drought.

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And it’s not exactly rocket science: start beating the Kiwis at Super Rugby and that might help when it comes to Test time.

Last year, the benchmark ACT Brumbies, NSW Waratahs, Queensland Reds, Melbourne Rebels and Western Force managed just six wins from a combined 30 matches against their trans-Tasman foes in Super Rugby.

Even that 20 per cent winning strike rate was an improvement on two decades of NZ beat-downs that includes a humiliating combined low of none-from-31 return against the Crusaders, Chiefs, Blues, Hurricanes and Highlanders in 2017.

When it comes to play-off matches in New Zealand, it’s even worse.

Phil Waugh
Rugby Australia CEO Phil Waugh speaks to the media. (Photo by Brendon Thorne/Getty Images)
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The Kiwis have won all but one of 15 trans-Tasman finals encounters since the competition began in 1996 and Australian victories on NZ soil have become alarmingly rare.

But in 2015, when the Brumbies and Waratahs both made the Super Rugby semi-finals, the Wallabies reached the World Cup final in England.

“There’s a strong correlation between having a successful Wallaby team and how we perform at Super Rugby level and it’s important for our Super Rugby team to set up the season for the Wallabies,” Waugh said ahead of the competition start on Friday.

“There’s been challenges around our competitiveness in Super Rugby, and we’ve seen that go through into the late stage of the tournament.

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“Ideally, you see our five Super Rugby teams consistently winning and beating New Zealand teams.”

Waugh was reticent to offer a “pass mark” for the Australian teams against Kiwi opposition in 2024.

“All I know is that every game that you go into, we want to have our Australian sides a genuine chance to win,” he said.

“I don’t want to be too optimistic but, from early signs in the trials, it appears that we’re prepared.

“It’s going to be how we perform in the games this weekend and, ideally, we get off to a fast start for all our Super Rugby teams.”

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Comments

3 Comments
S
SK 522 days ago

Really unfortunate that Australian rugby is where it is right now scraping the bottom of the barrel hoping for a miracle

Y
YeowNotEven 523 days ago

CEO of Rugby Australia, Phil Waugh, is urging Australian sides not to suck this year.

“It might make the wallabies better” said Waugh in a statement so obvious it could have been made by any human whether they watch rugby or not.

P
Pecos 523 days ago

Blah blah blah.

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JW 49 minutes ago
Leicester Fainga'anuku denied All Blacks eligibility for TRC

I don’t get that. I got the opposite, this was something Lester really really wanted to do. NZR is not going to stop him doing that by putting ridiculous money in front of him (noted you were only asking for fair money).


I wouldn’t say this was a Mo’unga or Frizell situation where there talent only was unlocked after they signed abroad, when Schmidt and Ryan came in respectively. LF was on a good trajectory, and he just decided he has the perfect window of opportunity to go abroad while he’s not first choice, learn and live in France to come back better and have a good shot at the perfect age. I think he recongised that.


Agreed that our rotation has been off the the last decade, players have not been moved on when they should, but I wouldn’t include Rieko in that discussion, though I would accept he is more of a marketing than performance signing.


Also agree it is a strange condunrum that results from the misalligned seasons, where Lester is straight into NPC in the same season almost. When really the ‘start’ of his contract is next year. Is he even going to be on the payroll at the moment? Could it be used as a double dip to encourage players back, a ‘bonus international season’ of match fees.


But they also don’t want them to become anymore common. So perhaps everything is fine? Like I was alluding to with Toko, they would need multiple markers of their own in Top 14 for them to be able to gauge off. As I’ve said in previous articles I’d be comfortable to expand sabbaticals to 2 in every position (yes a huge change), so that the was a core group of 30 of the top players all aligned with the ABs and overseas at any one time. This would ensure there are good markers to correlate levels of performance amongst everyone. This is a very similar setup/size to South Africa. It is like the AB modem in a wider organism, the vets are shipped off much earlier, and the core of next cycle is brought through. No missing out on the JGPs or Aki’s, no the Antonio’s or young Patrick Tuifua’s to france, keeping the Chandler Cunningham-South’s or Roots brothers, evan this Dubious guy from the French team was playing rugby here in NZ and could have stayed with a more ground up focus on bringing players through, not paying them much etc lol

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